Fuente: Todai Research » Feature Stories for TOP
Expuesto el: lunes, 28 de mayo de 2012 5:15
Autor: Todai Research » Feature Stories for TOP
Asunto: Linnaeus did not examine Japanese Volvox species
A new method for Volvox species classification 2012/05/28 Graduate School of Science Volvox is a well-known alga that forms spherical colonies, but its species identification has been very difficult because while the morphological characteristics of sexually differentiated spheroids and cells were taken to be the important taxonomic criteria, the induction of sexual reproduction of Volox in culture is generally difficult. One of the two new Japanese species of Volvox, V. kirkiorum (Nozaki et al.) originating from Gifu Prefecture, Japan. © Hisayoshi Nozaki In 1758 Linnaeus described the type species of Volvox, V. globator, and various Japanese books and encyclopedias list V. globator as a species growing in Japanese inland waters. However, detailed taxonomic studies on Japanese samples of V. globator have not been carried out since Ishikawa’s 1892 report of this species from Japan. Here, Associate Professor Nozaki’s group has established a new method to classify species of Volvox based on the induced formation of sexually-differentiated spheroids in culture, and DNA sequence data. The group examined many cultured samples originating from various localities of Japan, and finally delineated them as two new species of Volvox that are related to but essentially different from V. globator. This is the first DNA delineation of Volvox species related to V. globator. The objective recognition of the two new Japanese Volvox species will contribute much to our understanding of biodiversity in Japan and to preservation of biodiversity of aquatic organisms. Further new species of Volvox will be discovered worldwide using the new taxonomic method established here. Further information/ contact information(Japanese) Paper Nanako Isaka, Hiroko Kawai-Toyooka, Ryo Matsuzaki, Takashi Nakada and Hisayoshi Nozaki, Links Department of Biological Sciences Keio University Institute for Advanced Biosciences
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