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Biogeography and systematics of Hildenbrandia (Rhodophyta, Hildenbrandiales) in Europe: inferences from morphometrics and rbcL and 18S rRNA gene sequence analyses
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2000
Abstract
Twenty-one marine and freshwater specimens of Hildenbrandia from Europe were compared by analyses of morphometric data and sequences of the rbcL chloroplast gene (which codes for the large subunit of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase enzyme) and the nuclear 18S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene. Eleven freshwater specimens, all corresponding to H. rivularis, were collected from the British Isles, Germany, France, Austria, Spain and Italy. Six marine specimens, representing H. rubra, were obtained from Northern Ireland, Wales, France, Norway, Sweden and the Netherlands, while four marine specimens, corresponding to H. crouanii, were collected from Scotland and Germany. Morphometric analyses of vegetative and reproductive characters distinguished three groups of specimens, which correspond to the three species. Parsimony and distance analyses of the rbcL and 18S rRNA genes were performed on these samples and sequences of North American representatives were included to determine their inter-relationships. The rbcL gene sequence analyses separated the marine and freshwater specimens, with the H. rivularis and H. angolensis representatives forming a well- supported monophyletic clade. The rbcL sequence analyses did not resolve the groupings of marine specimens determined in the morphometric analysis. Analyses of the 18S rRNA gene sequences also supported separation of the marine samples from freshwater samples, although the bootstrap and decay support was not as strong as for the rbcL gene. H. rubra formed a monophyletic clade that was weakly supported. In terms of biogeographic trends, the fairly low intraspecific divergence of H. rivularis (0–1·9% for the rbcL gene and 0–3·6% for the 18S rRNA gene) and the positioning of these samples in the gene trees supports the concept that they are derived from marine populations.
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- © 2000 British Phycological Society
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