Bibliographic Detail
Gabriel, D., Driasma, S.G.A., Sauvage, T., Schmidt, W.E., Schils, T., Lim, P.-E., Harris, J. & Fredericq, S., 2016
Reference:
Gabriel, D., Driasma, S.G.A., Sauvage, T., Schmidt, W.E., Schils, T., Lim, P.-E., Harris, J. & Fredericq, S. (2016). Multilocus phylogeny reveals Gibsmithia hawaiiensis (Dumontiaceae, Rhodophyta) to be a species complex from the Indo-Pacific, with the proposal of G. eilatensis sp. nov. Phytotaxa 277(1): 1-20, 8 figs.
Abstract:
Gibsmithia hawaiiensis is a peculiar red alga characterized by furry gelatinous lobes arising from a cartilaginous stalk. The
species has been recorded from tropical reef systems throughout the Indo-Pacific. A multilocus phylogeny (UPA, rbcL, COI-
5P) of 36 specimens collected throughout the species distribution range, showed high genetic diversity at species level. Two
major groups were identified, each consisting of multiple lineages. Genetic variability was low in the Hawaiian Islands and
the northern Red Sea and high in the Western Indian Ocean and the Coral Triangle, where lineages overlap in distribution.
Genetic distances suggest that G. hawaiiensis represents a complex of five cryptic species, with no difference observed in
the external morphology corresponding to separate lineages. Anatomical and reproductive differences were observed at the
microscopic level for the lineage from the Red Sea, which is here described as G. eilatensis sp. nov. The geographic range
of the species complex is here expanded to include Madagascar, the Red Sea and the Indo-Malay region, and the generitype
seems endemic to the Hawaiian Islands. Algal diversity on coral reef systems is discussed from a conservation perspective
using G. hawaiiensis as an example.