4.2 Article

Studies on woloszynskioid dinoflagellates VI: description of Tovellia aveirensis sp nov (Dinophyceae), a new species of Tovelliaceae with spiny cysts

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 2, Pages 230-243

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09670262.2014.910610

Keywords

cyst; dinoflagellates; LSU rDNA; phylogeny; taxonomy; Tovelliaceae; Tovellia aveirensis; ultrastructure

Funding

  1. QREN-POPH - Tipologia 4.1 - Formacao Avancada
  2. European Social Funding (FSE)
  3. Portuguese Ministry of Education and Science (MEC)
  4. GeoBioTec [PEst-OE/CTE/UI4035/2014]
  5. [SFRH/BPD/68537/2010]

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A new species of Tovellia, T. aveirensis, is described on the basis of light (LM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) of motile cells and resting cysts, complemented with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of flagellate cells and phylogenetic analysis of partial sequences of the large subunit ribosomal rRNA gene. Both vegetative cells and several stages of a life cycle involving sexual reproduction and the production of resting cysts were examined in cultures established from a tank in the University of Aveiro campus. Vegetative cells were round and little compressed dorsoventrally; planozygotes were longer and had a proportionally larger epicone. Chloroplast lobes were shown by TEM to radiate from a central, branched pyrenoid, although this was difficult to ascertain in LM. The amphiesma of flagellate cells had mainly 5 or 6-sided vesicles with thin plates, arranged in 5-7 latitudinal series on the epicone, 3-5 on the hypocone. The cingulum had 2 rows of plates, the posterior row extending into the hypocone and crossed by a series of small projecting knobs along the lower edge of the cingulum. A line of narrow amphiesmal plates extended over the cell apex, from near the cingulum on the ventral side to the middle of the dorsal side of the epicone. Eight or 9 narrow amphiesmal plates lined each side of this apical line of plates (ALP). Resting cysts differed from any described before in having numerous long, tapering spines with branched tips distributed over most of the surface. Most mature cysts showed an equatorial constriction. Neither cysts nor motile cells were seen to accumulate red cytoplasmic bodies in any stage of the cultures. The phylogenetic analysis placed, with high statistical support, the new species within the genus Tovellia; it formed a clade, with moderate support, with T. sanguinea, a species notable for its reddening cells.

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