Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel.


Journal of Phycology | 2004

SYSTEMATICS OF THE GRACILARIACEAE (GRACILARIALES, RHODOPHYTA): A CRITICAL ASSESSMENT BASED ON rbcL SEQUENCE ANALYSES 1

Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel; Suzanne Fredericq

Generic concepts in the economically important agarophyte red algal family Gracilariaceae were evaluated based on maximum parsimony, Bayesian likelihood, and minimum evolution analyses of the chloroplast‐encoded rbc L gene from 67 specimens worldwide. The results confirm the monophyly of the family and identify three large clades, one of which corresponds to the ancestral antiboreal genera Curdiea and Melanthalia, one to Gracilariopsis, and one to Gracilaria sensu lato, which contains nine distinct independent evolutionary lineages, including Hydropuntia. The species currently attributed to Hydropuntia comprise a single well‐supported clade composed of two distinct lineages. The two most basal clades within Gracilaria sensu lato deserve generic rank: a new genus centered around G. chilensis Bird, McLachlan et Oliveira and G. aff. tenuistipitata Chang et Xia and a resurrected Hydropuntia encompassing primarily Indo‐Pacific (G. urvillei [Montagne] Abbott, G. edulis [S. Gmelin] P. Silva, G. eucheumatoides Harvey, G. preissiana [Sonder] Womersley, and G. rangiferina [Kützing] Piccone) and western Atlantic species (G. cornea J. Agardh, G. crassissima P. et H. Crouan in Mazé et Schramm, G. usneoides [C. Agardh] J. Agardh, G. caudata J. Agardh, and G. secunda P. et H. Crouan in Mazé et Schramm). Cystocarpic features within the Gracilaria sensu lato clades appear to be more phylogenetically informative than male characters. The textorii‐type spermatangial configuration is represented in two distinct clusters of Gracilaria. The rbc L genetic divergence among the Gracilariaceae genera ranged between 8.46% and 16.41%, providing at least 2.5 times more genetic variation than does the 18S nuclear rDNA. rbc L also resolves intrageneric relationships, especially within Gracilaria sensu lato. The current number of gracilariacean species is underestimated in the western Atlantic because of convergence in habit and apparent homoplasy in vegetative and reproductive anatomy.


Journal of Phycology | 2006

GRACILARIA VERMICULOPHYLLA (RHODOPHYTA, GRACILARIALES) IN HOG ISLAND BAY, VIRGINIA: A CRYPTIC ALIEN AND INVASIVE MACROALGA AND TAXONOMIC CORRECTION1

Mads S. Thomsen; Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel; Suzanne Fredericq; Karen J. McGlathery

Gracilaria in Virginia, USA, is abundant and composed of thalli either having relatively flat or cylindrical branches. These two morphologies were referred to previously as G. foliifera (Forsskål) Bøgesen and G. verrucosa (Hudson) Papenfuss. However, G. verrucosa is regarded an invalid name, and the flat specimens are now referred to as G. tikvahiae McLachlan. This has created confusion about the nomenclature of Gracilaria from this region. Here we document that the cylindrical form that dominates Hog Island Bay, Virginia, is G. vermiculophylla (Ohmi) Papenfuss, an alien macroalga from the West Pacific. Most of the ecological studies performed at the Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) site in Hog Island Bay used this cylindrical species. The present study clarifies the taxonomical status of this species, and we identify attributes that make this alien successful in turbid coastal lagoons.


Journal of Phycology | 2003

Systematics of Gracilariopsis (Gracilariales, Rhodophyta) based on rbcL sequence analyses and morphological evidence

Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel; Lawrence M. Liao; Suzanne Fredericq; Max H. Hommersand

A phylogeny has been inferred from parsimony and likelihood analyses of plastid rbcL DNA sequences for seven recognized and six undescribed species of Gracilariopsis (Gp.) (Gracilariales, Rhodophyta). New descriptions and illustrations of cystocarp morphology are provided for four Gracilariopsis species from North and South America. The generitype, Gp. sjoestedtii (Kylin) Dawson, is reinstated to include plants distributed from British Columbia to Pacific Baja California, and the name is corrected to Gp. andersonii (Grunow) Dawson. Gracilariopsis lemaneiformis (Bory) Dawson, Acleto et Foldvik is shown not to have a worldwide distribution but to be restricted to the vicinity of Peru. Gracilariopsis costaricensis is recognized with the provision that it may prove to be conspecific with Gp. lemaneiformis. Gracilariopsis “lemaneiformis” from North and South Carolina is described as a new species, Gp. carolinensis Liao et Hommersand sp. nov. Gracilariopsis longissima (Gmelin) Steentoft, Irvine et Farnham from Western Europe and the Mediterranean Sea and Gp. tenuifrons (Bird et Oliveira) Fredericq et Hommersand from the Ca‐ribbean Sea and Brazil are recognized. Entities that have been referred to Gp. “lemaneiformis” from China and Japan constitute an undescribed species that is related to Gp. heteroclada Zhang et Xia. An invasive species from the Gulf of California, Mexico, and South Australia that has been assigned to Gp. “lemaneiformis” is resolved in a clade that includes Gp. longissima. Four undescribed species are included in the molecular analyses. The systematics of Gracilariopsis is discussed in the light of the morphological and molecular evidence.


Journal of Phycology | 2004

Phylogeography of Gracilaria Tikvahiae (Gracilariaceae, Rhodophyta): A Study of Genetic Discontinuity in a Continuously Distributed Species Based on Molecular Evidence

Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel; Suzanne Fredericq; James N. Norris

Gracilaria tikvahiae, a highly morphologically variable red alga, is one of the most common species of Gracilariaceae inhabiting Atlantic estuarine environments and the Intracoastal Waterway of eastern North America. Populations of G. tikvahiae at the extremes of their geographic range (Canada and southern Mexico) are subjected to very different environmental regimes. In this study, we used two types of genetic markers, the chloroplast‐encoded rbcL and the nuclear internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, to examine the genetic variability within G. tikvahiae, for inferring the taxonomic and phylogenetic relationships between geographically isolated populations, and to discuss its distributional information in a phylogeographic framework. Based on rbcL and ITS phylogenies, specimens from populations collected at the extreme distributional ranges reported for G. tikvahiae are indeed part of the same species; however, rbcL‐ but not ITS‐based phylogenies detected phylogenetic structure among the ten G. tikvahiae different haplotypes found in this study. The four distinct rbcL lineages were identified as 1) a Canadian–northeast U.S. lineage, 2) a southeast Florida lineage, 3) an eastern Gulf of Mexico lineage, and 4) a western Gulf of Mexico lineage. We found no evidence for the occurrence of G. tikvahiae in the Caribbean Sea. Observed phylogeographic patterns match patterns of genetic structures reported for marine animal taxa with continuous and quasicontinuous geographic distribution along the same geographic ranges.


Phycologia | 2014

Misconceptions about analyses of Australian seaweed collections

Thomas Wernberg; Bayden D. Russell; Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel; Mads S. Thomsen; Elvira S. Poloczanska; Sean D. Connell

Abstract: One of the greatest impediments to detecting changes in species distributions in response to ocean warming is the lack of baseline data. In a recent article, we compared old (1940–1959) and new (1990–2009) herbarium records of Australian seaweeds and found a net southward shift in the latitude of northernmost collections of temperate species, implying a flora-wide poleward retreat over the past five decades. Huisman & Millar (2013) criticised our methods, contending that a comparison of herbarium records from different time periods cannot be used to infer changes in species distributions without field-based validation. However, our analysis compared the median position of extreme records of random species from random locations rather than focusing on particular species and their possible loss from specific sites. Hence, ground-truthing ‘extinctions’ are of limited value to the interpretation of our analysis. Moreover, subtidal ground-truthing over biogeographic scales is not logistically possible and even runs counter to entire disciplines (e.g. palaeontology, extinction biology and biogeography) that assess hypotheses of extinction and shifting distributions. Huisman & Millar also questioned the direction of biases in the data set. We show here that patterns of collection effort should have produced an apparent shift northward in the absence of a true shift southward. Even if herbaria were not designed for the purpose of detecting species’ range changes, we contend that such collections can contain useful information on the distribution of species across space and time.


Journal of Phycology | 2002

A Survey of the Offshore Marine Macroalgae From the North‐Western Gulf of Mexico Hard Bank Communities

Suzanne Fredericq; T. O. Cho; Brigitte Gavio; Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel; E. Hickerson; S. M. Lin; J. M. Lopez-Bautista; N. Phillips; M. Viguerie; B. Wysor


Journal of Phycology | 2000

GRACILARIA FROM THE GULF OF MEXICO, WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON GRACILARIA TIKVAHIAE BASED ON TWO MOLECULAR DATASETS

Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel; Suzanne Fredericq; J.N. Norris


Journal of Phycology | 2003

51 Characterization of the northwestern gulf of Mexico macroalgae

Suzanne Fredericq; T. O. Cho; Brigitte Gavio; Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel; D. Krayesky; S. M. Lin; J. M. Lopez-Bautista; N. Phillips; William E. Schmidt; Boo Yeon Won; B. Wysor


Journal of Phycology | 2003

57 Systematics of hydropuntia montagne (gracilariaceae, gracilariales, rhodophyta) based on comparative morphology and rbcL sequence analysis

Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel; Suzanne Fredericq; James N. Norris


Journal of Phycology | 2002

Three New Species of Gracilariopsis (Gracilariales, Rhodophyta) From the North-Western Atlantic

Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel; Suzanne Fredericq

Collaboration


Dive into the Carlos Frederico Deluqui Gurgel's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Suzanne Fredericq

University of Louisiana at Lafayette

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

B. Wysor

University of Louisiana at Lafayette

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brigitte Gavio

University of Louisiana at Lafayette

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. M. Lopez-Bautista

University of Louisiana at Lafayette

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

N. Phillips

University of Louisiana at Lafayette

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. M. Lin

University of Louisiana at Lafayette

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

T. O. Cho

University of Louisiana at Lafayette

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James N. Norris

National Museum of Natural History

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Boo Yeon Won

University of Louisiana at Lafayette

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge