@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20272,
author = {Anna Karnkowska-Ishikawa and Rafał Milanowski and Richard E. Triemer and Bożena Zakryś},
title = {A Rediscription of morphologically similar species from the genus Euglena: E. laciniata, E. sanguinea, E. sociabilis and E. splendens},
year = {2013},
keywords = {Euglena, Euglena laciniata, Euglena sanguinea, Euglena sociabilis, Euglena splendens, Euglenida, taxonomical revision, unusually expanded SSU rDNA sequences},
doi = {10.1111/jpy.12072},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Journal of Phycology},
volume = {49},
number = {3},
pages = {616?626},
abstract = {Euglena sanguinea (Ehrenberg, 1831) was one of the first green euglenoid species described in the literature. At first, the species aroused the interest of researchers mainly due to the blood-red color of its cells, which, as later turned out, is not a constant feature. Complicated chloroplast morphology, labeled by Pringsheim as the ?peculiar chromatophore system? made the correct identification of the species difficult, which is the reason why, throughout the 20th century, new species resembling E. sanguinea were continually being named due to a lack of suitable diagnostic features to distinguish E. sanguinea. Interest in E. sanguinea has returned in recent years, following findings that the species can produce ichthyotoxins. This was followed by the need to classify E. sanguinea correctly, which was achieved through the verification of morphological and molecular data (SSU rDNA) for all species similar to E. sanguinea. As the result of the analysis, the number of species sharing some morphological similarities with E. sanguinea could be reduced from 12, as described in the literature, to 4 (E. sanguinea Ehrenberg, E. sociabilis Dangeard, E. splendens Dangeard and E. laciniata Pringsheim), with established epitypes and updated diagnostic descriptions. The most important diagnostic features included: the presence of mucocysts, (i.e. whether they were visible before and/or after staining), the number of chloroplasts, the size of the double-sheathed pyrenoids, and the presence of the large paramylon grain in the vicinity of the stigma; cell size and chloroplast morphology served as secondary features. Moreover, sequence analysis revealed the presence of unusually long SSU rDNA sequences in E. sanguinea. Previously, SSU rDNA sequences of such length were known to be present only in primary osmotrophic euglenoids. }
}
Citation for Study 12193
Citation title:
"A Rediscription of morphologically similar species from the genus Euglena: E. laciniata, E. sanguinea, E. sociabilis and E. splendens".
Study name:
"A Rediscription of morphologically similar species from the genus Euglena: E. laciniata, E. sanguinea, E. sociabilis and E. splendens".
This study is part of submission 12193
(Status: Published).
Citation
Karnkowska-ishikawa A., Milanowski R., Triemer R., & Zakryś B. 2013. A Rediscription of morphologically similar species from the genus Euglena: E. laciniata, E. sanguinea, E. sociabilis and E. splendens. Journal of Phycology, 49(3): 616?626.
Authors
-
Karnkowska-ishikawa A.
-
Milanowski R.
-
Triemer R.
-
Zakryś B.
Abstract
Euglena sanguinea (Ehrenberg, 1831) was one of the first green euglenoid species described in the literature. At first, the species aroused the interest of researchers mainly due to the blood-red color of its cells, which, as later turned out, is not a constant feature. Complicated chloroplast morphology, labeled by Pringsheim as the ?peculiar chromatophore system? made the correct identification of the species difficult, which is the reason why, throughout the 20th century, new species resembling E. sanguinea were continually being named due to a lack of suitable diagnostic features to distinguish E. sanguinea. Interest in E. sanguinea has returned in recent years, following findings that the species can produce ichthyotoxins. This was followed by the need to classify E. sanguinea correctly, which was achieved through the verification of morphological and molecular data (SSU rDNA) for all species similar to E. sanguinea. As the result of the analysis, the number of species sharing some morphological similarities with E. sanguinea could be reduced from 12, as described in the literature, to 4 (E. sanguinea Ehrenberg, E. sociabilis Dangeard, E. splendens Dangeard and E. laciniata Pringsheim), with established epitypes and updated diagnostic descriptions. The most important diagnostic features included: the presence of mucocysts, (i.e. whether they were visible before and/or after staining), the number of chloroplasts, the size of the double-sheathed pyrenoids, and the presence of the large paramylon grain in the vicinity of the stigma; cell size and chloroplast morphology served as secondary features. Moreover, sequence analysis revealed the presence of unusually long SSU rDNA sequences in E. sanguinea. Previously, SSU rDNA sequences of such length were known to be present only in primary osmotrophic euglenoids.
Keywords
Euglena, Euglena laciniata, Euglena sanguinea, Euglena sociabilis, Euglena splendens, Euglenida, taxonomical revision, unusually expanded SSU rDNA sequences
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S12193
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20272,
author = {Anna Karnkowska-Ishikawa and Rafał Milanowski and Richard E. Triemer and Bożena Zakryś},
title = {A Rediscription of morphologically similar species from the genus Euglena: E. laciniata, E. sanguinea, E. sociabilis and E. splendens},
year = {2013},
keywords = {Euglena, Euglena laciniata, Euglena sanguinea, Euglena sociabilis, Euglena splendens, Euglenida, taxonomical revision, unusually expanded SSU rDNA sequences},
doi = {10.1111/jpy.12072},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Journal of Phycology},
volume = {49},
number = {3},
pages = {616?626},
abstract = {Euglena sanguinea (Ehrenberg, 1831) was one of the first green euglenoid species described in the literature. At first, the species aroused the interest of researchers mainly due to the blood-red color of its cells, which, as later turned out, is not a constant feature. Complicated chloroplast morphology, labeled by Pringsheim as the ?peculiar chromatophore system? made the correct identification of the species difficult, which is the reason why, throughout the 20th century, new species resembling E. sanguinea were continually being named due to a lack of suitable diagnostic features to distinguish E. sanguinea. Interest in E. sanguinea has returned in recent years, following findings that the species can produce ichthyotoxins. This was followed by the need to classify E. sanguinea correctly, which was achieved through the verification of morphological and molecular data (SSU rDNA) for all species similar to E. sanguinea. As the result of the analysis, the number of species sharing some morphological similarities with E. sanguinea could be reduced from 12, as described in the literature, to 4 (E. sanguinea Ehrenberg, E. sociabilis Dangeard, E. splendens Dangeard and E. laciniata Pringsheim), with established epitypes and updated diagnostic descriptions. The most important diagnostic features included: the presence of mucocysts, (i.e. whether they were visible before and/or after staining), the number of chloroplasts, the size of the double-sheathed pyrenoids, and the presence of the large paramylon grain in the vicinity of the stigma; cell size and chloroplast morphology served as secondary features. Moreover, sequence analysis revealed the presence of unusually long SSU rDNA sequences in E. sanguinea. Previously, SSU rDNA sequences of such length were known to be present only in primary osmotrophic euglenoids. }
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 20272
AU - Karnkowska-Ishikawa,Anna
AU - Milanowski,Rafał
AU - Triemer,Richard E.
AU - Zakryś,Bożena
T1 - A Rediscription of morphologically similar species from the genus Euglena: E. laciniata, E. sanguinea, E. sociabilis and E. splendens
PY - 2013
KW - Euglena
KW - Euglena laciniata
KW - Euglena sanguinea
KW - Euglena sociabilis
KW - Euglena splendens
KW - Euglenida
KW - taxonomical revision
KW - unusually expanded SSU rDNA sequences
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jpy.12072
N2 - Euglena sanguinea (Ehrenberg, 1831) was one of the first green euglenoid species described in the literature. At first, the species aroused the interest of researchers mainly due to the blood-red color of its cells, which, as later turned out, is not a constant feature. Complicated chloroplast morphology, labeled by Pringsheim as the ?peculiar chromatophore system? made the correct identification of the species difficult, which is the reason why, throughout the 20th century, new species resembling E. sanguinea were continually being named due to a lack of suitable diagnostic features to distinguish E. sanguinea. Interest in E. sanguinea has returned in recent years, following findings that the species can produce ichthyotoxins. This was followed by the need to classify E. sanguinea correctly, which was achieved through the verification of morphological and molecular data (SSU rDNA) for all species similar to E. sanguinea. As the result of the analysis, the number of species sharing some morphological similarities with E. sanguinea could be reduced from 12, as described in the literature, to 4 (E. sanguinea Ehrenberg, E. sociabilis Dangeard, E. splendens Dangeard and E. laciniata Pringsheim), with established epitypes and updated diagnostic descriptions. The most important diagnostic features included: the presence of mucocysts, (i.e. whether they were visible before and/or after staining), the number of chloroplasts, the size of the double-sheathed pyrenoids, and the presence of the large paramylon grain in the vicinity of the stigma; cell size and chloroplast morphology served as secondary features. Moreover, sequence analysis revealed the presence of unusually long SSU rDNA sequences in E. sanguinea. Previously, SSU rDNA sequences of such length were known to be present only in primary osmotrophic euglenoids.
L3 - 10.1111/jpy.12072
JF - Journal of Phycology
VL - 49
IS - 3
ER -