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Morphology and Molecular Phylogeny of Two New Terrestrial Ciliates, Australocirrus rubrus n. sp. and Notohymena gangwonensis n. sp. (Ciliophora: Oxytrichidae), from South Korea.

Kang-San KimJae-Ho JungGi-Sik Min
Published in: The Journal of eukaryotic microbiology (2019)
Two new soil oxytrichids, Australocirrus rubrus n. sp. and Notohymena gangwonensis n. sp., were discovered from South Korea. Morphologically, A. rubrus shares many features with A. australis, and these two species form a single clade in a molecular tree based on nuclear small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA) gene sequences. Australocirrus rubrus mainly differs from A. australis in the color (citrine color vs. reddish) and distribution of the cortical granules. Additionally, we confirm that the genus Australocirrus is not a monophyletic group, as A. shii is separated from the clade comprising the other Australocirrus species, being clustered instead with other taxa. Notohymena gangwonensis n. sp. mainly differs from its congeners by the following combination of features: irregularly distributed cortical granules (vs. arranged in groups associated with cirri and dorsal kineties), variable four or five (usually four) transverse cirri (vs. invariable five), and the anteriormost pretransverse cirrus V/2 on 13.2-16.1% of cell length (vs. on or above 18.9% of cell length). Currently, there are no available gene sequences for members of the genus Notohymena, thus we provide SSU rRNA gene sequences from the new species of Notohymena, as well as detailed morphological descriptions of the novel species.
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