@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19249,
author = {Hisayoshi Nozaki and Annette W. Coleman},
title = {A new species of Volvox sect. Merrillosphaera (Volvocaceae, Chlorophyceae) from Texas},
year = {2010},
keywords = {molecular phylogeny; morphology; taxonomy; Volvox ovalis sp. nov.; Volvox sect. Merrillosphaera},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Journal of Phycology},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Smith in 1944 divided the familiar genus Volvox Linnaeus into four sections, placing seven species that lacked cytoplasmic bridges between adult cells in the section Merrillosphaera. Here we describe a new member of the section Merrillosphaera originating from Texas (USA): V. ovalis M.A. Pocock ex H. Nozaki et A.W. Coleman, sp. nov. Asexual spheroids of V. ovalis are ovoid or elliptical, with a monolayer of 1,000-2,000 somatic cells that are not linked by cytoplasmic bridges, an expanded anterior region, and 8 to 12 gonidia in the posterior region. Visibly asymmetric cleavage divisions do not occur in V. ovalis embryos as they do V. carteri Stein, V. obversus (Shaw) Printz and V. africanus West, so the gonidia of the next generation are not yet recognizable in V. ovalis embryos prior to inversion. Molecular phylogenetic analyses of the five chloroplast genes and the internal transcribed spacer regions of nuclear ribosomal DNA indicated that V. ovalis is closely related to V. spermatosphaera Powers and/or V. tertius Meyer; however, V. ovalis can be distinguished from V. spermatosphaera by its larger gonidia, and from V. tertius by visible differences in gonidial chloroplast morphology.}
}
Citation for Study 10927
Citation title:
"A new species of Volvox sect. Merrillosphaera (Volvocaceae, Chlorophyceae) from Texas".
Study name:
"A new species of Volvox sect. Merrillosphaera (Volvocaceae, Chlorophyceae) from Texas".
This study is part of submission 10917
(Status: Published).
Citation
Nozaki H., & Coleman A. 2010. A new species of Volvox sect. Merrillosphaera (Volvocaceae, Chlorophyceae) from Texas. Journal of Phycology, .
Authors
Abstract
Smith in 1944 divided the familiar genus Volvox Linnaeus into four sections, placing seven species that lacked cytoplasmic bridges between adult cells in the section Merrillosphaera. Here we describe a new member of the section Merrillosphaera originating from Texas (USA): V. ovalis M.A. Pocock ex H. Nozaki et A.W. Coleman, sp. nov. Asexual spheroids of V. ovalis are ovoid or elliptical, with a monolayer of 1,000-2,000 somatic cells that are not linked by cytoplasmic bridges, an expanded anterior region, and 8 to 12 gonidia in the posterior region. Visibly asymmetric cleavage divisions do not occur in V. ovalis embryos as they do V. carteri Stein, V. obversus (Shaw) Printz and V. africanus West, so the gonidia of the next generation are not yet recognizable in V. ovalis embryos prior to inversion. Molecular phylogenetic analyses of the five chloroplast genes and the internal transcribed spacer regions of nuclear ribosomal DNA indicated that V. ovalis is closely related to V. spermatosphaera Powers and/or V. tertius Meyer; however, V. ovalis can be distinguished from V. spermatosphaera by its larger gonidia, and from V. tertius by visible differences in gonidial chloroplast morphology.
Keywords
molecular phylogeny; morphology; taxonomy; Volvox ovalis sp. nov.; Volvox sect. Merrillosphaera
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S10927
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19249,
author = {Hisayoshi Nozaki and Annette W. Coleman},
title = {A new species of Volvox sect. Merrillosphaera (Volvocaceae, Chlorophyceae) from Texas},
year = {2010},
keywords = {molecular phylogeny; morphology; taxonomy; Volvox ovalis sp. nov.; Volvox sect. Merrillosphaera},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Journal of Phycology},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Smith in 1944 divided the familiar genus Volvox Linnaeus into four sections, placing seven species that lacked cytoplasmic bridges between adult cells in the section Merrillosphaera. Here we describe a new member of the section Merrillosphaera originating from Texas (USA): V. ovalis M.A. Pocock ex H. Nozaki et A.W. Coleman, sp. nov. Asexual spheroids of V. ovalis are ovoid or elliptical, with a monolayer of 1,000-2,000 somatic cells that are not linked by cytoplasmic bridges, an expanded anterior region, and 8 to 12 gonidia in the posterior region. Visibly asymmetric cleavage divisions do not occur in V. ovalis embryos as they do V. carteri Stein, V. obversus (Shaw) Printz and V. africanus West, so the gonidia of the next generation are not yet recognizable in V. ovalis embryos prior to inversion. Molecular phylogenetic analyses of the five chloroplast genes and the internal transcribed spacer regions of nuclear ribosomal DNA indicated that V. ovalis is closely related to V. spermatosphaera Powers and/or V. tertius Meyer; however, V. ovalis can be distinguished from V. spermatosphaera by its larger gonidia, and from V. tertius by visible differences in gonidial chloroplast morphology.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 19249
AU - Nozaki,Hisayoshi
AU - Coleman,Annette W.
T1 - A new species of Volvox sect. Merrillosphaera (Volvocaceae, Chlorophyceae) from Texas
PY - 2010
KW - molecular phylogeny; morphology; taxonomy; Volvox ovalis sp. nov.; Volvox sect. Merrillosphaera
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Smith in 1944 divided the familiar genus Volvox Linnaeus into four sections, placing seven species that lacked cytoplasmic bridges between adult cells in the section Merrillosphaera. Here we describe a new member of the section Merrillosphaera originating from Texas (USA): V. ovalis M.A. Pocock ex H. Nozaki et A.W. Coleman, sp. nov. Asexual spheroids of V. ovalis are ovoid or elliptical, with a monolayer of 1,000-2,000 somatic cells that are not linked by cytoplasmic bridges, an expanded anterior region, and 8 to 12 gonidia in the posterior region. Visibly asymmetric cleavage divisions do not occur in V. ovalis embryos as they do V. carteri Stein, V. obversus (Shaw) Printz and V. africanus West, so the gonidia of the next generation are not yet recognizable in V. ovalis embryos prior to inversion. Molecular phylogenetic analyses of the five chloroplast genes and the internal transcribed spacer regions of nuclear ribosomal DNA indicated that V. ovalis is closely related to V. spermatosphaera Powers and/or V. tertius Meyer; however, V. ovalis can be distinguished from V. spermatosphaera by its larger gonidia, and from V. tertius by visible differences in gonidial chloroplast morphology.
L3 -
JF - Journal of Phycology
VL -
IS -
ER -