Abstract

Contemporary delimitation of species and populations in the microbial domain relies on an integrative approach combining molecular and morphological techniques. In case of the dinophyte Peridinium volzii, a considerable number of infraspecific taxonomic entities have been reported, but it is unclear at present whether the corresponding traits are stable within reproductively isolated units or refer to intraspecific variability. We established 26 monoclonal strains from Central Europe with a morphology that is consistent for P. volzii and characterised them by sequences gained from the rRNA operon. Ten of such strains, representative for the entire diversity observed, were investigated in detail morphologically using light and electron microscopy. In the molecular tree, P. volzii was monophyletic, sister group of Peridinium willei, and three ITS ribotypes could be distinguished. Some traits corresponding to previously described varieties and forms were found in individual cells across the strains under investigation, but not as stable characters correlating to certain ribotypes. We also observed new morphological variability (e.g., unusual shape of plate 4″). Cell size and displacement of the cingulum were significantly different between certain ribotypes but in turn, such diagnostic traits are impossible to assign to already described taxa due to their ambiguity. Based on the small first apical plate as diagnostic trait and putative apomorphy, P. volzii is a characteristic species but the present data given, we are reserved to accept more than a single reproductive unit. Thus, more research is necessary, including a focus on species delimitation to putative close relatives such as Peridinium maeandricum.

Highlights

  • Dinophytes play an important role in the ecology of water bodies, they are not as visually apparent as larger aquatic organisms

  • The integrative approach presented here studying both morphological and molecular data is important to clarify the boundaries between species in the microbial domain

  • Based on monoclonal strains established from recently collected material we confirmed a great morphological and genetic variability in P. volzii

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Summary

Introduction

Dinophytes play an important role in the ecology of water bodies, they are not as visually apparent as larger aquatic organisms. As unicellular algae and important bioindicators in aquatic systems, they have the ability to indicate rapid environmental changes within these habitats (Camargo, 1994; Hellawell, 1986). Accepted criteria for species delimitation are absent for unicellular organisms such as dinophytes (Boenigk et al, 2012; Mayr, 1982a, b). The quality of a diagnostic trait and its abundance in a certain population is not easy to work out precisely as well. This is especially true for character states that have been used to describe taxa at the

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