Abstract
ABSTRACTSpecies and varieties in the genus Eudorina Ehrenberg (Volvocaceae, Chlorophyta) were evaluated on the basis of phylogenetic analyses of the large subunit ofribulose‐1,5‐bis‐phosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rbcL) gene sequences from 14 strains of four Eudorina species, as well as from nine species of Pleodorina and Volvox. The sequence data suggested that 10 of the 14 Eudorina strains form three separate and robust monophyletic groups within the nonmonophyletic genus Eudorina. The first group comprises all three strains of E. unicocca G. M. Smith; the second group consists of one of the E. elegans Ehrenberg var. elegans strains, the E. cylindrica Korshikov strain, and both E. illinoisensis (Kofoid) Pascher strains; and the third group consists of two monoecious varieties of E. elegans [two strains of E. elegans var. synoica Goldstein and one strain of E. elegans var. carteri (G. M. Smith) Goldstein]. In addition, E. illinoisensis represents a poly‐ or paraphyletic species within the second group. The remaining four strains, all of which are assigned to E. elegans var. elegans, are nonmonophyletic. Although their position in the phylogenetic trees is more or less ambiguous, they are ancestral to other taxa in the large anisogamous/oogamous monophyletic group including Eudorina, Pleodorina, and Volvox (except for sect. Volvox). Thus, the four Eudorina groups resolved in the present molecular phylogeny do not correspond with the species concepts of Eudorina based on vegetative morphology, but they do reflect the results of the previous intercrossing experiments and modes of monoecious and dioecious sexual reproduction.
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