SMITHSONIELLA GEN. NOV., A POSSIBLE EVOLUTIONARY LINK BETWEEN THE MULTICELLULAR AND SIPHONOUS HABITS IN THE ULVOPHYCEAE,CHLOROPHYTA |
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Authors: | James R. Sears Susan H. Brawley |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biology, Southeastern Massachusetts University, No. Dartmouth, Massachusetts, 02747 |
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Abstract: | A low relief, green turf-forming alga of a heterotrichous habit was discovered in the coral reef microcosm, Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. Erect filaments bore lateral, specialized sporangia and together with basal filaments possessed septal plugs between adjacent cells, grossly similar to the “pit connections” of red algae. Data are presented which: 1) establish the identity of our plant with a plant recently described as Pilinia earleae Gallagher et Humm from the Florida Gulf coast; 2) support our establishment of the new genus Smithsoniella and our transfer of P. earleae to this new taxon. Additional data on pigmentation and cytology are related to the fine structure of other selected green algae to develop and test three hypotheses, viz. Smithsoniella earleae represents either: 1) a symbiotic association between a green and a red alga; 2) an alga which belongs to either the Ulotrichales, Chaetophorales or the Chroolepidales; or 3) an alga representing an evolutionary link between filamentous forms of the Ulvophyceae and members of the coenocytic siphonalean complex (e.g., Codiales or Caulerpales) of the Chlorophyta. Data refute hypotheses 1 and 2 but do lend support to the third hypothesis. |
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