4.1 Article

Morphology and molecular phylogeny of the marine diatom genus Nagumoea (Bacillariophyceae) from Japan

Journal

PHYCOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pre.12521

Keywords

Bacillariaceae; epiphytic diatoms; phylogenetic position; psbC; raphid diatoms; rbcL; SSU rRNA; taxonomy

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The study identified two species of Nagumoea diatoms from the Japanese coasts, Nagumoea africana and Nagumoea serrata, with high intra- and inter-specific divergences. Molecular phylogenetic analysis placed Nagumoea as a potential member of the Bacillariales order or its closely related outgroup. However, the exact phylogenetic position of Nagumoea with respect to other Bacillarialean members remains uncertain.
The canal-bearing diatom genus Nagumoea, described based on only morphological evidence, was tentatively assigned to the order Bacillariales, although its phylogenetic position remained unclear. Because three isolates of Nagumoea (SK002, SK024 and SK053) were successfully established from Japanese coasts, we performed their morphological observations and molecular phylogenetic analyses to discuss the phylogeny and taxonomic position of this genus. Strains SK002 and SK024 were identified as Nagumoea africana, whereas SK053 conformed with Nagumoea serrata. There was high interspecific divergence between N. africana and N. serrata in the rbcL sequences (8.03-8.17%), indicating their distinctness. Furthermore, intraspecific variations were detected within N. africana (2.35%) in the rbcL, implying its cryptic diversity. The maximum likelihood and Bayesian phylogenetic trees inferred from the plastid rbcL, psbC and nuclear 18S rDNA genes recovered Nagumoea as monophyletic with strong statistical support and embedded within an unresolved, poorly supported lineage containing Achnanthes, Craspedostauros, Staurotropis and Undatella in the canal-bearing order Bacillariales (= the family Bacillariaceae). Although the constrained tree based on the monophyly of Nagumoea and the other canal-bearing clade (Surirellales and Rhopalodiales) was statistically rejected by the topology tests, the phylogenetic position of Nagumoea with other Bacillarialean members remains equivocal. The possession of two plastids positioned fore and aft, observed in the present study, and lack of keel, typical of the Bacillariales, indicate the possibility of Nagumoea being part of the ingroup of the Bacillariales or its closely related outgroup.

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