2005
Title: Differences in
the effects of metals on growth of two freshwater green algae (Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata (Korshikov) Hindak and Gonium
pectorale Muller)
Author(s): Pereira MJ,
Resende P,
Azeiteiro UM,
Oliveira J,
de Figueiredo DR
Source: BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY 75 (3): 515-522 SEP 2005
2002
Nozaki H, Takahara M, Nakazawa A, et al.
Evolution of rbcL group IA introns and intron open reading frames within the colonial Volvocales (Chlorophyceae)
MOL PHYLOGENET EVOL 23 (3): 326-338 JUN 2002
Abstract:
2001
Coleman AW
Biogeography
and speciation in the Pandorina/Volvulina (Chlorophyta) superclade
J PHYCOL 37 (5): 836-851 OCT 2001
Abstract:
Mating affinity, nuclear rDNA internal transcribed
spacer (ITS) sequence, and geographic distribution of more than 100 isolates of
Pandorina,Volvulina, and Yamagishiella
were determined. Comparative analysis of ITS sequences reaffirmed the unity of Pandorina morum and its
separation from all other species of Volvocaceae
except those of Volvulina. This latter genus,
represented by four species, appears to represent only morphological variants
of several P. morum subclades.
The P. morum clade
(including also additional species such as P. smithii
and P. colemaniae) encompasses an evolutionary span,
as determined by comparison of ITS, greater than
either of the multispecies genera Gonium or Eudorina. There are at least 30 Pandorina/Volvulina
syngens, sexually isolated groups, so far as can be
determined, among the current collection of strains. In addition, as in other volvocacaean genera, two clones are homothallic, capable of
forming zygotes within a genetic clone. The existence of so many syngens suggests that considerable evolutionary diversification
of the genes controlling gamete compatibility and intercross survival has
occurred, unaccompanied by significant morphological change. Within each syngen, genetic distance increases with geographic distance
between collection sites. At least half of the isolates studied must have been
introduced northward since the Pleistocene. Although we probably know more
about characters in this group of algae than any other algal group, in part
because they are so easy to culture, we are still largely ignorant of what
circumscribes their niche in nature. The study of all these organisms,
distributed throughout the world presumably by the activities of shorebirds,
emphasizes the evolutionary role of mating genes in the inevitable formation of
new genetically isolated subclades in these
eukaryotes and provides initial data on their rate of appearance versus their
rate of distribution over the earth.
1999
Nozaki H,
Ohta N, Takano H, et al.
Reexamination
of phylogenetic relationships within the colonial Volvocales (Chlorophyta): An
analysis of atpB and rbcL
gene sequences
J PHYCOL 35 (1): 104-112 FEB 1999
Abstract:
The chloroplast-encoded atpB gene was sequenced from
33 strains representing 28 species of the colonial Volvocales
(the Volvocaceae and its relatives) to reexamine phylogenetic relationships as previously deduced by
morphological data and rbcL gene sequence data.1128
base pairs in the coding regions of the atpB gene
were analyzed by MP, NJ, and ML analyses, Although supported with relatively
low bootstrap values (75% and 65% in the NJ and ML analyses, respectively),
three anisogamous/oogamous volvocacean
genera-Eudorina, Pleodorina,
and Volvox, excluding the section Volvox(=
Euvolvox, illegitimate name), constituted a large
monophyletic group (Eudorina group), Outside the Eudorina group, a robust Lineage composed of three species
of Volvox sect, Volvox was
resolved as in the rbcL gene trees, rejecting the hypothesis
of the previous cladistic analysis based on
morphological data that the genus Volvox is
monophyletic, In addition, the NJ and ML trees suggested that Eudorina is a non-monophyletic genus as inferred from the
morphological data and rbcL gene sequences. Although phylogenetic status of the genus Gonium is ambiguous
in the rbcL gene trees and the paraphyly
of this genus is resolved in the cladistic analysis
based on morphological data, the atpB gene sequence
data suggest monophyly of Gonium with relatively
low bootstrap values (56-61%) in the NJ and ML trees. On the basis of the
combined sequence data (2256 base pairs) from atpB
and rbcL genes, Gonium was resolved as a
robust monophyletic genus in the NJ and ML trees (with 68-86% bootstrap
values), and Eudorina elegans
Ehrenberg represented a paraphyletic species
positioned most basally within the Eudorina group,
However, phylogenetic status and relationships of the
families of the colonial Volvocales were still almost
ambiguous even in the combined analysis.
Fabry S, Kohler A, Coleman AW
Intraspecies analysis: Comparison of ITS sequence data and gene intron sequence data with breeding data for a worldwide
collection of Gonium pectorale
J MOL EVOL 48 (1): 94-101 JAN 1999
Abstract:
The morphologically uniform species Gonium pectorale
is a colonial green flagellate of worldwide distribution. The affinities of 25
isolates from 18 sites on five continents were assessed by both DNA sequence
comparisons and sexual compatibility. Complete sequences were obtained (i) for the internal transcribed spacer ITS-1 and ITS-2
regions of ribosomal DNA and (ii) for each of three single-copy spliceosomal introns, two in a
small G protein and one in the actin gene. ITS
sequences appeared to homogenize sufficiently rapidly to behave as a single
copy gene. Intron sequence differences between
isolates in this species reached nucleotide substitution saturation, while ITS
sequences did not. Parsimony and evolutionary distance analysis of the two
types of DNA data gave essentially the same tree conformation. By all these
criteria, the group of G. pectorale isolates fell
into two main clades, A and B. Clade
A, with isolates from four continents, was comprised of four subclades of quite closely related isolates, plus one
strain of ambiguous affinity. Clade B was comprised
of two subclades represented by South African and
South American isolates, respectively; thus, only subclades
of clade B showed geographical localization. With
respect to mating, all isolates except one homothallic strain and one
apparently sterile strain fell into either one or the other of two mating
types. Pairings in all possible combinations revealed that isolates from the
same site formed abundant zygotes, which germinated to produce new, sexually
active organisms. Zygotes were also formed in many pairings of other
combinations, including crosses of clade A with clade B organisms, but none of the latter produced viable germlings. The ability to mate and produce viable progeny
that were themselves capable of sexual reproduction was restricted to members
of subclades established on the basis of DNA sequence
similarities. Thus, the grades of difference in both nuclear intron sequences and rDNA ITS
sequences paralleled those observed in the sexual analysis.
1998
Coleman AW, Preparata RM, Mehrotra B, et al.
Derivation of
the secondary structure of the ITS-1 transcript in volvocales
and its taxonomic correlations
PROTIST 149 (2): 135-146 MAY 1998
Abstract:
Knowledge of secondary structure, formed by the gene spacer regions of the
primary transcript of nuclear rDNA cistrons, is lacking for most phyla of eukaryotes. We have
sequenced the first internal transcribed spacer region (ITS-1) of multiple
representatives of the Volvocales, and from
comparisons of these, derived a secondary structure common to the entire group.
The secondary structure model is supported by numerous compensating base pair
changes located within the paired regions of the stem-loops. Within the
morphological species, such as those of Astrephomene
and Gonium, the three basal nucleotide pairs of helices are highly
conserved in primary sequence, and the single stranded region rich in CCAA is
identical in sequence, even when isolates come from all continents of the
earth. In other Volvocacean species known to include
many pairs of mating types, this same level of conservation is found to
correlate with the mating subgroups of the species. Thus a comparable degree of
sequence similarity appears to characterize all isolates of a
"biological" species; this is valid for taxonomic species only where
the biological and taxonomic species levels coincide. In addition, the ITS-1
contains information useful for population analyses, and spacer secondary
structure may have additional phylogenetic utility at
the level of class or subclass when that information becomes available for
other protistan groups.
Nozaki H,
Ohta N, Yamada T, et al.
Characterization
of rbcL group IA introns
from two colonial volvocalean species (Chlorophyceae)
PLANT MOL BIOL 37 (1): 77-85 MAY 1998
Abstract:
Group I introns were reported for the first time in
the large subunit of Rubisco (rbcL)
genes, using two colonial green algae, Pleodorina californica and Gonium multicoccum
(Volvocales). The rbcL gene
of P. californica contained an intron
(PlC intron) of 1320 bp harboring an open reading frame (ORF). The G. multicoccum rbcL gene had two
ORF-lacking introns of 549 (GM1 intron)
and 295 (GM2 intron) base pairs. Based on the conserved
nucleotide sequences of the secondary structure, the PlC
and GM1 introns were assigned to group IA2 whereas
the GM2 intron belonged to group IA1. Southern
hybridization analyses of nuclear and chloroplast DNAs
indicated that such intron-containing rbcL genes are located in the chloroplast genome.
Sequencing RNAs from the two algae revealed that
these introns are spliced out during mRNA maturation.
In addition, the PlC and GM1 introns
were inserted in the same position of the rbcL exons, and phylogenetic analysis
of group IA introns indicated a close phylogenetic relationship between the PlC
and GM1 introns within the lineage of bacteriophage group IA2 introns.
However, P. californica and G. multicoccum
occupy distinct clades in the phylogenetic
trees of the colonial Volvocales, and the majority of
other colonial volvocalean species do not have such introns in the rbcL genes.
Therefore, these introns might have been recently
inserted in the rbcL genes independently by
horizontal transmission by viruses or bacteriophage.
Haller K, Fabry S
Brefeldin A affects synthesis and integrity of a eukaryotic
flagellum
BIOCHEM BIOPH RES CO 242 (3): 597-601
Abstract:
Eukaryotic flagella and cilia are highly dynamic organelles. In green algae
like Chlamydomonas reinhardtii,
flagella absorption and resynthesis is a normal
process during the vegetative cell cycle. Rapid regeneration also occurs after
stress-induced shedding of flagella. Ca2+ ions, protein synthesis, and a kinase activity are the main factors known to affect resynthesis. Recently, we have detected that certain small
G proteins (Ypt/Rab) and a GTPase
regulator (GDP dissociation inhibitor), known as regulatory elements of
intracellular vesicle transport, are present in flagellar
membranes of green algae, raising the possibility that the organelle's
synthesis and/or integrity depends on functional membrane traffic. In this
study, we examined the effect of brefeldin A (BFA),
an inhibitor of intracellular membrane flow and Golgi
function in animal and plant cells, on flagella regeneration in the colonial
green alga Gonium pectorale. We show that low
BFA concentrations (<1 mu g/ml) inhibit flagella
outgrowth, while higher amounts cause dose-dependent deflagellation
and cell death. Our findings provide experimental evidence for a direct
connection between intracellular transport and eukaryotic flagella synthesis. (C) 1998 Academic Press.
1995
FAWLEY MW, BUCHHEIM MA
LOROXANTHIN,
A PHYLOGENETICALLY USEFUL CHARACTER IN CHLAMYDOMONAS AND OTHER CHLOROPHYCEAN FLAGELLATES
J PHYCOL 31 (4): 664-667 AUG 1995
Abstract:
The distribution of loroxanthin in chlorophycean flagellates is consistent with their
phylogeny as inferred from molecular and organismal
characters. Although polarity of this character cannot yet be determined, if
the absence of loroxanthin is plesiomorphic
for chlorophycean flagellates, the presence of loroxanthin defines a clade that
includes the Euchlamydomonas morphological group, two
other species of Chlamydomonas, C, asymmetrica and C. oblonga, and Gonium
pectorale. A subsequent reversal to loroxanthin absence is apomorphic
for the more complex volvocacean taxa.
These results suggest that loroxanthin distribution
will be useful for resolving phylogenetic questions
in green algae.
1994
HOOPS HJ, LONG JJ, HILE ES
FLAGELLAR
APPARATUS STRUCTURE IS SIMILAR BUT NOT IDENTICAL IN VOLVULINA-STEINII,
EUDORINA-ELEGANS, AND PLEODORINA-ILLINOISENSIS (CHLOROPHYTA) - IMPLICATIONS FOR
THE VOLVOCINE EVOLUTIONARY LINEAGE
J PHYCOL 30 (4): 679-689 AUG 1994
Abstract:
The colonial and multicellular members of the Volvocales can be arranged in order of increasing size and
complexity as the ''volvocine series.'' This series
is often assumed to reflect an evolutionary progression. The flagellar apparatuses of previously examined algae are not
consistent with a simple lineage. The flagellar
apparatuses of Astrephomene gubernaculifera
Pocock, Gonium pectorale
Muller, Platydorina caudata
Kofoid, Volvox rousseletii G. S. West, and V. carteri
f. weismannia (Powers) Iyengar
differ from one another, and there is no apparent progression in flagellar apparatus features from the simple to complex
colonial forms. We examined the flagellar apparatuses
of Volvulina steinii Playfair, Eudorina elegans Ehr., and Pleodorina illinoisensis Kofoid and found
then to be similar to one another. The basal bodies ave
connected by a distal fiber that is offset to the anti side of the cell. Two microtubular rootlets originate on the inside of the basal
bodies and extend toward the syn side. The other two
rootlets are oriented perpendicular to the first two and are anti-parallel to
each other. A coarsely striated component underlies the four-membered rootlets and extends to the basal bodies. A
proximal fiber complex connects the two basal bodies. This complex consists of
a branched striated component on the cis side of each
basal body. One part extends toward the anti side of the cell, while the other
extends into a fibrous component that runs between basal bodies. An additional
structure extends in the anti direction from the trans
side of each basal body. A fibrous component extends past one basal body in all
four species. This component goes past the trans basal
body in Volvulina steinii
and the cis basal body in E. elegans
and P. illinoisensis. The flagellar
apparatuses of these organisms are similar to those of G. pectorale
and Volvox carteri but
different from the other colonial volvocalean algae
examined. The algae examined in this study plus G. pectorale
and V. carteri probably share a common evolutionary
history that postdates the transition from the unicellular to colonial habit.
Such a shared evolutionary history is a requirement of the volvocine
hypothesis. However, we have not observed progressive changes in the flagellar apparatus correlated with increasing cell number,
differentiation, and sexual specialization. Thus, it is possible, but not
certain, that G. pectorale, Volvulina
steinii, E. elegans, P. illinoisensis, and Volvox carteri may form part of a volvocine
lineage.
NOZAKI H, KUROIWA H, KUROIWA T
LIGHT AND
ELECTRON-MICROSCOPIC CHARACTERIZATION OF 2 TYPES OF PYRENOIDS IN GONIUM (GONIACEAE, CHLOROPHYTA)
J PHYCOL 30 (2): 279-290 APR 1994
Abstract:
The single, basal pyrenoids of Gonium quadratum Pringsheim ex Nozaki
and G. pectorale Muller (Goniaceae,
Chlorophyta) differed in appearance when vegetative
colonies were cultured photoheterotrophically in
medium containing sodium acetate. Chloroplasts of G. quadratum
had distinct pyrenoids when grown in medium without
major carbon compounds. However, the pyrenoids
degenerated and were markedly reduced in size when such cells were inoculated
into a medium containing 400 mg.L-1 of sodium acetate. No pyrenoids
were visible under the light microscope; however, with electron microscopy
small pyrenoids and electron-dense bodies were
visible within the degenerating chloroplasts, which had only single layers of thylakoid lamellae at the periphery. The chloroplasts
subsequently developed distinct pyrenoids and several
layers of thylakoid lamellae as the culture aged. In
contrast, vegetative cells of G. pectorale always
showed distinct pyrenoids when cells were inoculated
into medium containing sodium acetate, sodium pyruvic
acid, sodium lactate, and/or yeast extract. Therefore, we propose two terms,
''unstable pyrenoids'' and ''stable pyrenoids, '' for pyrenoids of G.
quadratum and G. pectorale,
respectively. Chloroplasts of the colonial green flagellates should thus be
examined under various culture conditions in order to determine whether their pyrenoids are unstable or stable when pyrenoids
are used as taxonomic indicators. Immunogold electron
microscopy showed that the ratios of gold particle density of ribulose-1,5-biphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase
(RuBisCO) between pyrenoid
matrix and chloroplast stroma in G. quadratum grown in medium with or without sodium acetate
were lower than those of G. pectorale. Heavy labeling
by anti-RuBisCO was observed in both the
electron-dense bodies and pyrenoid matrix of G. quadratum. This is the first electron microscopic
demonstration of degeneration and development of both pyrenoids
and thylakoid lamallae in
the chloroplast as a function of culture condition in green algae.
NOZAKI H, ITOH M
PHYLOGENETIC-RELATIONSHIPS
WITHIN THE COLONIAL VOLVOCALES (CHLOROPHYTA) INFERRED FROM CLADISTIC-ANALYSIS
BASED ON MORPHOLOGICAL DATA
J PHYCOL 30 (2): 353-365 APR 1994
Abstract:
A cladistic analysis was used to deduce the phylogenetic relationships within the colonial Volvocales. Forty-one pairs of characters related to gross
morphology and ultrastructure of vegetative colonies
as well as asexual and sexual reproduction were analyzed based on parsimony,
using the PAUP 3.0 computer program, for 25 species belonging to nine volvocacean and goniacean genera
of the colonial Volvocales. Chlamydomonas
reinhardtii Dangeard was the outgroup. The strict consensus
tree indicated the presence of two monophyletic groups, one composed of all the
volvocacean species analyzed in this study and the other
containing the goniacean species except for the
four-celled species Gonium sociale (Dujardin) Warming. In addition, these two groups constitute
a large monophyletic group, to which G. sociale is a
sister group. A new combination Tetrabaena socialis (Dujardin) Nozaki et Itoh and a new family Tetrabaenaceae Nozaki et Itoh are
thus proposed for G. sociale. In addition, the
analysis suggests that the volvocacean genera Eudorina and Pleodorina are paraphyletic groups, respectively, and that the monotypic genus
Yamagishiella has no autapomorphic
characters and represents primitive features of the anisogamous
and oogamous genera of the Volvocaceae.
Phylogenetic relationships within the Volvocaceae and the Goniaceae, as
well as the various modes of sexual reproduction exhibited by these organisms,
are discussed on the basis of the analysis.
COLEMAN AW, SUAREZ A, GOFF LJ
MOLECULAR
DELINEATION OF SPECIES AND SYNGENS IN VOLVOCACEAN GREEN-ALGAE (CHLOROPHYTA)
J PHYCOL 30 (1): 80-90 FEB 1994
Abstract:
Two species of the colonial flagellate family Volvocaceae
are worldwide in distribution yet exhibit contrasting species structure.
Geographically disparate isolates of Gonium pectorale
Mueller can interbreed while isolates of Pandorina morum Bory behave quite
differently, More than 20 sexually isolated subpopulations occur within this
species; these have been termed ''syngens'' (sensu Sonneborn). Because prezygotic barriers to mating cause intersyngen
pairings to fail, breeding analyses cannot be used to estimate genetic
relatedness among the syngens of P. morum. DNA comparisons provide an alternative method of
assessing genetic relatedness. We compared the nucleotide sequence of the
internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of the nuclear ribosomal repeat among
clones of P. morum and of G. pectorale.
Members of syngens of P. morum
with distribution restricted to one small geographical area show great
similarity. Likewise, members of any syngen of
worldwide distribution show near uniformity, even those from different
continents. However, the ITS sequence of each syngen
differs from that of other syngens. In contrast, G. pectorale, which has an ITS region
that is remarkably uniform throughout the world, appears to consist of a single
syngen within
1993
NOZAKI H
ASEXUAL AND
SEXUAL REPRODUCTION IN GONIUM-QUADRATUM
(CHLOROPHYTA) WITH A DISCUSSION OF PHYLOGENETIC-RELATIONSHIPS WITHIN THE
GONIACEAE
J PHYCOL 29 (3): 369-376 JUN 1993
Abstract:
Morphological details of asexual and sexual reproduction in Gonium quadratum Pringsheim ex Nozaki (Goniaceae, Chlorophyta) were
observed by light microscopy, based on clonal
cultured materials originating from
1992
LARSON A, KIRK MM, KIRK DL
MOLECULAR
PHYLOGENY OF THE VOLVOCINE FLAGELLATES
MOL BIOL EVOL 9 (1): 85-105 JAN 1992
Abstract:
Phylogenetic studies of approximately 2,000 bases of
sequence from the large and small nuclear-encoded ribosomal RNAs
are used to investigate the origins of the genus Volvox.
The colonial and multicellular genera currently
placed in the family Volvocaceae form a monophyletic
group that is significantly closer phylogenetically
to Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
than it is to the other unicellular green flagellates that were tested,
including Chlamydomonas eugametos,
Chlorella pyrenoidosa, and Haematococcus
lacustris. Statistical analysis of 251 phylogenetically informative nucleotide positions rejects
the "volvocine lineage" hypothesis, which
postulates a monophyletic evolutionary progression from unicellular organisms
(such as Chlamydomonas), through colonial organisms
(e.g., Gonium, Pandorina, Eudorina,
and Pleodorina) demonstrating increasing size, cell
number, and tendency toward cellular differentiation, to multicellular
organisms having fully differentiated somatic and reproductive cells (in the
genus Volvox). The genus Volvox
appears not to be monophyletic. Volvox capensis falls outside a lineage containing other
representatives of Volvox(V. aureus, V. carteri,
and V. obversus), and both of these Volvox lineages are more closely related to certain
colonial genera than they are to each other. This implies either a diphyletic origin of Volvox from
different colonial volvocacean ancestors, a phylogenetic derivation of some of the colonial genera from
a multicellular (i.e., Volvox)
ancestor, or both. Considered together with previously published observations,
these results suggest that the different levels of organizational and
developmental complexity found in the Volvocaceae
represent alternative stable states, among which evolutionary transitions have
occurred several times during the phylogenetic
history of this group.
1991
NOZAKI H, KUROIWA T
MORPHOLOGY
AND SEXUAL REPRODUCTION OF GONIUM-MULTICOCCUM
(VOLVOCALES, CHLOROPHYTA) FROM NEPAL
PHYCOLOGIA 30 (5): 381-393 SEP 1991
Abstract:
Strains of Gonium (Volvocales, Chlorophyta) were isolated from a soil sample collected in
SAKO Y, SHRESTHA
K, UCHIDA A, et al.
ISOZYME
ANALYSIS OF MATING POPULATIONS OF GONIUM-PECTORALE
(CHLOROPHYTA)
J PHYCOL 27 (2): 309-315 APR 1991
Abstract:
Intraspecific variation among 36 strains of the
freshwater alga Gonium pectorale Muller (Chlorophyceae) isolated from three geographically different
locations in
1990
NOZAKI H
ULTRASTRUCTURE
OF THE EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX OF GONIUM
(VOLVOCALES, CHLOROPHYTA)
PHYCOLOGIA 29 (1): 1-8 MAR 1990
1989
NOZAKI H
MORPHOLOGICAL
VARIATION AND REPRODUCTION IN GONIUM-VIRIDISTELLATUM
(VOLVOCALES, CHLOROPHYTA)
PHYCOLOGIA 28 (1): 77-88 MAR 1989
1986
NOZAKI H
SEXUAL
REPRODUCTION IN GONIUM-SOCIALE
(CHLOROPHYTA, VOLVOCALES)
PHYCOLOGIA 25 (1): 29-35 MAR 1986
1985
GREUEL BT, FLOYD GL
DEVELOPMENT
OF THE FLAGELLAR APPARATUS AND FLAGELLAR ORIENTATION IN THE COLONIAL GREEN-ALGA
GONIUM-PECTORALE (VOLVOCALES)
J PHYCOL 21 (3): 358-371 1985
1983
GREUEL BT, FLOYD GL
ULTRASTRUCTURAL
STUDIES ON GONIUM-PECTORALE (VOLVOCALES,
CHLOROPHYTA) WITH EMPHASIS ON THE FLAGELLAR APPARATUS OF VEGETATIVE CELLS
1976
SHYAM R, SARMA YSRK
EFFECTS OF
COLCHICINE ON CELL-DIVISION OF A COLONIAL GREEN ALGAL FLAGELLATE GONIUM-PECTORALE MULLER
CARYOLOGIA 29 (1): 27-33 1976
STEIN JR, MCCAULEY MJ
SEXUAL COMPATIBILITY
IN GONIUM-PECTORALE
(VOLVOCALES-CHLOROPHYCEAE) FROM SOIL OF A SINGLE POND
CAN J BOT 54 (10): 1126-1130 1976
SAITO S
SULFUR
REQUIREMENT OF GONIUM
(VOLVOCACEAE)
PLANT CELL PHYSIOL 17 (2): 407-410 1976
1975
SHYAM R, SARMA YSRK
CERTAIN
ASPECTS OF MITOTIC DIVISION IN GONIUM-PECTORALE
MULLER (VOLVOCALES)
NUCLEUS 18 (3): 129-137 1975
SAITO S, ICHIMURA T
OBSERVATIONS
OF COLONIAL MULTIPLICATION IN A RAPIDLY GROWING ALGA, GONIUM-MULTICOCCUM POCOCK (VOLVOCACEAE)
BOT MAG
SAITO S
D-LACTATE
UTILIZATION BY GONIUM
(CHLOROPHYCEAE)
J PHYCOL 11 (2): 222-224 1975