Abstract

Holocarpic oomycetes have been neglected over several decades, until interest in these organisms has recently resurged. One of the most widespread genera of holocarpic oomycetes is Pontisma, parasitic to red seaweeds throughout all oceans. Recently, the genus Sirolpidium (parasitic to green algae) was found to be congeneric with Pontisma. This hinted at a high pathogenic versatility and prompted the screening of other macroalgae on the coastline of Iceland. During this survey a parasite of the brown algae Pylaiella littoralis was found, which formed anisolpidium-like thalli, but produced biflagellate zoospores. Phylogenetic investigations revealed that the parasite was placed in the genus Pontisma. In reconstructions based on partial nrSSU sequences, it grouped with some sequences of parasitoids of the diatom genus Licmophora, but the more variable mitochondrial cox2 sequences were divergent. Based on phylogenetic evidence and the unique parasitism of brown algae, the parasitoid is described as Pontisma blauvikense in this study. Pontisma blauvikense is the fourth oomycete species parasitic to Pylaiella, which is also parasitised by Euychasma dicksonii and two Anisolpidium species. For a better understanding of the ecology and evolution of holocarpic oomycetes, further research is necessary to investigate the host spectrum of Pontisma in general and Pontisma blauvikense in particular.

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