Abstract

ABSTRACT As historically described, the genus Amphidinum has long been recognized to be polyphyletic. Amphidinium sensu lato is the most diverse of all marine benthic dinoflagellate genera and after the redefinition of the sensu stricto genus about 100 species remained of unknown generic affiliation. A species similar to the Australian sensu lato species Amphidinium boggayum was discovered in France. Morphological and molecular phylogenetic data supported the description of a new species and the classification of the two closely related species within a new athecate, photosynthetic, benthic genus, named Bindiferia. Cells were dorsoventrally flattened with smaller asymmetric epicone. The cingulum was descending. The sulcus reached the antapex and had an extension onto the epicone. The apical structure complex formed an anticlockwise loop around the apex. A red stigma was located in the anterior part of the epicone, near the apex. Vegetative division occurred in a non-motile stage within a hyaline sheath. Non-motile cells had dorsal hypocone grooves. The two species differed from each other in epicone size, cingulum displacement, nucleus location and surface groove occurrence. The molecular phylogenetic results showed that Bindiferia is a distinct taxon that is only distantly related to Amphidinium sensu stricto. The nearest sister group to Bindiferia could not be reliably determined, but the apical structure complex suggested a close relationship to the genera of the Gymnodinium sensu stricto clade.

Highlights

  • IntroductionLachmann was among the largest and most diverse of all marine benthic dinoflagellate genera, containing about 120 species (e.g. Murray & Patterson 2002), but the genus was found to be polyphyletic (Flø Jørgensen et al 2004a)

  • Patterson was an arbitrary choice based on the cingulum placement in relation to the cell apex (Murray & Patterson 2002)

  • HOLOTYPE: cultured cells preserved in ethanol (Art. 44.2 of the ICN; Turland et al 2018) deposited at the dinoflagellate type collection in the Centre of Excellence for Dinophyte Taxonomy (CEDiT, Wilhelmshaven, Germany), which is part of the Herbarium Senckenbergianum Frankfurt/ M. (FR) with the designation CEDiT2021H135

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Summary

Introduction

Lachmann was among the largest and most diverse of all marine benthic dinoflagellate genera, containing about 120 species (e.g. Murray & Patterson 2002), but the genus was found to be polyphyletic (Flø Jørgensen et al 2004a). To distinguish Amphidinium from other athecate genera, overly generalized criteria such as epicone dimensions (shorter than 1⁄3 of the cell length) and cingulum displacement were used in the past. Lachmann (the type species) and putative relatives, the genus Amphidinium was re-defined as dorsoventrally flattened, athecate dinoflagellates with a minute epicone that overlays the anterior ventral part of the hypocone and deflects to the left (Murray et al 2004; Flø Jørgensen et al 2004a).

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