Systematics and Biogeography of Antarctic Deep-Sea Gromiids

Gromiids are large amoeboid protozoans with an organic test and filose pseudopodia, which protrude through a shell aperture that is surrounded by an oral capsule. The first shallow-water gromiid, Gromia oviformis, was described by Dujardin in 1835 and is found worldwide. It was only in 1994, however...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rothe, Nina
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/69035/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/69035/1/Rothe_2009_PhD.pdf
Description
Summary:Gromiids are large amoeboid protozoans with an organic test and filose pseudopodia, which protrude through a shell aperture that is surrounded by an oral capsule. The first shallow-water gromiid, Gromia oviformis, was described by Dujardin in 1835 and is found worldwide. It was only in 1994, however, that gromiids were found for the first time at bathyal depths in a nonfjord setting, when the first deep-sea gromiid, G. sphaerica, was recovered from below the oxygen minimum zone on the continental slope off Oman in the Arabian Sea. The present study is based on the largest sample set of undescribed deep-sea gromiids thus far. The core of this thesis is the description of twelve new morphospecies from bathyal and abyssal depths (1180 m – 4800 m) in the Weddell Sea, Antarctica, using a combination of morphological and molecular criteria. All species possess a distinct oral capsule and a layer of “honeycomb membranes”, which form the inner part of the organic test wall. Both these features are characteristic of gromiids. Their identification as gromiids is confirmed by analyses of partial small subunit ribosomal DNA (SSU rDNA) gene sequences for three of the twelve new species: Gromia marmorea sp. nov., Gromia melinus sp. nov., and Gromia winnetoui sp. nov. Phylogenetic analysis using the maximum likelihood method revealed that G. marmorea and G. melinus form two distinct clades reflecting the morphological differences amongst the Weddell Sea species, and between deep-water Southern Ocean Gromia and previously described shallow-water gromiid G. oviformis, as well as gromiids from the deep Arabian Sea. Gromia winnetoui forms a third clade which branches with one of the Arabian Sea species. Both these species are morphologically very distinct and therefore the molecular results are inconsistent with the morphological characteristics. Based solely on morphological criteria, another sixteen morphospecies from the Northeast Atlantic are described, including specimens from the Northwest African margin (1320 m), the ...