In a recent review of the seagrass genus Halophila in Japan, eight taxa including four new species were listed: (i) H. decipiens, (ii) H. minor, (iii) H. major, (iv) H. ovalis, (v) H. mikii, (vi) H. nipponica, (vii) H. okinawensis, and (viii) H. gaudichaudii. In this study, the specific concept of Halophila in Japan as well as some other geographic areas was re-assessed by a combination of nuclear ribosomal ITS1, 5.8S rDNA, and ITS2 sequence analyses and morphological examinations of both recently collected materials and available type collections. The results confirm the distinctness of the Australian endemic species H. australis and the putative pan-tropical taxon H. decipiens; but also demonstrate conspecificity of: (i) H. minor and H. ovalis; (ii) H. major and H. mikii; and (iii) H. nipponica, H. okinawensis and H. gaudichaudii. As an outcome of this study, we recommend restricting the list of Halophila representatives in Japan to the following four species: (i) H. decipiens, (ii) H. major, (iii) H. ovalis, and (iv) H. nipponica. In addition, we predict the possibility of H. major occurring further south than currently recorded.
Ulva limnetica Ichihara et Shimada, sp. nov. (Ulvales, Ulvophyceae) is described from the Ryukyu Islands, Japan, and is characterized by thalli that are: (i) branched, tubular, fragile and wrinkled; (ii) up to 80 cm in height and up to 2 cm in diameter; (iii) light to yellowish green in color; and (iv) having an asexual reproduction by means of quadriflagellate swarmers. Rhizoidal cells bear tubular extensions on the outside of the cell layer in the stipe. Ulva limnetica is distinguished from species with similar thalli by chloroplast disposition, branching pattern, number of pyrenoids per cell and gross morphology. It is also distinguished by sequences of the nuclear-encoded 18S ribosomal RNA gene, internal transcribed spacer 2 region and the plastid-encoded large subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxgenase gene (rbcL). Ulva limnetica was clustered with other Ulva species in an early diverging lineage within the genus.
A taxonomic study of the genus Padina from Japan, Southeast Asia, and Hawaii based on morphology and gene sequence data (rbcL and cox3) resulted in the recognition of four new species, that is, Padina macrophylla and Padina ishigakiensis from Ryukyu Islands, Japan; Padina maroensis from Hawaii; and Padina usoehtunii from Myanmar and Thailand. All species are bistratose and morphologically different from one another as well as from any known taxa by a combination of characters relating to degree of calcification; the structure, position, and arrangement of hairlines (HLs) and reproductive sori; and the presence or absence of rhizoid-like groups of hairs and an indusium. Molecular phylogenetic analyses demonstrated a close relationship between P. ishigakiensis, P. macrophylla, P. maroensis, and Padina australis Hauck. The position of P. usoehtunii, however, was not fully resolved, being either sister to a clade comprising the other three new species and P. australis in the rbcL tree or more closely related to a clade comprising several other recently described species in the cox3 tree. The finding of the four new species demonstrates high species diversity particularly in southern Japan. The following characters were first recognized here to be useful for species delimitation: the presence or absence of small rhizoid-like groups of hairs on the thallus surface, structure and arrangement of HLs on both surfaces either alternate or irregular, and arrangement of the alternating HLs between both surfaces in equal or unequal distance. The evolutionary trajectory of these and six other morphological characters used in species delineation was traced on the phylogenetic tree.
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