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Journal of Phycology | 2011

A NEW LOOK AT AN ANCIENT ORDER: GENERIC REVISION OF THE BANGIALES (RHODOPHYTA)†

Judith E. Sutherland; Sandra C. Lindstrom; Wendy A. Nelson; Juliet Brodie; Michael D. J. Lynch; Mi Sook Hwang; Han-Gu Choi; Masahiko Miyata; Norio Kikuchi; Mariana C. Oliveira; Tracy J. Farr; Chris Neefus; Agnes Mols-Mortensen; Daniela Milstein; Kirsten M. Müller

The red algal order Bangiales has been revised as a result of detailed regional studies and the development of expert local knowledge of Bangiales floras, followed by collaborative global analyses based on wide taxon sampling and molecular analyses. Combined analyses of the nuclear SSU rRNA gene and the plastid RUBISCO LSU (rbcL) gene for 157 Bangiales taxa have been conducted. Fifteen genera of Bangiales, seven filamentous and eight foliose, are recognized. This classification includes five newly described and two resurrected genera. This revision constitutes a major change in understanding relationships and evolution in this order. The genus Porphyra is now restricted to five described species and a number of undescribed species. Other foliose taxa previously placed in Porphyra are now recognized to belong to the genera Boreophyllum gen. nov., Clymene gen. nov., Fuscifolium gen. nov., Lysithea gen. nov., Miuraea gen. nov., Pyropia, and Wildemania. Four of the seven filamentous genera recognized in our analyses already have generic names (Bangia, Dione, Minerva, and Pseudobangia), and are all currently monotypic. The unnamed filamentous genera are clearly composed of multiple species, and few of these species have names. Further research is required: the genus to which the marine taxon Bangia fuscopurpurea belongs is not known, and there are also a large number of species previously described as Porphyra for which nuclear SSU ribosomal RNA (nrSSU) or rbcL sequence data should be obtained so that they can be assigned to the appropriate genus.


Journal of Phycology | 2011

A NEW LOOK AT AN ANCIENT ORDER: GENERIC REVISION OF THE BANGIALES (RHODOPHYTA)(1).

Judith E. Sutherland; Sandra C. Lindstrom; Wendy A. Nelson; Juliet Brodie; Michael D. J. Lynch; Mi Sook Hwang; Han-Gu Choi; Masahiko Miyata; Norio Kikuchi; Mariana C. Oliveira; Tracy J. Farr; Chris Neefus; Agnes Mols-Mortensen; Daniela Milstein; Kirsten M. Müller

The red algal order Bangiales has been revised as a result of detailed regional studies and the development of expert local knowledge of Bangiales floras, followed by collaborative global analyses based on wide taxon sampling and molecular analyses. Combined analyses of the nuclear SSU rRNA gene and the plastid RUBISCO LSU (rbcL) gene for 157 Bangiales taxa have been conducted. Fifteen genera of Bangiales, seven filamentous and eight foliose, are recognized. This classification includes five newly described and two resurrected genera. This revision constitutes a major change in understanding relationships and evolution in this order. The genus Porphyra is now restricted to five described species and a number of undescribed species. Other foliose taxa previously placed in Porphyra are now recognized to belong to the genera Boreophyllum gen. nov., Clymene gen. nov., Fuscifolium gen. nov., Lysithea gen. nov., Miuraea gen. nov., Pyropia, and Wildemania. Four of the seven filamentous genera recognized in our analyses already have generic names (Bangia, Dione, Minerva, and Pseudobangia), and are all currently monotypic. The unnamed filamentous genera are clearly composed of multiple species, and few of these species have names. Further research is required: the genus to which the marine taxon Bangia fuscopurpurea belongs is not known, and there are also a large number of species previously described as Porphyra for which nuclear SSU ribosomal RNA (nrSSU) or rbcL sequence data should be obtained so that they can be assigned to the appropriate genus.


Archive | 2011

A new look at an ancient order: generic revision of the Bangiales

Judith E. Sutherland; Sandra C. Lindstrom; Wendy A. Nelson; Juliet Brodie; Michael D. J. Lynch; Hwang; Han-Gu Choi; Masahiko Miyata; Norio Kikuchi; Mariana C. Oliveira; Tracy J. Farr; Chris Neefus; Agnes Mols-Mortensen; Daniela Milstein; Kirsten M. Müller

The red algal order Bangiales has been revised as a result of detailed regional studies and the development of expert local knowledge of Bangiales floras, followed by collaborative global analyses based on wide taxon sampling and molecular analyses. Combined analyses of the nuclear SSU rRNA gene and the plastid RUBISCO LSU (rbcL) gene for 157 Bangiales taxa have been conducted. Fifteen genera of Bangiales, seven filamentous and eight foliose, are recognized. This classification includes five newly described and two resurrected genera. This revision constitutes a major change in understanding relationships and evolution in this order. The genus Porphyra is now restricted to five described species and a number of undescribed species. Other foliose taxa previously placed in Porphyra are now recognized to belong to the genera Boreophyllum gen. nov., Clymene gen. nov., Fuscifolium gen. nov., Lysithea gen. nov., Miuraea gen. nov., Pyropia, and Wildemania. Four of the seven filamentous genera recognized in our analyses already have generic names (Bangia, Dione, Minerva, and Pseudobangia), and are all currently monotypic. The unnamed filamentous genera are clearly composed of multiple species, and few of these species have names. Further research is required: the genus to which the marine taxon Bangia fuscopurpurea belongs is not known, and there are also a large number of species previously described as Porphyra for which nuclear SSU ribosomal RNA (nrSSU) or rbcL sequence data should be obtained so that they can be assigned to the appropriate genus.


Applications in Plant Sciences | 2015

Digitization Workflows for Flat Sheets and Packets of Plants, Algae, and Fungi

Gil Nelson; Patrick W. Sweeney; Lisa E. Wallace; Richard K. Rabeler; Dorothy Allard; Herrick Brown; J. Richard Carter; Michael W. Denslow; Elizabeth R. Ellwood; Charlotte C. Germain-Aubrey; Ed Gilbert; Emily L. Gillespie; Leslie R. Goertzen; Ben Legler; D. Blaine Marchant; Travis D. Marsico; Ashley B. Morris; Zack E. Murrell; Mare Nazaire; Chris Neefus; Shanna Oberreiter; Deborah Paul; Brad R. Ruhfel; Thomas Sasek; Joey Shaw; Pamela S. Soltis; Kimberly Watson; Andrea Weeks; Austin R. Mast

Effective workflows are essential components in the digitization of biodiversity specimen collections. To date, no comprehensive, community-vetted workflows have been published for digitizing flat sheets and packets of plants, algae, and fungi, even though latest estimates suggest that only 33% of herbarium specimens have been digitally transcribed, 54% of herbaria use a specimen database, and 24% are imaging specimens. In 2012, iDigBio, the U.S. National Science Foundations (NSF) coordinating center and national resource for the digitization of public, nonfederal U.S. collections, launched several working groups to address this deficiency. Here, we report the development of 14 workflow modules with 7–36 tasks each. These workflows represent the combined work of approximately 35 curators, directors, and collections managers representing more than 30 herbaria, including 15 NSF-supported plant-related Thematic Collections Networks and collaboratives. The workflows are provided for download as Portable Document Format (PDF) and Microsoft Word files. Customization of these workflows for specific institutional implementation is encouraged.


Journal of Phycology | 2011

A NEW LOOK AT AN ANCIENT ORDER: GENERIC REVISION OF THE BANGIALES (RHODOPHYTA)1: GENERIC REVISION OF THE BANGIALES

Judith E. Sutherland; Sandra C. Lindstrom; Wendy A. Nelson; Juliet Brodie; Michael D. J. Lynch; Mi Sook Hwang; Han-Gu Choi; Masahiko Miyata; Norio Kikuchi; Mariana C. Oliveira; Tracy J. Farr; Chris Neefus; Agnes Mols-Mortensen; Daniela Milstein; Kirsten M. Müller

The red algal order Bangiales has been revised as a result of detailed regional studies and the development of expert local knowledge of Bangiales floras, followed by collaborative global analyses based on wide taxon sampling and molecular analyses. Combined analyses of the nuclear SSU rRNA gene and the plastid RUBISCO LSU (rbcL) gene for 157 Bangiales taxa have been conducted. Fifteen genera of Bangiales, seven filamentous and eight foliose, are recognized. This classification includes five newly described and two resurrected genera. This revision constitutes a major change in understanding relationships and evolution in this order. The genus Porphyra is now restricted to five described species and a number of undescribed species. Other foliose taxa previously placed in Porphyra are now recognized to belong to the genera Boreophyllum gen. nov., Clymene gen. nov., Fuscifolium gen. nov., Lysithea gen. nov., Miuraea gen. nov., Pyropia, and Wildemania. Four of the seven filamentous genera recognized in our analyses already have generic names (Bangia, Dione, Minerva, and Pseudobangia), and are all currently monotypic. The unnamed filamentous genera are clearly composed of multiple species, and few of these species have names. Further research is required: the genus to which the marine taxon Bangia fuscopurpurea belongs is not known, and there are also a large number of species previously described as Porphyra for which nuclear SSU ribosomal RNA (nrSSU) or rbcL sequence data should be obtained so that they can be assigned to the appropriate genus.


European Journal of Phycology | 2007

New insights into the cryptic diversity of the North Atlantic–Mediterranean ‘ Porphyra leucosticta ’ complex: P. olivii sp. nov. and P. rosengurttii (Bangiales, Rhodophyta)

Juliet Brodie; Inka Bartsch; Chris Neefus; Sotiris Orfanidis; Troy L. Bray; Arthur C. Mathieson


Journal of Phycology | 2000

FIVE CRYPTIC SPECIES OF PORPHYRA FROM THE NORTHWEST ATLANTIC

Chris Neefus; Arthur C. Mathieson; Charles Yarish; Anita S. Klein; Andrew West; B. Teasdale; E.J. Hehre


Journal of Phycology | 2000

ANALYSIS OF PORPHYRA RBC L DEMONSTRATES MULTIPLE MIGRATIONS OCCURRED BETWEEN THE NORTH ATLANTIC AND NORTH PACIFIC.

B. Teasdale; Sandra C. Lindstrom; Suzanne Fredericq; Chris Neefus; Arthur C. Mathieson; Heather Taylor; Andrew West; S.T. Mercado; N. Piche; Anita S. Klein


Journal of Phycology | 2003

126 Porphyra Birdiae Neefus et Mathieson (Bangiales, Rhodophyta): A New Species from the Northwest Atlantic

Chris Neefus; Arthur C. Mathieson; Anita S. Klein; B. Teasdale; Troy L. Bray; Charles Yarish


EPIC3Unravelling the algae - the past, present and future of algal molecular systematics, Symposium, Natural History Museum, 11-12 April, London, UK. | 2006

Unraveling the North Atlantic-Mediterranean 'Porphyra leucosticta' complex: P. olivii sp. nov. and P. rosengurtii

Juliet Brodie; Inka Bartsch; Chris Neefus; Sotiris Orfanidis; Troy L. Bray; Arthur C. Mathieson

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Juliet Brodie

American Museum of Natural History

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Charles Yarish

University of Connecticut

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Sandra C. Lindstrom

University of British Columbia

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Masahiko Miyata

American Museum of Natural History

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Norio Kikuchi

American Museum of Natural History

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Tracy J. Farr

National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research

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