4.7 Article

Oogamochlamys kurilensis sp. nov. (Chlorophyta, Volvocales) from the Soils of Iturup Island (Sakhalin Region, Russia)

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants12193350

Keywords

biflagellate green alga; Oogamochlamys; new species; SSU rDNA; ITS rDNA secondary structure; morphological characteristics; life cycle; temperate monsoon climate zone

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A new strain of oogamous biflagellate green alga was discovered and classified as part of the RL clade within Oogamochlamydinia. It shares similarities with members of the genus Oogamochlamys but differs in certain cell morphology and structure features. Despite the doubts about its relation to Oogamochlamys based on phylogenetic analysis, the strain from Iturup Island is described as a new species, Oogamochlamys kurilensis.
A strain of oogamous biflagellate green alga was isolated during a study on soil algal diversity in the Russian Far East (Sakhalin Region, Iturup Island) and examined using an integrative approach. Phylogenetic analyses, based on the SSU rDNA gene, resolved the new strain as a part of the RL clade (sensu Watanabe and Nakada) within Oogamochlamydinia (Volvocales, Chlorophyceae). The strain was similar to members of the genus Oogamochlamys (parietal and massive cup-shaped chloroplasts; two apical contractile vacuoles), but was, however, distinguished from them based on the size and shape of the mature vegetative cells, the flagellar length, the presence of only one pyrenoid in both the mature vegetative cells and the zoospores, the anterior nucleus position, and the spermatozoids' shape. Although a concept of the genus Oogamochlamys has been compromised in recent phylogenetic analysis based on the SSU rDNA sequence data and its likely affinity to anisogamous Chlamydomonas allensworthii, we described the strain from Iturup Island as Oogamochlamys kurilensis sp. nov.

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