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Citation for Study 1150

About Citation title: "Gene sequence diversity and the phylogenetic position of algae assigned to the genera Phaeophila and Ochlochaete (Ulvophyceae, Chlorophyta).".
About This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1057 (Status: Published).

Citation

O'kelly C., Wysor B., & Bellows W. 2004. Gene sequence diversity and the phylogenetic position of algae assigned to the genera Phaeophila and Ochlochaete (Ulvophyceae, Chlorophyta). Journal of Phycology, null.

Authors

  • O'kelly C.
  • Wysor B.
  • Bellows W.

Abstract

The phylogenetic position of microfilamentous marine green algae assigned to the species Phaeophila dendroides (Crouan et Crouan) Batters, Entocladia tenuis Kylin (Phaeophila tenuis (Kylin) Nielsen), and Ochlochaete hystrix Thwaites was examined through phylogenetic analyses of nuclear-encoded SSU rRNA and chloroplast-encoded tufA gene sequences. These analyses placed the P. dendroides strains within the Ulvophyceae, at the base of a clade that contains representatives of the families Ulvaceae, Ulvellaceae and the species Bolbocoleon piliferum, supporting an earlier hypothesis that P. dendroides constitutes a distinct lineage. Substantial divergence in both nuclear and plastid DNA sequences exists among strains of Phaeophila dendroides from different geographic localities, but these isolated strains are morphologically indistinguishable. The lineage may have an accelerated rate of gene sequence evolution relative to other microfilamentous marine green algae. Entocladia tenuis and Ochlochaete hystrix are placed neither in the P. dendroides clade nor in the Ulvellaceae as previous taxonomic schemes predicted, but instead form a new clade or clades at the base of the Ulvaceae. Ruthnielsenia gen. nov. is proposed to accommodate Kylin's species, which cannot be placed in Entocladia (= Acrochaete), Phaeophila or Ochlochaete. Ruthnielsenia tenuis (Kylin) comb. nov., previously known only from Atlantic coasts, is reported for the first time from the Pacific coast of North America (San Juan Island, Washington, USA). Isolates of R. tenuis from the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of North America have identical SSU rRNA and tufA gene sequences.

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  • Canonical resource URI: http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1150
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