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Marginal distribution and high heterozygosity of asexual Caloglossa vieillardii (Delesseriaceae,Rhodophyta) along the Australian coasts
Authors:Mitsunobu Kamiya  Erika Saba  John A. West
Affiliation:1. Faculty of Marine Bioscience, Fukui Prefectural University, Obama, Fukui, Japan;2. Graduate School of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Fukui Prefectural University, Obama, Fukui, Japan;3. School of Biosciences 2, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia
Abstract:In animals and land plants, many asexual species originate through inter‐ or intraspecific crosses, and such heterozygous asexuals frequently are more abundant than their sexual relatives in marginal habitats. Although asexual species have been reported in various macroalgal taxa, detailed information regarding their distribution, heterozygosity, and origin is limited. Because many asexual tetrasporophyte strains of Caloglossa vieillardii have been isolated from South Australia, far from their core tropical habitats, we re‐examined the distribution range of asexual C. vieillardii and genotyped these and other western Pacific strains using an actin gene marker. We confirmed the marginal distribution of the asexuals; however, a small patch of sexual thalli was newly discovered 450 km further west from asexual populations in South Australia. Three heterozygous genotypes and one homozygous genotypes were detected from nine asexual populations; 21 heterozygous strains were obligately asexual, but one homozygous strain suddenly produced sexual gametophytes after several years of culture. We hypothesized that the most abundant heterozygous genotype (defined as type 3/4) in asexual populations occurred by a cross between type 3 and type 4 allele gametophytes, both of which were isolated from the Australian coasts. In the crossing experiments, certain combinations between type 3 females and type 4 males produced tetrasporophytes, which recycled successive tetrasporophytes. In the culture experiments, whereas both sexual and asexual strains successfully produced tetraspores at 12°C, no sexual strains released carpospores below 14°C. However, it is uncertain whether this slight difference of maturation temperature was related to the marginal distribution of asexual C. vieillardii.
Keywords:actin gene  asexualization  crossing experiments  geographical parthenogenesis  heterozygous genotype  physiological differentiation
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