Phymatolithon (Melobesioideae, Hapalidiales) in the Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone of the North Atlantic: A Correlation of Plastid DNA Markers with Morpho-Anatomy, Ecology, and Biogeography

Species of the coralline algal genus Phymatolithon are the dominant algal calcifiers in the rocky intertidal and shallow photic sublittoral zone of the Boreal–Subarctic transition zone that stretches across the North Atlantic from the Gulf of Maine and the southern Canadian Maritimes to southwestern...

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Published in:Smithsonian Contributions to Marine Sciences
Main Authors: Walter H. Adey, Jazmin J. Hernández-Kantún, Paul W. Gabrielson, Merinda C. Nash, Lee-Ann C. Hayek
Format: Book
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5479/si.1943-667x.41
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spelling ftsmithonianinsp:oai:figshare.com:article/9761813 2023-05-15T16:52:53+02:00 Phymatolithon (Melobesioideae, Hapalidiales) in the Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone of the North Atlantic: A Correlation of Plastid DNA Markers with Morpho-Anatomy, Ecology, and Biogeography Walter H. Adey Jazmin J. Hernández-Kantún Paul W. Gabrielson Merinda C. Nash Lee-Ann C. Hayek 2018-04-06T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.5479/si.1943-667x.41 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/Phymatolithon_Melobesioideae_Hapalidiales_in_the_Boreal_Subarctic_Transition_Zone_of_the_North_Atlantic_A_Correlation_of_Plastid_DNA_Markers_with_Morpho-Anatomy_Ecology_and_Biogeography/9761813 CC BY-NC 4.0 CC-BY-NC Marine Biology Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone Phymatolithon Melobesioideae Hapalidiales North Atlantic Text Book 2018 ftsmithonianinsp https://doi.org/10.5479/si.1943-667x.41 2019-11-06T08:03:53Z Species of the coralline algal genus Phymatolithon are the dominant algal calcifiers in the rocky intertidal and shallow photic sublittoral zone of the Boreal–Subarctic transition zone that stretches across the North Atlantic from the Gulf of Maine and the southern Canadian Maritimes to southwestern Iceland and the Norwegian outer coast. In this paper, we use extensive field and laboratory data on the biology, physiology, and ecology of Phymatolithon species, supported by statistical analysis and DNA sequence data, to develop a multiscale view of this key genus of the ecosystems of this region. We demonstrate that species of Phymatolithon that occur in the Boreal–Subarctic transition zone in the North Atlantic can be segregated systematically by a statistical/developmental analysis of their morpho-anatomical characters. We show these results to be congruent with DNA sequence-based methods. Six species are recognized: Phymatolithon laevigatum , P. rugulosum ( P . lamii), P. squamulosum ( P. lenormandii ), P. investiens , P. borealis sp. nov. ( P. polymorphum ), and P. nantuckensis sp. nov.). Based on paraffin section, compound microscope, and EDS-SEM analysis, we show that coralline anatomy comprises a diversity of both tissue types and high magnesium carbonate wall structure. Variations in vegetative tissue morphology, particularly with respect to cell division and elongation patterns, as well as variation in conceptacle (reproductive structure) location and development, are the result of a complex of genetic and environmental factors. Some of these factors can be linked to adaptation to environmental and biogeographical niches, providing a basis for experimental analysis of the mechanisms of adaptation. We have analyzed conceptacle development in Phymatolithon and demonstrated the linkage between genetic control and concurrent vegetative growth; these parameters interact to produce considerable variation in some characters of final gross morphology but not in others. These results strongly demonstrate that morpho-anatomical research in the broader Corallinophycideae requires greater biological sophistication, with utilization of quantitative population-level data, if success in correlating it with DNA sequence data is to be generally achieved. Book Iceland North Atlantic Subarctic Smithsonian Institution: Figshare Smithsonian Contributions to Marine Sciences 41 2 90
institution Open Polar
collection Smithsonian Institution: Figshare
op_collection_id ftsmithonianinsp
language unknown
topic Marine Biology
Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone
Phymatolithon
Melobesioideae
Hapalidiales
North Atlantic
spellingShingle Marine Biology
Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone
Phymatolithon
Melobesioideae
Hapalidiales
North Atlantic
Walter H. Adey
Jazmin J. Hernández-Kantún
Paul W. Gabrielson
Merinda C. Nash
Lee-Ann C. Hayek
Phymatolithon (Melobesioideae, Hapalidiales) in the Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone of the North Atlantic: A Correlation of Plastid DNA Markers with Morpho-Anatomy, Ecology, and Biogeography
topic_facet Marine Biology
Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone
Phymatolithon
Melobesioideae
Hapalidiales
North Atlantic
description Species of the coralline algal genus Phymatolithon are the dominant algal calcifiers in the rocky intertidal and shallow photic sublittoral zone of the Boreal–Subarctic transition zone that stretches across the North Atlantic from the Gulf of Maine and the southern Canadian Maritimes to southwestern Iceland and the Norwegian outer coast. In this paper, we use extensive field and laboratory data on the biology, physiology, and ecology of Phymatolithon species, supported by statistical analysis and DNA sequence data, to develop a multiscale view of this key genus of the ecosystems of this region. We demonstrate that species of Phymatolithon that occur in the Boreal–Subarctic transition zone in the North Atlantic can be segregated systematically by a statistical/developmental analysis of their morpho-anatomical characters. We show these results to be congruent with DNA sequence-based methods. Six species are recognized: Phymatolithon laevigatum , P. rugulosum ( P . lamii), P. squamulosum ( P. lenormandii ), P. investiens , P. borealis sp. nov. ( P. polymorphum ), and P. nantuckensis sp. nov.). Based on paraffin section, compound microscope, and EDS-SEM analysis, we show that coralline anatomy comprises a diversity of both tissue types and high magnesium carbonate wall structure. Variations in vegetative tissue morphology, particularly with respect to cell division and elongation patterns, as well as variation in conceptacle (reproductive structure) location and development, are the result of a complex of genetic and environmental factors. Some of these factors can be linked to adaptation to environmental and biogeographical niches, providing a basis for experimental analysis of the mechanisms of adaptation. We have analyzed conceptacle development in Phymatolithon and demonstrated the linkage between genetic control and concurrent vegetative growth; these parameters interact to produce considerable variation in some characters of final gross morphology but not in others. These results strongly demonstrate that morpho-anatomical research in the broader Corallinophycideae requires greater biological sophistication, with utilization of quantitative population-level data, if success in correlating it with DNA sequence data is to be generally achieved.
format Book
author Walter H. Adey
Jazmin J. Hernández-Kantún
Paul W. Gabrielson
Merinda C. Nash
Lee-Ann C. Hayek
author_facet Walter H. Adey
Jazmin J. Hernández-Kantún
Paul W. Gabrielson
Merinda C. Nash
Lee-Ann C. Hayek
author_sort Walter H. Adey
title Phymatolithon (Melobesioideae, Hapalidiales) in the Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone of the North Atlantic: A Correlation of Plastid DNA Markers with Morpho-Anatomy, Ecology, and Biogeography
title_short Phymatolithon (Melobesioideae, Hapalidiales) in the Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone of the North Atlantic: A Correlation of Plastid DNA Markers with Morpho-Anatomy, Ecology, and Biogeography
title_full Phymatolithon (Melobesioideae, Hapalidiales) in the Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone of the North Atlantic: A Correlation of Plastid DNA Markers with Morpho-Anatomy, Ecology, and Biogeography
title_fullStr Phymatolithon (Melobesioideae, Hapalidiales) in the Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone of the North Atlantic: A Correlation of Plastid DNA Markers with Morpho-Anatomy, Ecology, and Biogeography
title_full_unstemmed Phymatolithon (Melobesioideae, Hapalidiales) in the Boreal–Subarctic Transition Zone of the North Atlantic: A Correlation of Plastid DNA Markers with Morpho-Anatomy, Ecology, and Biogeography
title_sort phymatolithon (melobesioideae, hapalidiales) in the boreal–subarctic transition zone of the north atlantic: a correlation of plastid dna markers with morpho-anatomy, ecology, and biogeography
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.5479/si.1943-667x.41
genre Iceland
North Atlantic
Subarctic
genre_facet Iceland
North Atlantic
Subarctic
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op_rights CC BY-NC 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC
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container_title Smithsonian Contributions to Marine Sciences
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