2006
Title: Morphology, molecular phylogeny and taxonomy of two new
species of Pleodorina (Volvoceae, Chlorophyceae)
Author(s): Nozaki H (Nozaki, Hisayoshi), Ott FD (Ott, Franklyn D.), Coleman AW (Coleman, Annette W.)
Source: JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY 42 (5): 1072-1080 OCT 2006
Abstract: The volvocacean genus Pleodorina has been
morphologically characterized as having small somatic cells in spheroidal colonies
and anisogamous sexual reproduction with sperm packets. In this study we
examined two new species that can be assigned to the genus Pleodorina
based on morphology: P. starrii H. Nozaki et al. sp. nov.
and P. thompsonii F. D. Ott et al. sp. nov. P. starrii
was collected from
Title: Morphogenesis in the family Volvocaceae: Different
tactics for turning an embryo right-side out
Author(s): Hallmann A (Hallmann, Armin)
Source: PROTIST 157 (4): 445-461 OCT 2006
Abstract: Green algae of the family Volvocaceae provide an
unrivalled opportunity to analyze an evolutionary pathway leading from
unicellularity to multicellularity with division of labor. One key step
required for achieving multicellularity in this group was the development of a
process for turning an embryo inside out: a morphogenetic process that is now
known as "inversion," and that is a diagnostic feature of the group.
Inversion is essential because at the end of its embryonic cleavage divisions,
each volvocacean embryo contains all of the cells that will be present in an
adult, but the flagellar ends of all cells are pointed toward the interior,
rather than toward the exterior where they will need to be to function in
locomotion. Inversion has been studied in greatest detail in Volvox carteri,
but although all other volvocacean species have to struggle with the same
awkward situation of being wrong-side out at the end of cleavage, they do it in
rather different ways. Here, the inversion processes of six different
volvocacean species (Gonium pectorale, Pandorina morum, Eudorina unicocca,
Volvox carteri, Volvox tertius, and Volvox globator) are compared, in order to
illustrate the variation in inversion patterns that exists within this family.
The simplest inversion process occurs in the plate-shaped alga Gonium
pectorale, and the most complicated in the spherical alga Volvox globator
Gonium pectorale goes only from a concave-bowl shape to a slightly convex
plate. In Volvox globator, the posterior hemisphere inverts completely before
the anterior pole opens and the anterior hemisphere slides over the
already-inverted posterior hemisphere; during both halves of this inversion
process, the regions of maximum cell-sheet curvature move progressively, as
radially symmetrical waves, along the posterior-anterior axis.
2005
Title: A twelve-step program for evolving multicellularity and a
division of labor
Author(s): Kirk DL
Source: BIOESSAYS 27 (3): 299-310 MAR 2005
Abstract: The volvocine algae provide an unrivalled
opportunity to explore details of an evolutionary pathway leading from a
unicellular ancestor to multicellular organisms with a division of labor
between different cell types. Members of this monophyletic group of green
flagellates range in complexity from unicellular Chlamydomonas through a series
of extant organisms of intermediate size and complexity to Volvox, a genus of
spherical organisms that have thousands of cells and a germ-soma division of
labor. It is estimated that these organisms all shared a common ancestor about
50 +/- 20 MYA. Here we outline twelve important ways in which the developmental
repertoire of an ancestral unicell similar to modern C. reinhardtii was
modified to produce first a small colonial organism like Gonium that was
capable of swimming directionally, then a sequence of larger organisms (such as
Pandorina, Eudorina and Pleodorina) in which there was an increasing
tendency to differentiate two cell types, and eventually Volvox carteri with
its complete germ-soma division of labor.
Title: The occurrence of a bloom-forming green alga Pleodorina
indica (Volvocales) in the downstream reach of the River Malse (
Author(s): Znachor P, Jezberova J
Source: HYDROBIOLOGIA 541: 221-228
Abstract: In mid-August 2003 a massive bloom of the green alga Pleodorina
indica (Iyengar) Nozaki (Volvocales) occurred in the downstream reach of the
River Malse in the
2003
Nozaki H
Origin and
evolution of the genera Pleodorina
and Volvox (Volvocales)
BIOLOGIA 58 (4): 425-431 JUL 2003
Abstract:
The previous molecular phylogenetic study using 6021 base pairs from five
chloroplast genes suggested that two species of Pleodorina (P.
californica, P. japonica) might have evolved from a Volvox-like alga by the
decrease in colony cell number and size. However, number of species of the
genus Volvox was very limited especially in the section Merrillosphaera.
In the present study, 6021 base pairs of the concatenated five chloroplast genes from 10 strains representing seven taxa of the genus Volvox were added to the previous data matrix. The sequence data resolved two anisogamous/oogamous clades within a large monophyletic group comprising five advanced genera of the Volvocaceae (Yamagishiella, Platydorina, Eudorina, Pleodorina and Volvox), one containing Volvox sect. Volvox and the anisogamous genus Platydorina (32-celled flattened colony), and the other (Eudorina group) composed of three other sections of Volvox, Pleodorina and Eudorina. The isogamous genus Yamagishiella (32-celled colony) was positioned basally to the Eudorina group. Therefore, evolution of anisogamy with sperm packets from isogamy might have occurred twice within the Volvocaceae. Based on the present molecular phylogenetic analysis, species of Volvox and Pleodorina within the Eudorina group represented three and two, respectively, separate lineages. One the three Volvox lineages [composed of V (sect. Merrillosphaera) carteri, V (sect. Merrillosphaera) obversus, V. (sect. Merrillosphaera) tertius, V. (sect. Merrillosphaera) africanus and V (sect. Copelandosphaera) dissipatrix] was sister to the monophyletic group consisting of one of the two Pleodorina lineages (P. californica and P. japonica) and V (sect. Janetosphaera) aureus. In addition, species of Eudorina were basal to the two lineages of Pleodorina and three Volvox lineages within the Eudorina group, representing the ancestral situation of Pleodorina/Volvox (excluding sect. Volvox). Thus, reverse evolution from a Volvox-like alga to Pleodorina suggested previously appears unlikely.
2002
Coleman AW
Comparison of
Eudorina/Pleodorina ITS
sequences of isolates from nature with those from experimental hybrids
AM J BOT 89 (9): 1523-1530 SEP 2002
Abstract:
Internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of nuclear ribosomal repeats were
compared among 50 Eudorina and Pleodorina isolates and two Volvox
species known to clade with Eudorina species. Of the six major subclades found,
four containing Eudorina and Pleodorina illinoisensis isolates, one
containing Eudorina and Pleodorina indica, and one containing Volvox
gigas and V. powersii, the basal branching order remains uncertain, but the
positioning of isolates known to mate was always as nearest neighbors on the
terminal branches of the tree. Four hybrid clones from a cross of E. elegans with
P. illinoisensis, known from chromosome counts to be products of the failure of
meiosis at zygote germination, contain both parental ITS repeat regions, as
expected. However, they have in addition both crossover and other variant ITS
cistrons among their many repeats of ITS. Such variation is limited to terminal
regions of helices, as recognized from knowledge of RNA transcript secondary
structure. Proper alignment then utilizes all of the nucleotide positions; the
hybrid variants appear in positions intermediate between their parents in the
tree. In fact, such variants seem to be hallmarks of recent hybridization
events, since they were not found in any of the other 50 isolates.
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
Nozaki H, Krienitz L
Morphology
and phylogeny of Eudorina minodii (Chodat) Nozaki et
Krienitz, comb. nov (Volvocales, Chlorophyta) from
Germany
EUR J PHYCOL 36 (1): 23-28 FEB 2001
Abstract:
Morphology, sexual reproduction and phylogeny of a colonial green alga
collected from
2000
Nozaki H, Misawa K, Kajita T, et al.
Origin and
evolution of the colonial Volvocales (Chlorophyceae) as inferred from multiple,
chloroplast gene sequences
MOL PHYLOGENET EVOL 17 (2): 256-268 NOV 2000
Abstract:
A combined data set of DNA sequences (6021 bp) from five protein-coding genes
of the chloroplast genome (rbcL, atpB, psaA, psaB, and psbC genes) were
analyzed for 42 strains representing 30 species of the colonial Volvocales
(Volvox and its relatives) and 5 related species of green algae to deduce
robust phylogenetic relationships within the colonial green flagellates. The
4-celled family Tetrabaenaceae was robustly resolved as the most basal group
within the colonial Volvocales. The sequence data also suggested that all five
volvocacean genera with 32 or more cells in a vegetative colony (all four of
the anisogamous/oogamous genera, Eudorina, Platydorina, Pleodorina, and
Volvox, plus the isogamous genus Yamagishiella) constituted a large
monophyletic group, in which 2 Pleodorina species were positioned
distally to 3 species of Volvox. Therefore, most of the evolution of the
colonial Volvocales appears to constitute a gradual progression in colonial
complexity and in types of sexual reproduction, as in the traditional volvocine
lineage hypothesis, although reverse evolution must be considered for the
origin of certain species of Pleodorina. Data presented here also
provide robust support for a monophyletic family Goniaceae consisting of two
genera: Gonium and Astrephomene. (C) 2000 Academic Press.
1999
Coleman AW
Phylogenetic
analysis of "Volvocacae" for comparative genetic studies
P NATL ACAD SCI USA 96 (24): 13892-13897
Abstract:
Sequence analysis based on multiple isolates representing essentially all
genera and species of the classic family Volvocaeae has clarified their
phylogenetic relationships. Cloned internal transcribed spacer sequences
(ITS-1. and ITS-2, flanking the 5.8S gene of the nuclear ribosomal gene
cistrons) were aligned, guided by ITS transcript secondary structural features,
and subjected to parsimony and neighbor joining distance analysis. Results
confirm the notion of a single common ancestor, and Chlamydomonas reinharditii
alone among all sequenced green unicells is most similar. interbreeding
isolates were nearest neighbors on the evolutionary tree in all cases. Some
taxa, at whatever level, prove to be clades by sequence comparisons, but others
provide striking exceptions. The morphological species Pandorina morum, known
to be widespread and diverse in mating pairs, was found to encompass all of the
isolates of the four species of Volvulina. Platydorina appears to have
originated early and not to fall within the genus Eudorina, with which it can
sometimes be confused by morphology. The four species of Pleodorina
appear variously associated with Eudorina examples. Although the species of
Volvox are each clades, the genus Volvox is not The
conclusions confirm and extend prior, more limited, studies on nuclear SSU and
LSU rDNA genes and plastid-encoded rbcL and atpB. The phylogenetic tree
suggests which classical taxonomic characters are most misleading and provides
a framework for molecular studies of the cell cycle-related and other
alterations that have engendered diversity in both vegetative and sexual colony
patterns in this classical family.
Angeler DG,
Schagerl M, Coleman AW
Phylogenetic
relationships among isolates of Eudorina species (Volvocales, Chlorophyta) inferred
from molecular and biochemical data
J PHYCOL 35 (4): 815-823 AUG 1999
Abstract:
Phylogenetic analyses of 19 strains representing five species of Eudorina, one
strain of Pleodorina indica, and seven strains of Yamagishiella unicocca
were carried out by sequencing the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS 1
and ITS 2) of the nuclear ribosomal DNA (rDNA) repeats. The sequence data
resolved five phylogenetic groups, one consisting of Y. unicocca and the other
four encompassing all the Eudorina species. Two isolates, Eudorina sp, (ASW
05157) and Pleodorina indica (ASW 05153), were of uncertain affiliation,
Whereas one monophyletic group included strains of E. elegans only, the other
strains of E. elegans appeared alongside E. cylindrica, E. illinoisensis, and
E. unicocca var. unicocca in the other Eudorina clades. The distribution
pattern of the carotenoid loroxanthin ([3R,3'R,6'R]beta,epsilon-carotene-3,19,3'-triol),
a systematically useful biochemical marker within chlorophycean flagellates,
was shown to match the evaluated molecular data. Whereas it was either totally
absent or universally present in six of the deduced phylogenetic lines, it
occurred randomly in the E. elegans clade containing only E, elegans isolates.
The results substantiated the current hypothesis that the unique vegetative
morphology of E. elegans has independently arisen at various times during
evolution and that it is not a marker of a monophyletic group.
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.
1998
Schagerl M, Angeler DG
The
distribution of the xanthophyll loroxanthin and its systematic significance in
the colonial Volvocales (Chlorophyta)
PHYCOLOGIA 37 (2): 79-83 MAR 1998
Abstract:
The distribution of the xanthophyll loroxanthin [(3R,3'R,6'R)-
beta,epsilon-carotene-3,19,3'-triol] within colonial volvocalean families was
analyzed by reversed-phase high pressure Liquid chromatography (rP-HPLC). The
results demonstrate that loroxanthin is a physiological marker delineating the
families Tetrabaenaceae Nozaki et Itoh and Goniaceae
(Pascher) Pascher. Thus loroxanthin may be considered to be of systematic significance
within the Volvocales, and its use as a marker supports recent ideas on
phylogenetic relationships. Within the Volvocaceae Ehrenberg, its infraspecific
disjunct distribution indicates that it is not useful systematically in this
family and that it varies even within a morphologically defined species. The
pattern of loroxanthin distribution was compared with molecular data and
traditional characters.
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.
1997
Nozaki H,
Ito M, Uchida H, et al.
Phylogenetic
analysis of Eudorina species (Valvocaceae, Chlorophyta) based on rbcL gene
sequences
J PHYCOL 33 (5): 859-863 OCT 1997
Abstract:
Species and varieties in the genus Eudorina Ehrenberg (Volvocaceae,
Chlorophyta) were evaluated on the basis of phylogenetic analyses of the large
subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rbcL) gene sequence
from 14 strains of four Eudorina species, as well as from nine species of Pleodorina
and Volvox. The sequence data suggested that 10 of the 14 Eudorina strains form
three separate and robust monophyletic groups within the nonmonophyletic genus
Eudorina. The first group comprises ail three strains off. unicocca G. M.
Smith; the second group consists of one of the E, elegans Ehrenberg var elegans
strains, the E. cylindrica Korshikov strain, and both E. illinoisensis (Kofoid)
Pascher strains; and the third group consists of two monoecious varieties off,
elegans [two strains of E. elegans var synoica Goldstein and one strain of E.
elegans var. carteri (G. hi. Smith) Goldstein]. In
addition, E. illinoisensis represents a poly- or paraphyletic species within
the second group. The remaining four strains, all of which are assigned to E.
elegans var. elegans, are nonmonophyletic. Although their position in the
phylogenetic trees is more or less ambiguous, they are ancestral to other taxa
ill the large anisogamous/oogamous monophyletic group including Eudorina, Pleodorina,
and Volvox (except for sect. Volvox). Thus, the four
Eudorina groups resolved in the present molecular phylogeny do not correspond
with the species concepts of Eudorina based on vegetative morphology, but they
do reflect the results Of the previous intercrossing
experiments and modes of monoecious and dioecious sexual reproduction.
Nozaki H,
Ito M, Sano R, et al.
Phylogenetic analysis of Yamagishiella and
Platydorina (Volvocaceae, Chlorophyta) based on rbcL gene sequences
J PHYCOL 33 (2): 272-278
APR 1997
Abstract:
Yamagishiella, based on Pandorina unicocca Rayburn et Starr is distinguished
from Eudorina by its isogamous sexual reproduction, whereas Platydorina
exhibits anisogamous sexual reproduction. In the present study, rue sequenced the
large subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rbcL) genes
from five Japanese and North American strains of Y. unicocca (Rayburn et Stair)
Nozaki, true Platydorina caudata Kofoid strains, and two strains of Eudorina
unicocca G. M. Smith, as well as eight related colonial and unicellular
species. Phylogenetic trees were constructed based on these sequence data and
on previously published rbcL gene sequences from 23 volvocalean species in
order to deduce phylogenetic relationships within the colonial Volvocales, with
particular regard to the phylogenetic positions and status of the genera
Yamagishiella and Platydorina. Two robust monophyletic groups of the
anisogamous/oogamous volvocacean species were resolved in the maximum-parsimony
tree as well as in the neighbor-joining distance tree. One of the two groups
comprises three species of Volvox section Volvox, whereas the other is composed
of other sections of Volvox as well as of all the species of Eudorina and Pleodorina.
Platydorina, however, was positioned outside these two monophyletic groups.
Therefore, derivation of the Platydorina lineage may be earlier than that of
such anisogamous/oogamous groups, or origin of ''anisogamy with sperm,
packets'' in Platydorina may De independent of sperm packet evolution in
Eudorina, Pleodorina, and Volvox. It was also resolved with high
bootstrap values that all of the Y. unicocca strains form a monophyletic group
positioned outside the large monophyletic group including Eudorina and Pleodorina.
These reject the possibility of the reverse evolution of isogamy from anisogamy
to give rise to Yamagishiella within the lineage of Eudorina.
Liss M, Kirk DL, Beyser K, et al.
Intron
sequences provide a tool for high-resolution phylogenetic analysis of volvocine
algae
CURR GENET 31 (3): 214-227 MAR 1997
Abstract:
Three nuclear spliceosomal introns in conserved locations were amplified and
sequenced from 28 strains representing 14 species and 4 genera of volvocalean
green algae. Data derived from the three different introns yielded congruent
results in nearly all cases. In pairwise comparisons, a spectrum of
taxon-specific sequence differences ranging from complete identity to no
significant similarity was observed, with the most distantly related organisms
lacking any conserved elements apart from exon-intron boundaries and a
pyrimidine-rich stretch near the 3' splice site. A metric (SI50), providing a
measure of the degree of similarity of any pair of intron sequences, was
defined and used to calculate phylogenetic distances between organisms whose
introns displayed statistically significant similarities. The rate of sequences
divergence in the introns was great enough to provide useful information about
relationships among different geographical isolates of a single species, but in
most cases was too great to provide reliable guides to relationships above the
species level. A substitution rate of approximately 3 x 10(-8) per intron
position per year was estimated, which is about 150-fold higher than in nuclear
genes encoding rRNA and about 10-fold higher than the synonymous substitution
rate in protein-coding regions. Thus, these homologous introns not only provide
useful information about intraspecific phylogenetic relationships, but also
illustrate the concept that different parts of a gene may be subject to
extremely different intensities of selection. The intron data generated here
(1) reliably resolve for the first;time the
relationships among the five most extensively studied strains of Volvox, (2)
reveal that two other Volvox species may be more closely related than had
previously been suspected, (3) confirm prior evidence that particular isolates
of Eudorina elegans and Pleodorina illinoisensis appear to be sibling
taxa, and (4) contribute to the resolution of several hitherto unsettled issues
in Chlamydomonas taxonomy.
1996
Nozaki H
Morphology
and evolution of sexual reproduction in the Volvocaceae (Chlorophyta)
J PLANT RES 109 (1095): 353-361 SEP 1996
Abstract:
Morphological features of sexual reproduction in the Volvocaceae are reviewed,
focusing particularly on gametic union and zygote germination. Both of the two
conjugating gametes of the isogamous genera Pandorina, Volvulina and
Yamagishiella bear a tubular mating structure (mating papilla), and plasmogamy
is initiated by union of the papillae tips. On zygote germination, a single
biflagellate gone cell is released from the zygote wall. Although all the
anisogamous and oogamous genera of the Volvocaceae produce ''sperm packets''
during gametogenesis and a single gone cell at zygote germination, some
difference can be recognized in the male gametes. The male gametes of Eudorina
bear a tubular cytoplasmic protuberance (putative mating papilla) near the base
of the flagella, whereas such a structure recognized at the light microscopic
level is not evident in Pleodorina and Volvox, Evolution of the sexual
reproduction characteristics of volvocacean algae is discussed on the basis of
recent cladistic analysis of morphological data as well as of the ribosomal (r)
RNA phylogeny and large subunit of the ribulose-1,5-biphosphate
carboxylase/oxygenase(rbcL) gene trees.
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,
AIZAWA K, WATANABE MM
A TAXONOMIC
STUDY OF 4 SPECIES OF CARTERIA (VOLVOCALES, CHLOROPHYTA) WITH CRUCIATE ANTERIOR
PAPILLAE, BASED ON CULTURED MATERIAL
PHYCOLOGIA 33 (4): 239-247 JUL 1994
Abstract:
The taxonomy of four species of Carteria with cruciate anterior papilla
(Volvocales, Chlorophyta) was studied in two strains isolated recently from
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.
1992
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.
1991
HABERYAN KA, MHONE OK
ALGAL COMMUNITIES
NEAR CAPE MACLEAR, SOUTHERN LAKE MALAWI, AFRICA
HYDROBIOLOGIA 215 (3):
175-188
Abstract:
Algal communities were compared among benthic and net plankton samples from
In all phytoplankton samples, taken with a 10-mu-m mesh net, cyanophyte cells were the most common (70 to 80%), especially those of Oscillatoria. Biomass, however, was dominated by Peridinium from November to April and by Anabaena and Oscillatoria from September to April when the mixolimnion was stratified. Among the chlorophytes, Oedogonium was the most common, especially from May into December when Pleodorina became more common.
Diatoms dominated the biomass in the mixing season (May to September): Stephanodiscus in May, followed by Melosira nyassensis and lanceolate Nitzschia species from mid-June through August. For the rest of the year the epilimnion was stratified and these Nitzschia species were virtually the only diatoms present.
Benthic and planktonic communities share few taxa: benthic taxa never made up more than 2% of cells in offshore tows. This conclusion contrasts with previous reports, especially regarding Surirella. Consequently, an abundance of benthic taxa in sediment cores may be interpreted as lower lake level if sediment redistribution can be excluded. The seasonality of the planktonic diatoms is compatible with current ecological hypotheses, and therefore increases their value as paleolimnological indicators.