• Title/Summary/Keyword: Morphological and molecular analyses

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Morphological Description, DNA Barcoding, and Taxonomic Review of Five Nudibranch Species (Gastropoda) from South Korea

  • Jina Park;Damin Lee;Eggy Triana Putri;Haelim Kil;Joong-Ki Park
    • Animal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity
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    • v.39 no.3
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    • pp.99-113
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    • 2023
  • The nudibranch is one of the most colorful gastropod species found in oceans worldwide. Unlike many other gastropod groups, the nudibranch loses an external shell in the adult stage, but instead develops various chemical defense systems. More than 2,500 nudibranch species have been reported worldwide, and 73 species are currently recorded in Korean waters. In this study, we present morphological descriptions, DNA barcode information of mtDNA cox1 sequence, and taxonomic review for five nudibranch species: Apata pricei (MacFarland, 1966), Doto rosacea Baba, 1949, Janolus toyamensis Baba and Abe, 1970, Polycera abei (Baba, 1960), and Trinchesia sibogae (Bergh, 1905). Of these, we also provide in-depth discussion of taxonomic issue of A. pricei that was previously subdivided into two subspecies, A. pricei pricei and A. pricei komandorica. Our morphological examination and molecular analyses of the mtDNA cox1 sequences indicate that these two subspecies are not taxonomically warranted. The phylogenetic information for the other nudibranch species from mtDNA cox1 sequence analysis is also included, providing a molecular basis for species identification and inferring their local phylogenies within each of the species groups discussed herein.

New records of two filamentous brown algae, Acinetospora filamentosa and Microspongium stilophorae from Korea

  • Oteng'o, Antony Otinga;Avila-Peltroche, Jose;Jeong, So Young;Won, Boo Yeon;Cho, Tae Oh
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.37 no.3
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    • pp.285-292
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    • 2019
  • Acinetospora filamentosa and Microspongium stilophorae are reported as new records from South Korea based on morphological and molecular analyses. A. filamentosa is mainly characterized by having the sparsely branched erect filaments, the scattered meristematic zones, forming crampons, plurilocular sporangia on both prostrate filaments and lower part of erect filaments, and spherical to oval unilocular sporangia formed either sessile or with a pedicel. M. stilophorae is an epiphytic thalli mostly on Stilophora sp. It is characterized by prostrate filaments with irregular cells, short erect filaments with short ramuli, phaeophycean hairs, uniseriate plurilocular sporangia on the terminal part of erect filament. Our molecular analyses of rbcL and cox1 genes reveals that A. filamentosa and M. stilophorae are nested within the clades of Acinetospora and Microspongium, respectively.

New Records of Two Filamentous Brown Algae, Acinetospora asiatica and Botrytella reinboldii from Korea

  • Oteng'o, Antony Otinga;Avila-Peltroche, Jose;Jeong, So Young;Won, Boo Yeon;Cho, Tae Oh
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.36 no.3
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    • pp.329-335
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    • 2018
  • Acinetospora asiatica and Botrytella reinboldii are reported as two new records from S. Korea based on morphological studies and molecular analyses. A. asiatica is mainly characterized by the presence of sparsely branched uniseriate filaments with diffused meristematic zones, the formation of crampons at right angles, and the formation of plurilocular sporangia on both prostrate and erect filaments. B. reinboldii is characterized by the presence of irregularly alternating branched uniseriate filaments attached by rhizoids, and single or clustered plurilocular sporangia with a single opening. Molecular analyses of rbcL gene revealed that A. asiatica and B. reinboldii are placed within each clade of Acinetospora and Botrytella, respectively.

Taxonomic revision of the genus Herposiphonia (Rhodomelaceae, Rhodophyta) from Korea, with the description of three new species

  • Koh, Young Ho;Kim, Myung Sook
    • ALGAE
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    • v.33 no.1
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    • pp.69-84
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    • 2018
  • We examined the species diversity of Herposiphonia on Korean coasts, based on a combination of morphology and molecular analyses of the mitochondrial COI-5P DNA barcode marker and plastid rbcL gene. We report the presence of eight species including three novel species: H. donghaensis sp. nov., H. jejuinsula sp. nov., H. sparsa sp. nov., H. caespitosa, H. fissidentoides, H. insidiosa, H. parca, and H. subdisticha. Specimens were separated into eight clades in both the COI-5P and rbcL gene analyses, with 1.3-19.6 and 6.6-15% interspecific sequence divergence, respectively. These eight species are also distinguishable by several morphological characteristics such as: branching pattern (d/i pattern in H. donghaensis sp. nov. and H. sparsa sp. nov.; d/d/d/i pattern in others), shape of determinate branch (ligulate in H. fissidentoides; terete in others), number of vegetative trichoblasts (1-2 in H. insidiosa and H. sparsa sp. nov.; 3-4 in H. caespitosa; absent in others), and number of segments and pericentral cells in determinate branches. About three novel species revealed by our analyses, H. donghaensis sp. nov. is newly discovered, and H. jejuinsula sp. nov. and H. sparsa sp. nov. were previously reported in Korea as H. nuda and H. secunda, respectively. Our results show that DNA barcoding and rbcL analyses are useful for delimiting species boundaries and discovering cryptic species diversity in the genus Herposiphonia.

Molecular Phylogeny of Poecilostome Copepods Based on the 18S rDNA Sequences

  • Kim, Jihee;Kim, Won
    • Animal cells and systems
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    • v.4 no.3
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    • pp.257-261
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    • 2000
  • To elucidate phylogenetic relationships among poecilostome families 18S rDNA sequence data were generated for seven poecilostome and one cyclopoid copopods by PCR cloning and sequencing techmiques. Phylogenetic trees were constructed by maximum parsimony, neighbor joining, and maximum likelihood methods using cyclopoid sequence as an outgroup. The results from three different analyses showed that the seven poecilostome families were eiridel into two groups: Clausidiidae-Myicolidae-Synaptiphillidae-bomolochidae and Lichomologidae-Chondracanthidae-Ergasilidae. The molecular phylogenies were consistent with those from the morphological characters. Therefore, these analyses porvide further evidence for the utility of 18S rDNA sequences in addressing phylogenetic relationships among poecilostome families.

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Erysiphe cornicola, a Powdery Mildew Occurring on Cornus controversa in Korea

  • In-Young Choi;Lamiya Abasova;Joon-Ho Choi;Ji-Hyun Park;Hyeon-Dong Shin
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
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    • v.51 no.1
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    • pp.57-62
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    • 2023
  • In Korea, Cornus controversa and C. florida are known as hosts of Erysiphe pulchra from section Microspharea of the genus Erysiphe. However, recent molecular-phylogenetic analyses on the internal transcribed spacer regions and large subunit gene of the rDNA revealed that the Erysiphe powdery mildew on C. controversa in Japan is in fact E. cornicola. To assess the taxonomic status of Erysiphe-C. controversa association in Korea, isolates collected since 1987 were investigated and consequently identified as E. cornicola based on molecular-phylogenetic analyses and new morphological traits. To our knowledge, this is the first study to confirm the presence of this powdery mildew in Korea.

Molecular Phylogeny of Syngnathiformes Fishes (한국산 실고기목 어류의 분자계통)

  • Song, Choon-Bok
    • Korean Journal of Ichthyology
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    • v.21 no.sup1
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    • pp.75-75
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    • 2009
  • The previous morphology-based taxonomic frameworks within the family Sygnathidae had emphasized the significance of the male brood pouch and reproductive biology in defining the group. However, several different hypotheses had been proposed by different investigators. This study have beencarried out to determine the phylogenetic relationships among 19 species belonging to the order Syngnathiformes with three Gasterosteiformes species as outgroup taxa by using the mitochondrial cytochrome b and Rag2 nuclear DNA sequences. Phylogenetic analyses based on neighbor-joining distance, maximum parsimony, minimum evolution and maximum likelihood method strongly supported that the family Syngnathidae, the suborder Syngnathoidei and the order Syngnathiformes were all monophyletic group. Much of previous morphological analyses were supported by our molecular data, but some deep relationships were not clearly resolved with regard to members of the suborder Aulostomoidei.

Two New Species and a New Chinese Record of Hypocreaceae as Evidenced by Morphological and Molecular Data

  • Zeng, Zhao Qing;Zhuang, Wen Ying
    • Mycobiology
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    • v.47 no.3
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    • pp.280-291
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    • 2019
  • To explore species diversity of Hypocreaceae, collections from Guangdong, Hubei, and Tibet of China were examined and two new species and a new Chinese record were discovered. Morphological characteristics and DNA sequence analyses of the ITS, LSU, $EF-1{\alpha}$, and RPB2 regions support their placements in Hypocreaceae and the establishments of the new species. Hypomyces hubeiensis sp. nov. is characterized by occurrence on fruitbody of Agaricus sp., concentric rings formed on MEA medium, verticillium-like conidiophores, subulate phialides, rod-shaped to narrowly ellipsoidal conidia, and absence of chlamydospores. Trichoderma subiculoides sp. nov. is distinguished by effuse to confluent rudimentary stromata lacking of a well-developed flank and not changing color in KOH, subcylindrical asci containing eight ascospores that disarticulate into 16 dimorphic part-ascospores, verticillium-like conidiophores, subcylindrical phialides, and subellipsoidal to rod-shaped conidia. Morphological distinctions between the new species and their close relatives are discussed. Hypomyces orthosporus is found for the first time from China.

Morphological and Molecular Analyses of $Anabaena$ $variabilis$ and $Trichormus$ $variabilis$ (Cyanobacteria) from Korea

  • Choi, Gang-Guk;Yoon, Sook-Kyung;Kim, Hee-Sik;Ahn, Chi-Yong;Oh, Hee-Mock
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.30 no.1
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    • pp.54-63
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    • 2012
  • This study characterizes three $Anabaena$ strains and 5 $Trichormus$ strains isolated from Korean waters and 3 $Anabaena$ $flos-aquae$ strains procured from the UTEX based on morphological features and molecular analyses. The $Anabaena$ and $Trichormus$ isolates were morphologically assigned to $A.$ $variabilis$ K$\ddot{u}$tzing and $T.$ $variabilis$(K$\ddot{u}$tzing ex Bornet et Flahault) Kom$\acute{a}$rek et Anagnostidis, respectively. The $Anabaena$ and $Trichormus$ strains differed significantly in the mean length of their vegetative cells. The 16S rRNA genes from the $Anabaena$ strains showed a 100% identity to that from $A.$ $variabilis$ ATCC 29413, while the 16S rRNA genes from the $Trichormus$ strains showed a 99.9% identity to that from $T.$ $variabilis$ GREIFSWALD. The overall topology was in agreement for the 16S rRNA gene and $cpcBA$-IGS trees in the both tree-constructing methods. In a neighbor-joining tree based on the 16S rRNA gene, the 3 $Anabaena$ strains were asso-ciated with $A.$ $variabilis$, the 5 $Trichormus$ strains with $T.$ $variabilis$, and the 3 $Anabaena$ (UTEX) strains were with $Nostoc$. To date, this is the first report on $A.$ $variabilis$ and $T.$ $variabilis$ strains originating from Korea.

Morphological and molecular characterization of the genus Coolia (Dinophyceae) from Bahía de La Paz, southwest Gulf of California

  • Morquecho, Lourdes;Garate-Lizarraga, Ismael;Gu, Haifeng
    • ALGAE
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    • v.37 no.3
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    • pp.185-204
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    • 2022
  • The genus Coolia A. Meunier 1919 has a global distribution and is a common member of epiphytic dinoflagellate assemblages in neritic ecosystems. Coolia monotis is the type species of the genus and was the only known species for 76 years. Over the past few decades, molecular characterization has unveiled two species complexes that group morphologically very similar species, so their limits are often unclear. To provide new knowledge on the biogeography and species composition of the genus Coolia, 16 strains were isolated from Bahía de La Paz, Gulf of California. The species were identified by applying morphological and molecular approaches. The morphometric characteristics of all isolated Coolia species were consistent with the original taxa descriptions. Phylogenetic analyses (large subunit [LSU] rDNA D1 / D2 and internal transcribed spacer [ITS] 1 / 5.8S / ITS2) revealed a species assemblage comprising Coolia malayensis, C. palmyrensis, C. tropicalis, and the C. cf. canariensis lineage. This is the first report of Coolia palmyrensis and C. cf. canariensis in Mexico and C. tropicalis in the Gulf of California. Our results strengthen the biogeographical understanding of these potentially harmful epiphytic dinoflagellate species.