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TRACING SPECIES INVASION IN CODIUM,A SIPHONOUS GREEN ALGA,USING MOLECULAR TOOLS
Authors:Lynda J Goff  Larry Liddle  Paul C Silva  Mary Voytek  Annette W Coleman
Institution:1. Department of Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz, California, 96064;2. Division of Natural Sciences, Long Island University, Southampton, New York, 11968;3. Herbarium, University of California, Berkeley, California, 94720;4. Department of Marine Sciences, University of California, Santa Cruz, California, 95064;5. Division of Biology and Medicine, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 02912
Abstract:The siphonous green alga Codium fragile occurs in many temperate marine regions and is composed of a number of distinct subspecies. Included in this taxon is the common open coast C. fragile subsp. fragile of the northeast Pacific and the weedy C. fragile subsp. tomentosoides which has invaded temperate marine communities in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The center of origin of this weedy subspecies is not known, although it is thought to have dispersed from the northwest Pacific. To examine the relationship of the weedy subspecies to the indigenous northeast Pacific form, chloroplast DNA was compared. Each of these subspecies has a restriction map that is uniform throughout its geographic distribution, and the patterns are distinct from each other and from other Codium species examined. However, the two share an almost identical genome size and arrangement of genes. A population in San Francisco Bay was found to be indistinguishable from the weed C. fragile subsp. tomentosoides from the Atlantic. The potential for using molecular data in solving systematic problems in Codium has been clearly demonstrated.
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