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Observations on Purpureofilum apyrenoidigerum gen. et sp. nov. from Australia and Bangiopsis subsimplex from India (Stylonematales, Bangiophyceae, Rhodophyta)
Authors:John A West  Giuseppe C Zuccarello  Joe Scott  Jeremy Pickett-Heaps  Gwang Hoon Kim
Institution:School of Botany, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia;National Herbarium-Netherlands, University of Leiden, PO Box 9514, 2300 RA Leiden, the Netherlands;Department of Biology, PO Box 8795, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA 23187 USA;Department of Biology, Kongju National University, Kongju, Chungnam 314-701 Korea
Abstract:Purpureofilum apyrenoidigerum gen et sp. nov. was obtained from a mangrove habitat in New South Wales, Australia. It had unbranched uniseriate to multiseriate filaments less than 1 mm tall, with a unicellular base. Each cell had a single multilobed parietal chloroplast without a pyrenoid. During reproduction vegetative cells were discharged directly as monospores that remained motile for several hours after release. Spores with long tails moved more slowly (0.053–0.195 μm sχ) than spores without tails (0.43–1.76 μm s′1). Phylo‐genetic analysis of sequences of the small subunit of the nuclear‐encoded rRNA and plastid‐encoded ribu‐lose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase genes revealed that Purpureofilum is a member of the Stylonematales and is most closely related to the filamentous genus Bangiopsis. Bangiopsis differs from Purpureofilum by having longer (to 5 mm) multiseriate filaments, cells containing a stellate chloroplast, a conspicuous central pyrenoid, and monospores often formed in packets. Monospores of Bangiopsis were also motile. Transmission electron microscopy investigation of Purpureofilum and Bangiopsis revealed that the Golgi complexes are associated only with rough endo‐plasmic reticulum and that the plastid contains a peripheral thylakoid; this combination of features being the same as in all other multicellular members of the Stylonematales. The low molecular weight carbohydrates of Purpureofilum and Bangiopsis were digenea‐side and sorbitol, which were present in most other Stylonematales.
Keywords:Bangiophyceae              Bangiopsis subsimplex            carbohydrates  molecular phylogeny              Purpureofilum apyrenoidigerum                        rbcL            Rhodophyta  spore movement  SSL) rDNA  Stylonematales
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