Journal article
The golden paradox – a new heterokont lineage with chloroplasts surrounded by two membranes
R Wetherbee, CJ Jackson, SI Repetti, LA Clementson, JF Costa, A van de Meene, S Crawford, H Verbruggen
Journal of Phycology | WILEY | Published : 2019
DOI: 10.1111/jpy.12822
Abstract
A marine, sand-dwelling, golden-brown alga is described from clonal cultures established from a high intertidal pool in southeastern Australia. This tiny, unicellular species, which we call the “golden paradox” (Chrysoparadoxa australica gen. et sp. nov.), is benthic, surrounded by a multilayered cell wall and attached to the substratum by a complex adhesive plug. Each vegetative cell gives rise to a single, naked zoospore with heterokont flagella that settles and may become briefly amoeboid prior to dividing. Daughter cells are initially amoeboid, then either permanently attach and return to the benthic stage or become motile again prior to final settlement. Two deeply lobed chloroplasts oc..
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Awarded by Institution of Civil Engineers
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank the School of Biosciences Microscopy Unit at the University of Melbourne for the use of the microscopes and Leica Microsystems (Vienna) for the use of the HPF EM ICE. Financial support was provided by the Australian Research Council (DP150100705) and the University of Melbourne Botany Foundation. We appreciate the thoughtful comments on the manuscript made by Robert Andersen and an anonymous reviewer.