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      Morphological diversity and phylogeny of the diatom genus Entomoneis (Bacillariophyta) in marine plankton: six new species from the Adriatic Sea

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          HOW MANY SPECIES OF ALGAE ARE THERE?

          Algae have been estimated to include anything from 30,000 to more than 1 million species. An attempt is made here to arrive at a more accurate estimate using species numbers in phyla and classes included in the on-line taxonomic database AlgaeBase (http://www.algaebase.org). Despite uncertainties regarding what organisms should be included as algae and what a species is in the context of the various algal phyla and classes, a conservative approach results in an estimate of 72,500 algal species, names for 44,000 of which have probably been published, and 33,248 names have been processed by AlgaeBase to date (June 2012). Some published estimates of diatom numbers are of over 200,000 species, which would result in four to five diatom species for every other algal species. Concern is expressed at the decline and potential extinction of taxonomists worldwide capable of improving and completing the necessary systematic studies.
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            Reproductive isolation among sympatric cryptic species in marine diatoms.

            Pseudo-nitzschia is a marine cosmopolitan genus of chain-forming planktonic diatoms. As for the vast majority of phytoplankton organisms, species identification within this genus mostly relies upon morphological features. Taxa were initially identified based on cell shape and gross morphology of their composite silica cell wall, called the frustule. Yet, observations of the frustule in electron microscopy showed many additional characters for species identification and results of molecular studies have demonstrated that genetically distinct groups might exist within morpho-species. However, these studies have not addressed the biological meaning of these genetic differences. Here, we bridge that gap by comparing ultrastructural features and sequence data (three ribosomal and one plastid marker) of 95 strains with results of mating experiments among these strains. Experiments were performed on two morphologically distinct entities: P. delicatissima and P. pseudodelicatissima. Each of the two entities consisted of multiple genetically distinct and reproductively isolated taxa, all occurring in sympatry: P. delicatissima was composed of three phylogenetic and reproductively distinct groups, whereas P. pseudodelicatissima consisted of up to five. Once these taxa had been defined both genetically and biologically, subtle ultrastructural differences could be detected as well. Our findings not only show that cryptic genetic variants abound in sympatry, but also that they are reproductively isolated and, therefore, biologically distinct units.
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              An inordinate fondness? The number, distributions, and origins of diatom species.

              The number of extant species of diatoms is estimated here to be at least 30,000 and probably ca. 100,000, by extrapolation from an eclectic sample of genera and species complexes. Available data, although few, indicate that the pseudocryptic species being discovered in many genera are not functionally equivalent. Molecular sequence data show that some diatom species are ubiquitously dispersed. A good case can be made that at least some diatom species and even a few genera are endemics, but many such claims are still weak. The combination of very large species numbers and relatively rapid dispersal in diatoms is inconsistent with some versions of the "ubiquity hypothesis" of protist biogeography, and appears paradoxical. However, population genetic data indicate geographical structure in all the (few) marine and freshwater species that have been examined in detail, sometimes over distances of a few tens of kilometres. The mode of speciation may often be parapatric, in the context of a constantly shifting mosaic of temporarily isolated (meta) populations, but if our "intermediate dispersal hypothesis" is true (that long-distance dispersal is rare, but not extremely rare), allopatric speciation could also be maximized. © 2013 The Author(s) Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology © 2013 International Society of Protistologists.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Journal of Phycology
                J. Phycol.
                Wiley
                00223646
                April 2018
                April 2018
                March 07 2018
                : 54
                : 2
                : 275-298
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Biology; Faculty of Science; University of Zagreb; Rooseveltov trg 6 10000 Zagreb Croatia
                [2 ]Department of Biological Sciences; University of Arkansas; 1 University of Arkansas, SCEN 601 Fayetteville Arkansas 72701 USA
                [3 ]Ruđer Bošković Institute; Bijenička 54 10000 Zagreb Croatia
                [4 ]Microbial Ecology; Center of Excellence for Science and Technology Integrating Mediterranean Region; Bijenička 54 10000 Zagreb Croatia
                [5 ]Department of Biology; Faculty of Science; University of Zagreb; Horvatovac 102a 10000 Zagreb Croatia
                [6 ]Forensic Science Office; University of Zagreb; Ilica 335 10000 Zagreb Croatia
                [7 ]Forensic Science Center “Ivan Vučetić” Zagreb; Ilica 335 10000 Zagreb Croatia
                Article
                10.1111/jpy.12622
                3a98f74c-dea2-4e71-a035-b9e3a6ed28ad
                © 2018

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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