Abstract

During the last decade investigations of heterokont protists utilizing molecular methods have challenged established biosystematic concepts. Most investigations emphasized the chloroplast genome or sequences from nuclear-encoded, ribosomal genes. Refinement of DNA isolation protocols, advent of universal primers and the polymerase chain reaction, automated sequencing and increased accessibility of DNA sequence databases have expanded data-gathering efficiency and increased dataset sizes. Because independent datasets have been easier to obtain, the testing of specific phylogenetic hypotheses has been facilitated, altering relationship concepts, primarily at phylum/class levels, and perceptions of cellular evolution. New approaches have emphasized ecological studies and extended studies to genus/species levels and poorly investigated genomes. This paper reviews studies documenting these impacts and identifies some current limitations. Additionally, new DNA sequence data from our laboratory on nuclear-encoded rDNA internal transcribed spacers and the chloroplast-encoded psbA gene suggest that these regions will provide taxonomic resolution for the Synurophyceae, at the class/order level and subspecies level, respectively.

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