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PHYLOGENY AND CLASSIFICATION OF REEF‐BUILDING CORALLINE ALGAE (CORALLINALES,RHODOPHYTA)
Authors:JC Bailey  DW Freshwater
Abstract:The Corallinales includes ca. 40 genera of calcified red seaweeds. Species are of two distinct morphotypes; those that possess genicula (uncalcified nodes) and those that lack genicula. Most nongeniculate species take the form of crusts. The presence (or absence) of genicula, secondary pit connections, and tetrasporangial conceptacle features have traditionally been used as key characters for delimiting coralline subfamilies. In this study, nuclear encoded 18S and 26S rRNA gene sequences were determined and used to reexamine relationships among coralline taxa. Separate and combined phylogenetic analyses of these data yielded similar trees in which four major lineages are resolved. Heydrichia and Sporolithon (Sporolithaceae) are positioned at the base of the tree and appear to be distantly related to other species examined. Within the Corallinaceae, the nongeniculate Melobesioideae is resolved as a monophyletic group. All members of this subfamily produce mutiporate tetraspoangial conceptacles. The Corallinoideae, which are characterized by unizonate genicula, are resolved as sister to a clade containing species placed in the Lithophylloideae, Mastophoroideae and Metagoniolithoideae. The molecular data indicate that geniculate and nongeniculate species characterized by the presence of secondary pit connections are closely related. For example, both data sets robustly support a sister taxon relationship between Amphiroa and Titanoderma. Our results indicate that: 1) all taxa in which secondary pit connections are present should be referred to the Lithophylloideae and, 2) genicula are nonhomologous structures that are independently derived in Amphiroa, Lithothrix, Metagoniolithon and the last common ancestor of the Corallinoideae.
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