Bibliographic Detail
O'Kelly, C.J., 2002
Reference:
O'Kelly, C.J. (2002). Glossomastix chrysoplasta n. gen., n. sp. (Pinguiophyceae), a new coccoidal, colony-forming golden alga from southern Australia. Phycological Research 50(1): 67-74.
Publication Date:
March 2002
Abstract:
Glossomastix chrysoplasta gen. et sp. nov. is described from cultures isolated from sandstone rubble, Sorrento Back Beach, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria, Australia. The alga forms wall-less, coccoidal vegetative cells that congregate in mucilaginous colonies and reproduce by successive bipartition. Plastids have girdle lamellae and partially embedded pyrenoids that are traversed by cytoplasmic channels. Zoospores are uniflagellate and swim poorly; a narrow lingulate pseudopod provides their primary form of motion. The single flagellum, which lacks hairs, a flagellar swelling, and autofluorescence, is the equivalent of the posterior flagellum in other golden algae. The anterior flagellum is absent; the basal body with which it would normally be associated is blind. The flagellar apparatus has two basal bodies, three microtubular roots, and a rhizoplast. The posterior (elder) basal body has a transitional helix that is proximal to the basal plate. Glossomastix chrysoplasta, placed in the Pinguiophyceae on the basis of molecular sequence and biochemical data, shares some ultrastructural features with other members of the class, especially Polypodochrysis teissieri, which has similar zoospores, but it also differs from other pinguiophytes in many respects. Glossomastix chrysoplasta is the pinguiophyte with, on average, the largest cells (exclusive of external materials), and it is the only one with a colonial habit.
DOI:
doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-1835.2002.00259.x