Journal article
Kraftionema allantoideum, a new genus and family of Ulotrichales (Chlorophyta) adapted for survival in high intertidal pools
R Wetherbee, H Verbruggen
Journal of Phycology | WILEY-BLACKWELL | Published : 2016
DOI: 10.1111/jpy.12447
Abstract
The marine, sand-dwelling green alga Kraftionema allantoideum gen. et sp. nov. is described from clonal cultures established from samples collected in coastal, high intertidal pools from south eastern Australia. The species forms microscopic, uniseriate, unbranched, 6–8 μm wide filaments surrounded by a gelatinous capsule of varying thickness. Filaments are twisted, knotted, and variable in length from 4 to 50 cells in field samples but straighter and much longer in culture, up to 1.5 mm in length. Cell division occurs in several planes, resulting in daughter cells of varying shape, from square to rectangular to triangular, giving rise to gnarled filaments. Mature cells become allantoid, elo..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank Joana Costa for generating the 18S sequences and Fabio Rindi for nomenclatural advice. Dr. Simon Crawford helped with the electron microscopy. Funding during the preparation of this study was provided by the Australian Biological Resources Study (RFL213-08) and the Australian Research Council (FT110100585, DP150100705).