Marine Protists 2015
DOI: 10.1007/978-4-431-55130-0_16
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Diversity and Phylogeny of Marine Parasitic Dinoflagellates

Abstract: The dinofl agellates are an assemblage of autotrophic, myxotrophic and heterotrophic species and play important roles in marine ecosystems. Most of them are free-living, but several are known as symbionts of marine invertebrates or as parasites of aquatic animals and protists. Molecular phylogenetic studies on parasitic dinofl agellates reveal that the parasitism has evolved polyphyletically appearing several times independently within the division Dinophyta. The Dinophyta consists of "core" dinofl agellates (… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…They are assumed to be parasites, and the microscopic and genomic data described here are consistent with this, and in some cases identify new hosts. Their exact evolutionary relationship to dinokaryotes has also been controversial (Guillou et al, 2008;Massana et al, 2008;Horiguchi, 2015), and our data provide strong support for their paraphyly. These insights impact how we reconstruct the evolution of plastids and parasitism in MALVs and dinoflagellates.…”
Section: Ibmentioning
confidence: 52%
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“…They are assumed to be parasites, and the microscopic and genomic data described here are consistent with this, and in some cases identify new hosts. Their exact evolutionary relationship to dinokaryotes has also been controversial (Guillou et al, 2008;Massana et al, 2008;Horiguchi, 2015), and our data provide strong support for their paraphyly. These insights impact how we reconstruct the evolution of plastids and parasitism in MALVs and dinoflagellates.…”
Section: Ibmentioning
confidence: 52%
“…Originally, MALVs were divided into two major groups: MALV I including Ichthyodinium and Duboscquella (Harada et al, 2007;Skovgaard et al, 2009), and MALV II, including Syndinium, Hematodinium and Amoebophrya (Skovgaard et al, 2005). Both groups were subsequently subdivided further, but the relationships between subgroups remained uncertain (Guillou et al, 2008;Skovgaard et al, 2009;Horiguchi, 2015; see also Supplementary Figure 2). The concatenated SSU/LSU tree (Figure 1) recovers four strongly-supported subgroups: MALV Ia, Ib, II and IV (following the names of Guillou et al, 2008, but distinguishing two phylogenetically distant subgroups of MALV I).…”
Section: Ibmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Dinoflagellates are one of the major groups in the supergroup Alveolata, with an estimated ~ 2500 species [ 1 ]. They inhabit aquatic environments and nearly half are phototrophic [ 1 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Parasites of the superphylum Alveolata, specifically the marine alveolates (MALV)-I and MALV-II clusters, routinely infect members of the family Dinophyceae and can account for up to 88% of the eukaryote fraction in some locations. These two MALV clusters have recently been renamed Syndiniales groups I and II, respectively [12]. Specifically for the southwest Indian Ocean, the eukaryotic fraction was dominated by alveolates including the Dinophyceae and their Syndiniales parasites [7].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%