NOZAKI H, KUROIWA T
ULTRASTRUCTURE
OF THE EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX AND TAXONOMY OF EUDORINA, PLEODORINA AND YAMAGISHIELLA GEN-NOV (VOLVOCACEAE, CHLOROPHYTA)
PHYCOLOGIA 31 (6): 529-541 NOV 1992
Abstract:
Vegetative colonies of Pandorina unicocca
Rayburn et Starr, four taxa of Eudorina
[E. elegans Ehrenberg (type species), E. illinoisensis (Kofoid) Pascher, E. unicocca G.M. Smith
var. unicocca and E. unicocca
var. peripheralis Goldstein] and two species of Pleodorina [P. californica
Shaw (type species) and P. indica (Iyengar) Nozaki] were examined with electron microscopy in
order to characterize the structure of the extracellular
matrix. Each cell of the colonies of all the taxa
examined was tightly enclosed by a dense fibrillar
zone of the extracellular matrix (cellular envelope)
with sparse fibrillar material filling the space
outside the cellular envelopes within the tripartite colonial boundary of the
matrix. This arrangement is essentially different from that of Pandorina morum (O.F. Muller) Bory (type species) and P. colemaniae
Nozaki. As Eudorina and Pleodorina
both have anisogamous sexual reproduction with sperm
packets (bundles of male gametes), a new genus, Yamagishiella
Nozaki, is proposed for encompassing the isogamous
species Yamagishiella unicocca
(Rayburn et Starr) Nozaki comb. nov. [Pandorina
unicocca].
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.