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Original Articles

Description of Ulvella elegans sp. nov. and U. islandica sp. nov. (Ulvellaceae, Ulvophyceae) from Iceland – a study based on morphology of species in culture and tufA gene sequences

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Pages 60-67 | Received 11 Apr 2013, Accepted 29 Sep 2013, Published online: 20 Feb 2014
 

Abstract

Two new Ulvella species, U. elegans R. Nielsen & K. Gunnarsson and U. islandica R. Nielsen & K. Gunnarsson are described. These microfilamentous marine green algae were found in the sublittoral zone in northern Iceland, epiphytic on Euthora cristata and associated with a calcareous polychaete tube, respectively. Unialgal cultures were established from field-collected material for morphological observations. In culture, Ulvella elegans was characterized by rosettes of monostromatic pseudoparenchyma consisting of radiating filaments with a margin of mutually free filaments. Each cell had one pyrenoid. Hairs were not observed. Ulvella islandica had a heterotrichous morphology, consisting of dense tufts of upright broad branches and much narrower, rhizoid-like branches. Acrochaete-type hairs occurred; these are hyaline non-septate merocytic extensions from a more or less bulbous base, which may be separated from the vegetative cell below. Most cells had one pyrenoid except for a few broad cells which had two or three. In a phylogenetic reconstruction based on the chloroplast-encoded tufA gene, the sequences for the two species were clearly distinct from any other Ulvella sequence available for this gene. Ulvella islandica was placed in a clade together with U. lens, U. wittrockii, U. reticulata and U. pseudorepens. Ulvella elegans occupied a branch deep in the phylogeny but the position was poorly supported.

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Svanhildur Egilsdóttir, Tryggvi Sveinsson, Erlendur Bogason, Juliet Brodie and Barbara Rinkel for their company and help during the sampling expedition. We thank Charlotte Hansen and Hannah Blossom for assistance with the molecular work. A Carlsberg Foundation grant supported the molecular work and equipment. Financial and logistic support was provided by the EU-program ‘Synthesys’ during analyses of the culture collections at Botanical Garden and Museum, Natural History Museum of Denmark.

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