Abstract

In the summer of 2008, free-floating green algae bloomed in the Yellow Sea. Samples were collected in a wide area (119°32′–122°00′E, 32°25′–36°49′N). We calculated the sequence divergences of nuclear ITS, chloroplast rbcL, and psbA data of free-floating samples collected from the Yellow Sea and Ulvaceae from Europe and Japan. In the ITS sequence, 19 out of the 21 Yellow Sea samples of 2008 were identical to those of a sample taken at Qingdao in 2007. A low divergence (0.2%) was found in remaining two samples. Similar evidence was shown by pairwise distances of rbcL and psbA gene sequence data, implying the uniformity of the Yellow Sea blooms in 2007 and 2008. The ITS sequence of the Yellow Sea samples differed 8.1–10.8% from free-floating Enteromorpha or Ulva reported worldwide. ITS-based molecular phylogenetic results and rbcL sequence data grouped the free-floating alga in the Yellow Sea into one clade with Enteromorpha procera, Enteromorpha linza and Enteromorpha prolifera. Furthermore, both morphological characteristics and ribotype network of the ITS sequences imply that the blooming algae in 2007 and 2008 were E. prolifera. The haplotypes of the Yellow Sea free-floating E. prolifera are closely related to those from the Japanese coast but less to European and American algae.

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