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Articles

Fragilariopsis (Bacillariophyceae) of the Northern Hemisphere – morphology, taxonomy, phylogeny and distribution, with a description of F. pacifica sp. nov.

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Pages 438-460 | Received 23 Nov 2009, Accepted 08 Feb 2010, Published online: 23 Apr 2019
 

Abstract

Lundholm N. and Hasle G.R. 2010. Fragilariopsis (Bacillariophyceae) of the Northern Hemisphere – morphology, taxonomy, phylogeny and distribution, with a description of F. pacifica sp. nov. Phycologia 49: 438–460. DOI: 10.2216/09-97.1

In polar areas, Fragilariopsis are among the most abundant phytoplankton organisms in plankton and ice. Four Fragilariopsis species, F. oceanica, F. reginae-jahniae, F. atlantica and F. pacifica sp. nov., recorded from and apparently restricted to the Northern Hemisphere have been explored with regard to morphology, distribution and phylogeny. Morphologically the examined species are pair-wise very similar and easily confused. Hence, the numerous records of F. oceanica from sea ice and plankton in Arctic waters most likely include F. reginae-jahniae. Fragilariopsis atlantica and the sibling species F. pacifica were found in the plankton, not in ice. All four species exhibit a pronounced valve variation related to the diminution of the apical length through vegetative reproduction (stadial variation). In F. oceanica and F. reginae-jahniae this is expressed by a variation in valve outline from being more linear to almost elliptical and in F. atlantica and F. pacifica by heteropolarity of the greater specimens. Fragilariopsis oceanica and F. reginae-jahniae differed in cell length and width, valve and girdle structures as did F. atlantica and F. pacifica. In the phylogenetic tree of Fragilariopsis, a biogeographical subdivision appeared with the Antarctic Fragilariopsis taxa forming one clade, the bipolar taxa a second clade and the Arctic taxa were found in a third clade and basal in the tree. The phylogenetic analyses support the morphological data and show F. oceanica and F. reginae-jahniae to be sister taxa. The morphologically defined F. oceanica were found to be paraphyletic, representing two cryptic species.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Rita Horner for providing a sample and LM of F. pacifica, Alice Chang for a sample with F. pacifica, Michel Poulin, Lyse Bérard-Therriault and Réal Gagnon for cultures and samples from Canada, Anette Sophie Grimsrud Davidsen for sediment from Norway, and Jørgen Kristiansen for translating the diagnosis of Fragilariopsis pacifica to Latin. G.R.H. thanks the Department of Biology, University of Oslo, for continuing working facilities and technical and financial support. Erik E. Syvertsen assisted during the preliminary part of the study.

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