INVESTIGADORES
GAUNA Maria Cecilia
artículos
Título:
Taxonomic study of Scytosiphon (Phaeophyceae) from temperate coasts of Argentina
Autor/es:
CROCE, M. E.; HOSHINO, M.; GAUNA, M. C.; PARODI, E. R.; KOGAME, K.
Revista:
JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Año: 2023
ISSN:
0022-3646
Resumen:
Scytosiphon is a common intertidal genus widely distributed in temperate coasts worldwide. Recently, eight species have been delimited with molecular tools. Although S. lomentaria is the only species that predominates in the macroalgal literature of the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean (SwAO), unpublished molecular data obtained for a population study of S. lomentaria revealed hidden species diversity of Scytosiphon among the individuals collected from four localities at the SwAO. The aim of this study was to revise the identity and phylogenetic relationships of Scytosiphon from temperate coasts of the SwAO using DNA data. Thalli were collected from the Argentinean coast between 39° S and 43° S, from which cox1 and rbcL sequences were obtained. Phylogenies and haplotype networks were inferred and morphology of gametophytes was studied. Four species were recognized, S. lomentaria, S. promiscuus, S. shibazakiorum and one species that belongs to a complex of species known as “Scytosiphon Atlantic complex”. This complex was known to occur only in the North Atlantic, however the results found in this study revealed that it has an extended distribution range that includes the southern hemisphere, where its populations have high genetic diversity and unique haplotypes. The morphological differences among the four species were subtle; denoting that previous Scytosiphon records from the SwAO attributed to the renowned S. lomentaria could represent different species. In addition, sex ratio and genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) analyses were done for populations of S. promiscuus presumably introduced to the SwAO, and the results indicated that they included female dominant parthenogenetic populations, which were probably introduced from Japan.