The species concept in a marine diatom: LSU rDNA–based phylogenetic differentiation in Skeletonema marinoi/dohrnii (Bacillariophyceae) is not reflected in morphology

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The species concept in a marine diatom: LSU rDNA–based phylogenetic differentiation in Skeletonema marinoi/dohrnii (Bacillariophyceae) is not reflected in morphology. / Ellegaard, Marianne; Godhe, Anna; Härnström, Karolina; McQuoid, Melissa.

In: Phycologia, Vol. 47, No. 2, 2008, p. 156-167.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ellegaard, M, Godhe, A, Härnström, K & McQuoid, M 2008, 'The species concept in a marine diatom: LSU rDNA–based phylogenetic differentiation in Skeletonema marinoi/dohrnii (Bacillariophyceae) is not reflected in morphology', Phycologia, vol. 47, no. 2, pp. 156-167. https://doi.org/10.2216/07-09.1

APA

Ellegaard, M., Godhe, A., Härnström, K., & McQuoid, M. (2008). The species concept in a marine diatom: LSU rDNA–based phylogenetic differentiation in Skeletonema marinoi/dohrnii (Bacillariophyceae) is not reflected in morphology. Phycologia, 47(2), 156-167. https://doi.org/10.2216/07-09.1

Vancouver

Ellegaard M, Godhe A, Härnström K, McQuoid M. The species concept in a marine diatom: LSU rDNA–based phylogenetic differentiation in Skeletonema marinoi/dohrnii (Bacillariophyceae) is not reflected in morphology. Phycologia. 2008;47(2):156-167. https://doi.org/10.2216/07-09.1

Author

Ellegaard, Marianne ; Godhe, Anna ; Härnström, Karolina ; McQuoid, Melissa. / The species concept in a marine diatom: LSU rDNA–based phylogenetic differentiation in Skeletonema marinoi/dohrnii (Bacillariophyceae) is not reflected in morphology. In: Phycologia. 2008 ; Vol. 47, No. 2. pp. 156-167.

Bibtex

@article{27e23900e26e11ddb5fc000ea68e967b,
title = "The species concept in a marine diatom: LSU rDNA–based phylogenetic differentiation in Skeletonema marinoi/dohrnii (Bacillariophyceae) is not reflected in morphology",
abstract = "The ubiquitous marine diatom genus Skeletonema includes several newly described species. This paper presents a study of morphology and LSU sequence diversity of one of these new species, Skeletonema marinoi. The 15 monoclonal strains (from the Swedish west coast, the Swedish east coast, Portugal and Canada) included in the study showed differences in LSU rDNA sequence within the morphospecies, with differences seen even among clones established from a single plankton net sample. Morphologically, all clones were indistinguishable from each other and from the closely related species Skeletonema dohrnii. In the original description of these two species, they were differentiated by the structure of the girdle bands. However, the girdle band types of both species were found within single samples of almost all clones of S. marinoi in this study. The LSU-based phylogeny is consistent with the split into two species, and there may be a difference in their biogeographical distribution. We therefore do not at present suggest that the two species be merged. Questions regarding species delimitation and cryptic species within protists often arise from such studies that include data from both morphological and DNA sequence analysis, and such questions are addressed here.",
author = "Marianne Ellegaard and Anna Godhe and Karolina H{\"a}rnstr{\"o}m and Melissa McQuoid",
note = "KEYWORDS: Diatom, Population, Protist, SEM, TEM",
year = "2008",
doi = "10.2216/07-09.1",
language = "English",
volume = "47",
pages = "156--167",
journal = "Phycologia",
issn = "0031-8884",
publisher = "International Phycological Society",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The species concept in a marine diatom: LSU rDNA–based phylogenetic differentiation in Skeletonema marinoi/dohrnii (Bacillariophyceae) is not reflected in morphology

AU - Ellegaard, Marianne

AU - Godhe, Anna

AU - Härnström, Karolina

AU - McQuoid, Melissa

N1 - KEYWORDS: Diatom, Population, Protist, SEM, TEM

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - The ubiquitous marine diatom genus Skeletonema includes several newly described species. This paper presents a study of morphology and LSU sequence diversity of one of these new species, Skeletonema marinoi. The 15 monoclonal strains (from the Swedish west coast, the Swedish east coast, Portugal and Canada) included in the study showed differences in LSU rDNA sequence within the morphospecies, with differences seen even among clones established from a single plankton net sample. Morphologically, all clones were indistinguishable from each other and from the closely related species Skeletonema dohrnii. In the original description of these two species, they were differentiated by the structure of the girdle bands. However, the girdle band types of both species were found within single samples of almost all clones of S. marinoi in this study. The LSU-based phylogeny is consistent with the split into two species, and there may be a difference in their biogeographical distribution. We therefore do not at present suggest that the two species be merged. Questions regarding species delimitation and cryptic species within protists often arise from such studies that include data from both morphological and DNA sequence analysis, and such questions are addressed here.

AB - The ubiquitous marine diatom genus Skeletonema includes several newly described species. This paper presents a study of morphology and LSU sequence diversity of one of these new species, Skeletonema marinoi. The 15 monoclonal strains (from the Swedish west coast, the Swedish east coast, Portugal and Canada) included in the study showed differences in LSU rDNA sequence within the morphospecies, with differences seen even among clones established from a single plankton net sample. Morphologically, all clones were indistinguishable from each other and from the closely related species Skeletonema dohrnii. In the original description of these two species, they were differentiated by the structure of the girdle bands. However, the girdle band types of both species were found within single samples of almost all clones of S. marinoi in this study. The LSU-based phylogeny is consistent with the split into two species, and there may be a difference in their biogeographical distribution. We therefore do not at present suggest that the two species be merged. Questions regarding species delimitation and cryptic species within protists often arise from such studies that include data from both morphological and DNA sequence analysis, and such questions are addressed here.

U2 - 10.2216/07-09.1

DO - 10.2216/07-09.1

M3 - Journal article

VL - 47

SP - 156

EP - 167

JO - Phycologia

JF - Phycologia

SN - 0031-8884

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 9725799