Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Richard M. McCourt is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Richard M. McCourt.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 2005

The New Higher Level Classification of Eukaryotes with Emphasis on the Taxonomy of Protists

Sina M. Adl; Alastair G. B. Simpson; Mark A. Farmer; Robert A. Andersen; O. Roger Anderson; John R. Barta; Samuel S. Bowser; Guy Brugerolle; Robert A. Fensome; Suzanne Fredericq; Timothy Y. James; Sergei Karpov; Paul Kugrens; J. C. Krug; Christopher E. Lane; Louise A. Lewis; Jean Lodge; Denis H. Lynn; David G. Mann; Richard M. McCourt; Leonel Mendoza; Øjvind Moestrup; Sharon E. Mozley-Standridge; Thomas A. Nerad; Carol A. Shearer; Alexey V. Smirnov; Frederick W. Spiegel; “Max” F. J. R. Taylor

Abstract. This revision of the classification of unicellular eukaryotes updates that of Levine et al. (1980) for the protozoa and expands it to include other protists. Whereas the previous revision was primarily to incorporate the results of ultrastructural studies, this revision incorporates results from both ultrastructural research since 1980 and molecular phylogenetic studies. We propose a scheme that is based on nameless ranked systematics. The vocabulary of the taxonomy is updated, particularly to clarify the naming of groups that have been repositioned. We recognize six clusters of eukaryotes that may represent the basic groupings similar to traditional “kingdoms.” The multicellular lineages emerged from within monophyletic protist lineages: animals and fungi from Opisthokonta, plants from Archaeplastida, and brown algae from Stramenopiles.


American Journal of Botany | 2004

Green algae and the origin of land plants

Louise A. Lewis; Richard M. McCourt

Over the past two decades, molecular phylogenetic data have allowed evaluations of hypotheses on the evolution of green algae based on vegetative morphological and ultrastructural characters. Higher taxa are now generally recognized on the basis of ultrastructural characters. Molecular analyses have mostly employed primarily nuclear small subunit rDNA (18S) and plastid rbcL data, as well as data on intron gain, complete genome sequencing, and mitochondrial sequences. Molecular-based revisions of classification at nearly all levels have occurred, from dismemberment of long-established genera and families into multiple classes, to the circumscription of two major lineages within the green algae. One lineage, the chlorophyte algae or Chlorophyta sensu stricto, comprises most of what are commonly called green algae and includes most members of the grade of putatively ancestral scaly flagellates in Prasinophyceae plus members of Ulvophyceae, Trebouxiophyceae, and Chlorophyceae. The other lineage (charophyte algae and embryophyte land plants), comprises at least five monophyletic groups of green algae, plus embryophytes. A recent multigene analysis corroborates a close relationship between Mesostigma (formerly in the Prasinophyceae) and the charophyte algae, although sequence data of the Mesostigma mitochondrial genome analysis places the genus as sister to charophyte and chlorophyte algae. These studies also support Charales as sister to land plants. The reorganization of taxa stimulated by molecular analyses is expected to continue as more data accumulate and new taxa and habitats are sampled.


American Journal of Botany | 1998

Circumscription of the Malvales and relationships to other Rosidae: evidence from RBCL sequence data

William S. Alverson; Kenneth G. Karol; David A. Baum; Mark W. Chase; Susan M. Swensen; Richard M. McCourt; Kenneth J. Sytsma

The order Malvales remains poorly circumscribed, despite its seemingly indisputable core constituents: Bombacaceae, Malvaceae, Sterculiaceae, and Tiliaceae. We conducted a two-step parsimony analysis on 125 rbcL sequences to clarify the composition of Malvales, to determine the relationships of some controversial families, and to identify the placement of the Malvales within Rosidae. We sampled taxa that have been previously suggested to be within, or close to, Malvales (83 sequences), plus additional rosids (26 sequences) and nonrosid eudicots (16 sequences) to provide a broader framework for the analysis. The resulting trees strongly support the monophyly of the core malvalean families, listed above. In addition, these data serve to identify a broader group of taxa that are closely associated with the core families. This expanded malvalean clade is composed of four major subclades: (1) the core families (Bombacaceae, Malvaceae, Sterculiaceae, Tiliaceae); (2) Bixaceae, Cochlospermaceae, and Sphaerosepalaceae (Rhopalocarpaceae); (3) Thymelaeaceae sensu lato (s.l.); and (4) Cistaceae, Dipterocarpaceae s.l., Sarcolaenaceae (Chlaenaceae), and Muntingia. In addition, Neurada (Neuradaceae or Rosaceae) falls in the expanded malvalean clade but not clearly within any of the four major subclades. This expanded malvalean clade is sister to either the expanded capparalean clade of Rodman et al. or the sapindalean clade of Gadek et al. Members of Elaeocarpaceae, hypothesized by most authors as a sister group to the four core malvalean families, are shown to not fall close to these taxa. Also excluded as members of, or sister groups to, the expanded malvalean clade were the families Aextoxicaceae, Barbeyaceae, Cannabinaceae, Cecropiaceae, Dichapetalaceae, Elaeagnaceae, Euphorbiaceae s.l., Huaceae, Lecythidaceae, Moraceae s.l., Pandaceae, Plagiopteraceae, Rhamnaceae, Scytopetalaceae, Ulmaceae, and Urticaceae.


Journal of Phycology | 2000

PHYLOGENY OF THE CONJUGATING GREEN ALGAE (ZYGNEMOPHYCEAE) BASED ON rbc L SEQUENCES

Richard M. McCourt; K. G. Karol; Jeremy Bell; Kathleen Helm-Bychowski; Anna Grajewska; Martin F. Wojciechowski; Robert W. Hoshaw

Sequences of the gene encoding the large subunit of RUBISCO (rbcL) for 30 genera in the six currently recognized families of conjugating green algae (Desmidiaceae, Gonatozygaceae, Mesotaeniaceae, Peniaceae, and Zygnemataceae) were analyzed using maximum parsimony and maximum likelihood; bootstrap replications were performed as a measure of support for clades. Other Charophyceae sensu Mattox and Stewart and representative land plants were used as outgroups. All analyses supported the monophyly of the conjugating green algae. The Desmidiales, or placoderm desmids, constitute a monophyletic group, with moderate to strong support for the four component families of this assemblage (Closteriaceae, Desmidiaceae, Gonatozygaceae, and Peniaceae). The analyses showed that the two families of Zygnematales (Mesotaeniaceae, Zygnemataceae), which have plesiomorphic, unornamented and unsegmented cell walls, are not monophyletic. However, combined taxa of these two traditional families may constitute a monophyletic group. Partitioning the data by codon position revealed no significant differences across all positions or between partitions of positions one and two versus position three. The trees resulting from parsimony analyses using first plus second positions versus third position differed only in topology of branches with poor bootstrap support. The tree derived from third positions only was more resolved than the tree derived from first and second positions. The rbcL‐based phylogeny is largely congruent with published analyses of small subunit rDNA sequences for the Zygnematales. The molecular data do not support hypotheses of monophyly for groups of extant unicellular and filamentous or colonial desmid genera exhibiting a common cell shape. A trend is evident from simple omniradiate cell shapes to taxa with lobed cell and plastid shapes, which supports the hypothesis that chloroplast shape evolved generally from simple to complex. The data imply that multicellular placoderm desmids are monophyletic. Several anomalous placements of genera were found, including the saccoderm desmid Roya in the Gonatozygaceae and the zygnematacean Entransia in the Coleochaetales. The former is strongly supported, although the latter is not, and Entransias phylogenetic position warrants further study.


Trends in Ecology and Evolution | 1995

Green algal phylogeny

Richard M. McCourt

Studies on the fine structure of green algal cells in the 1970s fundamentally revised theories on the evolution of green algae (Division Chlorophyta) and their relation to higher and drier green plants (i.e. embryophytes or land plants). Recent molecular phylogenetic work has largely confirmed some rather unorthodox proposals about which of the green algae represent the closest living relatives of higher plants. Resolution of the most ancient divergences on the green algal-land plant lineage remains elusive because of the rapidity of these evolutionary radiations and because branch topology varies with the taxa and molecular sequences sampled (as well as method of analysis). Molecular analyses within green algal groups have reinforced the value of ultrastructural characters and challenged the use of vegetative form as on overriding feature in classification.


Journal of Phycology | 2008

PHYLOGENY OF THE CONJUGATING GREEN ALGAE BASED ON CHLOROPLAST AND MITOCHONDRIAL NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE DATA

John D. Hall; Kenneth G. Karol; Richard M. McCourt; Charles F. Delwiche

The conjugating green algae represent a lineage of charophyte green algae known for their structural diversity and unusual mode of sexual reproduction, conjugation. These algae are ubiquitous in freshwater environments, where they are often important primary producers, but few studies have investigated evolutionary relationships in a molecular systematic context. A 109‐taxon data set consisting of three gene fragments (two from the chloroplast and one from the mitochondrial genome) was used to estimate the phylogeny of the genera of the conjugating green algae. Maximum likelihood (ML), maximum parsimony (MP), and Bayesian inference (BI) were used to estimate relationships from the 4,047 alignable nucleotides. This study confirmed the polyphyly of the Zygnemataceae and Mesotaeniaceae with respect to one another. The Peniaceae were determined to be paraphyletic, and two genera traditionally classified among the Zygnematales appear to belong to the lineage that gave rise to the Desmidiales. Six genera, Euastrum, Cosmarium, Cylindrocystis, Mesotaenium, Spondylosium, and Staurodesmus, were polyphyletic in this analysis. These findings have important implications for the evolution of structural characteristics in the group and will require some taxonomic changes. More work will be required to delineate lineages of Zygnematales in particular and to identify structural synapomorphies for some of the newly identified clades.


Molecular systematics of plants II | 1998

Molecular Systematics of the Green Algae

Russell L. Chapman; Mark A. Buchheim; Charles F. Delwiche; Thomas Friedl; Volker A. R. Huss; Kenneth G. Karol; Louise A. Lewis; Jim Manhart; Richard M. McCourt; Jeanine L. Olsen; Debra A. Waters

Ranging from unicells to complex “plantlike” organisms that are adapted to habitats from subaerial or terrestrial to freshwater or marine, the green algae represent a diversity of life forms that offer a daunting challenge in the search for shared morphological characters. The ultrastuctural techniques that fueled the 1970s and early 1980s revolution in algal systematics revealed a suite of new morphological characters, but many were not global (i.e., present in all of the taxa). Controversy over the interpretation of the importance of ultrastructural features (e.g., of cell division versus flagellar apparatus) led to conflicting hypotheses. Also, different researchers studied different details of different taxa, and thus a data matrix reporting a complete set of morphological and ultrastructural characters over a wide range of algal taxa was not available. Thus, it is no wonder that many researchers interested in unraveling the mystery of green algal phylogeny embraced molecular systematics, hoping that its early promise of relatively simple access to ample global characters would lead, finally, to a “true” phylogeny. The extent to which this promise has been fulfilled, or is likely to be fulfilled, is the subject of this chapter.


American Journal of Botany | 2003

Occurrence of matK in a trnK group II intron in charophyte green algae and phylogeny of the Characeae

Erin R. Sanders; K. G. Karol; Richard M. McCourt

A group II intron containing the matK gene, which encodes a splicing-associated maturase, was found in the trnK (lysine tRNA) exon in the chloroplast genome of the six extant genera of green algae in the family Characeae, which among green algae are the sister group to embryophytes (land plants). The characean trnK intron (∼2.5 kilobases [kb]) and matK ORF (∼1.5 kb) are comparable in size to the intron and ORF of land plants, in which they are similarly found inserted in the trnK exon. Domain X, a sequence of conserved amino acid residues within matK, occurs in the Characeae. Phylogenetic analysis using maximum likelihood (GTR + I + gamma likelihood model) and parsimony (branch and bound search) yielded one tree with high bootstrap support for all branches. The matK tree was congruent with the rbcL tree for the same taxa. The number and proportion of informative sites was higher in matK (501, 31% of matK sequence) compared to rbcL (122, 10%). Characeae branch lengths were on average more than five times longer for matK compared to rbcL and provided better resolution within the Characeae. These findings along with recent genomic analyses demonstrate that the intron and matK invaded the chloroplast genome of green algae prior to the evolution of land plants.


Journal of Phycology | 2005

PHYLOGENY OF SPIROGYRA AND SIROGONIUM (ZYGNEMATOPHYCEAE) BASED ON RBCL SEQUENCE DATA1

Christopher S. Drummond; John D. Hall; K. G. Karol; Charles F. Delwiche; Richard M. McCourt

DNA sequence data were obtained for the gene encoding the large subunit of RUBISCO (rbcL) from 26 strains of Spirogyra and seven of Sirogonium, using as outgroups 10 genera in the Zygnematales and Desmidiales (Closterium, Cosmarium, Cylindrocystis, Gonatozygon, Mesotaenium, Netrium, Penium, Zygnema, Zygnemopsis, Zygogonium). Sequence data were analyzed using maximum parsimony (MP), maximum likelihood (ML), and Bayesian inference (BI), with bootstrap replication (MP, ML) and posterior probabilities (BI) as measures of support. MP, ML, and BI analyses of the rbcL data strongly support a single clade containing Spirogyra and Sirogonium. The Spirogyra taxa are monophyletic, with the exception of Spirogyra maxima (Hassall) Wittrock, which is nested within a clade with Sirogonium and shares with them the characters of loosely spiraled chloroplasts (<1 complete turn per cell) and anisogamy of gametangial cells; S. maxima differs from Sirogonium in displaying well‐defined conjugation tubes rather than a tubeless connection involving bending (genuflection) of filaments. The ML and BI analyses place this Sirogonium/Spirogyra maxima clade sister to the remaining Spirogyra. Morphological differences among strains of Spirogyra grouped together on the basis of rbcL data, including laboratory strains derived from clonal cultures (Spirogyra communis, S. pratensis), indicate that some characters (filament width, chloroplast number) used in the traditional taxonomy of this group are poor measures of species identity. However, some characters such as replicate end walls and loose spiraling of chloroplasts may be synapomorphies for Spirogyra clades.


Journal of Phycology | 2014

Phylogeny of North American Tolypella (Charophyceae, Charophyta) based on plastid DNA sequences with a description of Tolypella ramosissima sp. nov.

William Pérez; John D. Hall; Richard M. McCourt; Kenneth G. Karol

Characeae (Charophyceae, Charophyta) contains two tribes with six genera: tribe Chareae with four genera and tribe Nitelleae, which includes Tolypella and Nitella. This paper uses molecular and morphological data to elucidate the phylogeny of Tolypella species in North America. In the most comprehensive taxonomic treatment of Characeae, 16 Tolypella species worldwide were subsumed into two species, T. intricata and T. nidifica, in two sections, Rothia and Tolypella respectively. It was further suggested that Tolypella might be a derived group within Nitella. In this investigation into species diversity and relationships in North American Tolypella, sequence data from the plastid genes atpB, psbC, and rbcL were assembled for a broad range of charophycean and land plant taxa. Molecular data were used in conjunction with morphology to test monophyly of the genus and species within it. Phylogenetic analyses of the sequence data showed that Characeae is monophyletic but that Nitelleae is paraphyletic with Tolypella sister to a monophyletic Nitella + Chareae. The results also supported the monophyly of Tolypella and the sections Rothia and Tolypella. Morphologically defined species were supported as clades with little or no DNA sequence differences. In addition, molecular data revealed several lineages and a new species (T. ramosissima sp. nov.), which suggests greater species diversity in Tolypella than previously recognized.

Collaboration


Dive into the Richard M. McCourt's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Monique Feist

University of Montpellier

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Louise A. Lewis

University of Connecticut

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert G. Sheath

California State University San Marcos

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rosalina Stancheva

California State University San Marcos

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

William Pérez

New York Botanical Garden

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hong Cui

University of Arizona

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge