Comparing and Informing Morphological Species Identifications and Boundaries in Arthropod Gut-dwelling Protists Using Molecular Phylogenetic Analyses

Trichomycetes are fungal and protistan symbionts of arthropods and have been found in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial habitats on every continent except Antarctica. Minimally, trichomycetes associate commensally with their immature aquatic hosts (including black flies, mayflies, stoneflies, isop...

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Main Authors: Hinchcliff, Mason, Reynolds, Nicole, Tretter, Eric, Heeney, Dustin, Gause, Justin, Pickell, Tyler, Kandel, Prasanna
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks 2014
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Online Access:https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/as_14/56
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/as_14/article/1060/viewcontent/Hinchcliff_et_al_with_Merlin_White_Poster_FINAL_2014_4_18.pdf
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spelling ftboisestateu:oai:scholarworks.boisestate.edu:as_14-1060 2023-10-29T02:30:30+01:00 Comparing and Informing Morphological Species Identifications and Boundaries in Arthropod Gut-dwelling Protists Using Molecular Phylogenetic Analyses Hinchcliff, Mason Reynolds, Nicole Tretter, Eric Heeney, Dustin Gause, Justin Pickell, Tyler Kandel, Prasanna 2014-04-21T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/as_14/56 https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/as_14/article/1060/viewcontent/Hinchcliff_et_al_with_Merlin_White_Poster_FINAL_2014_4_18.pdf unknown ScholarWorks https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/as_14/56 https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/as_14/article/1060/viewcontent/Hinchcliff_et_al_with_Merlin_White_Poster_FINAL_2014_4_18.pdf College of Arts and Sciences Presentations Morphological Paramoebidium species morphology Structural Biology text 2014 ftboisestateu 2023-09-29T15:11:54Z Trichomycetes are fungal and protistan symbionts of arthropods and have been found in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial habitats on every continent except Antarctica. Minimally, trichomycetes associate commensally with their immature aquatic hosts (including black flies, mayflies, stoneflies, isopods, and others) attaching to the chitinous lining of the mid or hindgut. Classified with trichomycetes are Paramoebidium, a group of protists which associate in an obligate manner with their hosts. To date, 16 species of Paramoebidium have been identified by morphological approaches. These descriptions have included characterization and discrimination of species based on thallus (body) length and width, differences in the holdfast (structure used to attach to the gut of the host), and the appearance of the asexual, motile amoebae they release. Several challenges arise from this method. Namely, Paramoebidium species can be unremarkable in appearance. Immature Paramoebidium can have large variation, and finding a specimen in the process of releasing amoebae is very difficult as live organisms must be dissected directly from host tissue. We have been using molecular and phylogenetic approaches (sequencing rDNA genes) to assess morpho-species boundaries and their potential to differentiate and infer evolutionary relationships among Paramoebidium species. To date, efforts to compare recent molecular findings to morphological data have not been done. We plan to perform a morphological comparison of specimens used in the molecular data to highlight the pros and cons of the current classification system for Paramoebidium. Text Antarc* Antarctica Boise State University: Scholar Works
institution Open Polar
collection Boise State University: Scholar Works
op_collection_id ftboisestateu
language unknown
topic Morphological
Paramoebidium
species
morphology
Structural Biology
spellingShingle Morphological
Paramoebidium
species
morphology
Structural Biology
Hinchcliff, Mason
Reynolds, Nicole
Tretter, Eric
Heeney, Dustin
Gause, Justin
Pickell, Tyler
Kandel, Prasanna
Comparing and Informing Morphological Species Identifications and Boundaries in Arthropod Gut-dwelling Protists Using Molecular Phylogenetic Analyses
topic_facet Morphological
Paramoebidium
species
morphology
Structural Biology
description Trichomycetes are fungal and protistan symbionts of arthropods and have been found in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial habitats on every continent except Antarctica. Minimally, trichomycetes associate commensally with their immature aquatic hosts (including black flies, mayflies, stoneflies, isopods, and others) attaching to the chitinous lining of the mid or hindgut. Classified with trichomycetes are Paramoebidium, a group of protists which associate in an obligate manner with their hosts. To date, 16 species of Paramoebidium have been identified by morphological approaches. These descriptions have included characterization and discrimination of species based on thallus (body) length and width, differences in the holdfast (structure used to attach to the gut of the host), and the appearance of the asexual, motile amoebae they release. Several challenges arise from this method. Namely, Paramoebidium species can be unremarkable in appearance. Immature Paramoebidium can have large variation, and finding a specimen in the process of releasing amoebae is very difficult as live organisms must be dissected directly from host tissue. We have been using molecular and phylogenetic approaches (sequencing rDNA genes) to assess morpho-species boundaries and their potential to differentiate and infer evolutionary relationships among Paramoebidium species. To date, efforts to compare recent molecular findings to morphological data have not been done. We plan to perform a morphological comparison of specimens used in the molecular data to highlight the pros and cons of the current classification system for Paramoebidium.
format Text
author Hinchcliff, Mason
Reynolds, Nicole
Tretter, Eric
Heeney, Dustin
Gause, Justin
Pickell, Tyler
Kandel, Prasanna
author_facet Hinchcliff, Mason
Reynolds, Nicole
Tretter, Eric
Heeney, Dustin
Gause, Justin
Pickell, Tyler
Kandel, Prasanna
author_sort Hinchcliff, Mason
title Comparing and Informing Morphological Species Identifications and Boundaries in Arthropod Gut-dwelling Protists Using Molecular Phylogenetic Analyses
title_short Comparing and Informing Morphological Species Identifications and Boundaries in Arthropod Gut-dwelling Protists Using Molecular Phylogenetic Analyses
title_full Comparing and Informing Morphological Species Identifications and Boundaries in Arthropod Gut-dwelling Protists Using Molecular Phylogenetic Analyses
title_fullStr Comparing and Informing Morphological Species Identifications and Boundaries in Arthropod Gut-dwelling Protists Using Molecular Phylogenetic Analyses
title_full_unstemmed Comparing and Informing Morphological Species Identifications and Boundaries in Arthropod Gut-dwelling Protists Using Molecular Phylogenetic Analyses
title_sort comparing and informing morphological species identifications and boundaries in arthropod gut-dwelling protists using molecular phylogenetic analyses
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2014
url https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/as_14/56
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/as_14/article/1060/viewcontent/Hinchcliff_et_al_with_Merlin_White_Poster_FINAL_2014_4_18.pdf
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_source College of Arts and Sciences Presentations
op_relation https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/as_14/56
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/as_14/article/1060/viewcontent/Hinchcliff_et_al_with_Merlin_White_Poster_FINAL_2014_4_18.pdf
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