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Two New Marine Species of Placopus (Vampyrellida, Rhizaria) That Perforate the Theca of Tetraselmis (Chlorodendrales, Viridiplantae).

Kira MoreAlastair G B SimpsonSebastian Hess
Published in: The Journal of eukaryotic microbiology (2018)
Vampyrellids (Vampyrellida, Rhizaria) are a major group of predatory amoebae known primarily from freshwater and soil. Environmental sequence data indicate that there is also a considerable diversity of vampyrellids inhabiting marine ecosystems, but their phenotypic traits and ecology remain largely unexplored. We discovered algivorous vampyrellids of the filoflabellate morphotype in coastal habitats in Atlantic Canada, established cultures by single-cell isolation, and characterised three strains using light microscopy, SSU rRNA gene sequencing, feeding experiments and growth experiments at various salinities. These strains exhibit orange, discoid trophozoites with ventral filopodia, moving granules ("membranosomes"), and rolling locomotion, similar to freshwater species previously assigned to Hyalodiscus Hertwig & Lesser, but here moved to Placopus Schulze (due to homonymy with Hyalodiscus Ehrenberg). SSU rRNA gene phylogenies place our strains in two distinct positions within "lineage B3" (here referred to as Placopodidae). Based on these morphological, habitat and molecular data, we describe two new species, Placopus melkoniani sp. nov. and Placopus pusillus sp. nov., both of which feed on chlorophyte flagellates (Tetraselmis, Pyramimonas) and the cryptophyte Chroomonas. They perforate the theca of Tetraselmis to extract the protoplast, and thereby represent the first vampyrellids known to degrade the biochemically exotic cell wall of the Chlorodendrales (Chlorophyta, Viridiplantae).
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