4.5 Article

PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS AND BIOGEOGRAPHY OF &ITPTILOPHORA &IT(GELIDIALES, RHODOPHYTA) WITH DESCRIPTIONS OF&IT P&IT. &ITAUREOLUSA&IT,&IT P&IT. &ITMALAGASYA&IT, AND &ITP&IT. &ITSPONGIOPHILA &ITFROM MADAGASCAR

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 2, Pages 249-263

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jpy.12617

Keywords

agar-producing algae; ancestral area; Atimo Vatae expedition; biogeography; cox1; psbA; rbcL; systematics; Western Indo-Pacific

Funding

  1. Total Foundation
  2. Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation
  3. Stavros Niarchos Foundation under Our Planet Reviewed, a joint initiative of Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle (MNHN) and Pro Natura International (PNI)
  4. Silva Center for Phycological Documentation, University Herbarium
  5. Service de Systematique Moleculaire du Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle [CNRS - UMS 2700]
  6. Marine Biotechnology grants from the Korean Government's Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries
  7. Institut d'Halieutique et des Sciences Marines, University of Toliara (IH.SM)
  8. Madagascar bureau of Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS)

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The genus Ptilophora currently includes 16 species occurring mostly in subtidal habitats of the Indo-Pacific Ocean, but its global diversity and biogeography are poorly understood. We analyzed mitochondrial cox1, plastid rbcL and plastid psbA sequences from specimens collected in southern Madagascar during the 2010 Atimo Vatae expedition and studied their morphologies. Both morphological and molecular data sets demonstrated the presence of five species in southern Madagascar: Ptilophora hildebrandtii, P. pterocladioides, and three new species described here, P. aureolusa, P. malagasya, and P. spongiophila. Ptilophora aureolusa is distinguished by its compound pinnae with uniformly spaced pinnules. Ptilophora malagasya has an indistinct midrib and irregularly spaced pinnules. Ptilophora spongiophila, heavily coated with sponges, has cylindrical to flattened main axes, lateral and surface proliferations, and spatulate tetrasporangial sori. The species of Ptilophora found in Madagascar are endemic, except P. hildebrandtii, which also occurs in eastern Africa. Ptilophora comprises four phylogenetic groups that map to eastern Australia, Japan, western Australia/Southeast Asia/ Madagascar/eastern Africa, and Madagascar/eastern Africa/Aegean Sea. Biogeographical analysis revealed that the ancestor of Ptilophora originated in Australia, but most of the species radiated from Madagascar.

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