4.2 Article

DNA sequencing reveals three new species of Chamberlainium (Corallinales, Rhodophyta) from South Africa, all formerly passing under Spongites yendoi

Journal

BOTANICA MARINA
Volume 64, Issue 1, Pages 19-40

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/bot-2020-0074

Keywords

biogeography; Chamberlainoideae; cryptic diversity; morpho-anatomy; non-geniculate coralline algae.

Funding

  1. Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology at the University of the Western Cape
  2. South African National Research Foundation (NRF)
  3. South African National Botanical Institute (SANBI)
  4. Department of Science and Technology (DST)

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This study describes three new non-geniculate coralline algal species from South Africa, originally misidentified as Spongites yendoi. Through DNA sequences and morphoanatomical characteristics, these species are classified into the genus Chamberlainium rather than Pneophyllum. The three species can be distinguished by their habits, habitats, geographic distributions, and morphoanatomical features.
Three new non-geniculate coralline algal species from South Africa are described that were passing under the misapplied name, Spongites yendoi. Based on plastid encoded DNA sequences from psbA and rbcL markers, these species belong in the subfamily Chamberlainoideae. The DNA sequences, supported by the morphoanatomical character of tetrasporangial conceptacle roof development, placed all three species in the genus Chamberlainium and not Pneophyllum, the only other genus in Chamberlainoideae. In addition to the diagnostic DNA sequences, Chamberlainium capense sp. nov., C. glebosum sp. nov. and Chamberlainium occidentale sp. nov. may be distinguished by a combination of habit, habitat, geographic distribution, and several morpho-anatomical features. Biogeographically all three species are found in the Benguela Marine Province of South Africa, with C. occidentale being the most widespread. Chamberlainium glebosum also has a wide, but disjunct distribution and C. capense is another South African endemic nongeniculate coralline, whose range is restricted to a 43 km stretch of coastline. Thus far, DNA sequences from type specimens of non-geniculate corallines show that only those species whose type localities are from South Africa are correctly applied; all other non-geniculate coralline names are likely misapplied in South Africa.

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