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NEW AND RARE CHRYSOPHYTES FROM WYOMING AND COLORADO LAKES
Authors:Aguiar,R.,&  Kugrens,P.
Affiliation:Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523 USA
Abstract:Colorado and Wyoming lakes with high pH values generally ranging from 8 to 10 are dominated by phytoplankton belonging to the chrysophytes, diatoms and cryptomonads. Our studies on phytoplankton diversity in Dowdy, South Delaney Buttes and Cowdrey Lakes in Colorado and Diamond and Twin Buttes Lakes in Wyoming have yielded several isolates of rare or new chrysophytes. These isolates were examined with light microscopy, SEM, TEM, and novel information regarding their structure is presented. Proposed new species belong to the genera Saccochrysis, Prymnesium and Chrysochromulina. Chrysophytes that were examined for the first time include Monochrysis aphanaster , Uroglenopsis , and a mixotrophic species of Ochromonas , which ingests small diatoms. Probable new species are the following: Saccochrysis sp. nov. differs in chloroplast structure, cell shape and cell number/colony, and absence of a posterior vacuole; Prymnesium sp. nov. is the first freshwater form examined with EM and differs in scale morphology; and Chrysochromulina sp. nov. is similar to Chrysochromulina parva but lacks scales. The ultrastructure of M. aphanaster is unique and appears to be a member of the Chrysophyceae. It has two flagella, one of which is emergent, while the other is hidden within an invagination of the cytoplasm. Diacronema and Sarcinochrysis spp. from these lakes also were isolated and reinvestigated, and some unique cellular features will be discussed.
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