An assessment of the taxonomic status of the Mediterranean endemic genus Acrodiscus Zanardini (Halymeniales, Rhodophyta)
Author
Manghisi, Antonio
Institut de Systématique, Évolution, Biodiversité, ISYEB - UMR 7205 - CNRS, MNHN, UPMC, EPHE, Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, Sorbonne Universités, 57 rue Cuvier, CP 39 75005, Paris, France. & Dept. of Chemical, Biological, Pharmaceutical and Environmental Sciences - Botany, University of Messina, Salita Sperone, 31, 98166 Messina, Italy. & Laboratori de Botànica, Facultat de Farmàcia, Universitat de Barcelona, Av. Joan XXIII s / n, 08028 Barcelona, Spain. & Corresponding author: amanghisi @ unime. it
amanghisi@unime.it
Author
Gall, Line Le
Institut de Systématique, Évolution, Biodiversité, ISYEB - UMR 7205 - CNRS, MNHN, UPMC, EPHE, Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, Sorbonne Universités, 57 rue Cuvier, CP 39 75005, Paris, France. & Email: legall @ mnhn. fr
legall@mnhn.fr
Author
Bonillo, Céline
Institut de Systématique, Évolution, Biodiversité, ISYEB - UMR 7205 - CNRS, MNHN, UPMC, EPHE, Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, Sorbonne Universités, 57 rue Cuvier, CP 39 75005, Paris, France. & Email: bonillo @ mnhn. fr
bonillo@mnhn.fr
Author
Gargiulo, Gaetano M.
Dept. of Chemical, Biological, Pharmaceutical and Environmental Sciences - Botany, University of Messina, Salita Sperone, 31, 98166 Messina, Italy. & Email: ggargiulo @ unime. it
ggargiulo@unime.it
Author
Ribeira, M. Antonia
Laboratori de Botànica, Facultat de Farmàcia, Universitat de Barcelona, Av. Joan XXIII s / n, 08028 Barcelona, Spain. & Email: riberasiguan @ ub. edu
riberasiguan@ub.edu
Author
Morabito, Marina
Dept. of Chemical, Biological, Pharmaceutical and Environmental Sciences - Botany, University of Messina, Salita Sperone, 31, 98166 Messina, Italy. & Email: morabitom @ unime. it
morabitom@unime.it
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2017
2017-01-31
267
1
24
journal article
22218
10.5852/ejt.2017.267
ac3fb2f5-0a6d-4480-aed4-ab0ca8711258
2118-9773
3823200
Acrodiscus vidovichii
(Menegh.) Zanardini
Figs 1–7
;
Tables 1–2
Memorie del Reale Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti
14: 201 (1868). –
Chondrus
?
vidovichii
Menegh. in Savi,
Sezione di Botanica
, e Fisiologia Vegetabile
,
Adunanza del dì
16 Settembre 1841
.
In: Atti della terza
Riunione
degli Scienziati Italiani tenuta in Firenze
: 427 (
1841
). –
Cryptonemia vidovichii
(Meneghini) Zanardini,
Saggio
di classificazione naturale delle Ficee
: 42 (
1843
). –
Euhymenia dichotoma
(J.Agardh) Kütz. var.
vidovichii
Menegh. ex Kütz.,
Tabulae
phycologicae; oder, Abbildungen der Tange. Vol. 17
: 22, tab. 72 (1867). –
Lectotype
(designated here): Dalmatia [Šibenik,
Croatia
],
Jul.
1841
,
Vidovich
folder 742.4, n.11, fragments at the top and at the bottom left (PI!) (
Fig. 7
).
Cryptonemia dichotoma
J.Agardh
,
Algae maris Mediterranei et Adriatici
: 100 (1842). –
Cryptonemia
(section
Acrodiscus
)
dichotoma
J.Agardh
,
Species genera et ordines algarum
: 225 (1851). –
Euhymenia dichotoma
(J.Agardh) Kütz.
,
Species algarum
: 742 (1849). –
Type
:
France
, Nice, near St. Hospice, 1841,
J. Agardh
s.n. (LD, BM!, BM000619430, PC!, PC0523534).
Acrodiscus vidovichii
Zanardini
f.
cochlearis
Erceg.,
Acta Adriatica
IV: 76 (1949). syn. nov. –
Type
: Adriatic,
Croatia
.
Description
Thalli up to
10 cm
in length, the blade segments typically
1–3 cm
long by (4–)7(–10) mm broad by
200–250 µm
thick (
Fig. 1
), compressed to flattened, thin, membranous-fleshy, dark red in color, erect from a very short cuneate stipe with a discoid holdfast, the blades subdichotomously branched, linear and slightly channeled, the apices broadly rounded (
Figs 1
C–D, 2A, 3A). Constrictions occasional between forks (
Fig. 1D
) and especially at sites of branching (
Fig. 1B, D
); proliferous blades frequent at constrictions (
Fig. 1B
) or from lower stipes (
Fig. 1
B–D).
Fronds multiaxial (
Fig. 2A
), the cortex anticlinal (
Fig. 2
A–B), the medulla densely filamentous (
Fig. 2D
); cortical filaments 5- or 6-layered, pseudo-dichotomously branched, the cells subspherical to ellipsoid (
Fig. 2B
), progressively smaller outwardly,
5–9 µm
in diameter proximally,
2–3 µm
in diameter at surface (
Fig. 2B
) and evenly spaced or slightly paired (
Fig. 2C
). Subsurface cortical cells secondarily pit-connected; short longitudinal multicellular ‘bridges’ sometimes linking adjacent cortical cells or growing into the medulla from the transition zone between cortex and medulla; stellate (“ganglionic”
sensu
Womersley & Lewis 1994
) and refractive medullary cells or filaments absent. Medulla occupying half of the blade sections, composed of interwoven longitudinal or, less commonly, oblique and transverse filaments ca
5 µm
in diameter (
Fig. 2D
).
Female and male reproductive structures not observed. Tetrasporangia developing in eliptical nemathecia located subapically (
Fig. 3A
). Tetrasporangial filaments usually three-celled, the terminal cell a cruciate/ decussate-cruciate tetrad (30–)33(–35) µm long by
12–15 µm
wide (
Fig. 3
C–D); subapical cells ellipsoid, bearing two simple or once-dichomous sterile filaments that surround the sporangia (
Fig. 3C
); basal
cells deltoid, sterile nemathecial paraphyses four-celled (
Fig. 3C
), the proximal cells narrowly falcate, the terminal cells smaller in diameter and subspherical (
Fig. 3C
).
Distribution and habitat
Acrodiscus
is uncommon but widely distributed across the Mediterranean Sea (
Fig. 4
; see also
Guiry & Guiry 2016
; Manghisi
et al
. 2010a); it is a sciaphilous species, found throughout the year on rocky substrata from depths of
0–
50 m
. Tetrasporophytes were collected in spring and autumn (
Table 1
).
Taxonomic history
In the year following Meneghini’s (
Savi 1841
) proposal of
Chondrus
?
vidovichii
from Dalmatia [collected by Vidovich,
fide
Zanardini (1868)
], J.
Agardh (1842)
described
Cryptonemia dichotoma
from collections near Nice.
Zanardini (1843)
soon after regarded
Chondrus
?
vidovichii
and
Cryptonemia dichotoma
as conspecific and a true member of
Cryptonemia
, creating
Cryptonemia vidovichii
based on Meneghini’s prior naming. Apparently disregarding
Zanardini’s (1843)
proposals,
Kützing (1849)
transferred
C. dichotoma
to his own new genus
Euhymenia
, which is now regarded as synonymous with
Kallymenia
(
Guiry & Guiry 2016
)
. Next, J.
Agardh (1851)
, ignoring Kützing’s
Euhymenia
, put
Cryptonemia vidovichii
into his newly proposed section
Acrodiscus
of
Cryptonemia
, along with
Phyllophora
crenulata
J.Agardh
and
C. denticulata
J.Agardh
, on the base of their morphology and the presence of subapical tetrasorangial sori.
Kützing (1867)
then made Meneghini’s species a variety of J. Agardh’s
Cryptonemia dichotoma
, thus not acknowledging the synonymy of the two as had been advocated by
Zanardini (1843)
. Soon afterwards,
Zanardini (1868)
removed
Cryptonemia vidovichii
(which he still regarded as synonymous with
C. dichotoma
) from the genus
Cryptonemia
and placed it into a newly created one,
Acrodiscus
, named after the section made by J. Agardh.
De Toni (1905)
transferred J. Agardh’s
C. crenulata
and
C. denticulata
to
Acrodiscus
(as
A. crenulatus
(J.Agardh) De Toni
and
A. denticulatus
(J.Agardh) De Toni
), although both are currently regarded as genuine species of
Cryptonemia
(
Guiry & Guiry 2016
)
.
Fig. 1. A–B
. Herbarium sheets MS35027-1 and MS35027-14, respectively, both from Sicily.
C–D
. Herbarium sheets PC0152091 (LLG0393) and PC0152089 (LLG0394), respectively, both from Vis Island, Croatia. Scale bars: A–B = 2 cm; C–D = 1 cm.
Fig. 2.
Analine-blue stained vegetative features.
A
. A transapical longitudinal section indicative of its multiaxial structure.
B
. The anticlinal orientation of pseudo-dichotomous cortical filaments.
C
. Mostly paired cortical cells in surface view.
D
. Longitudinally aligned, peripherally inverwoven medullary filaments. Scale bars: A, D = 20 μm; B–C = 10 μm.
In 1949, Ercegović proposed
Acrodiscus vidovichii
f.
cochlearis
, arguing that the specimens from Dalmatia (
Croatia
) had “spoon-shaped”, rather than the flattened fronds described by several other workers (
Ardissone 1883
;
Hauck 1885
;
Preda 1908
;
Zanardini 1868
). Ercegović overlooked, however, the fact that populations from throughout the Mediterranean had been described as both compressed-flat or plane (
Ardissone 1883
;
Hauck 1885
;
Kylin 1956
;
Savi 1841
;
Preda 1908
;
Zanardini 1868
) and with bent/curved sub-grooved margins (
Agardh 1842
;
Aleem 1993
;
De Toni 1905
;
Feldmann 1939
). In our experience, freshly collected specimens normally have bent/curved margins but flatten once pressed on herbarium sheets; younger and thinner specimens, on the other hand, can be planar throughout and usually adhere to paper, whereas older, more coriaceous specimens may remain canaliculate and nonadherent. We therefore find little reason to recognize a separate forma
cochlearis
.
Lectotypification
Chondrus
?
vidovichii
Menegh.
was validly published in what is commonly reported as Menghini’s
Algologia Dalmatica
(
Guiry & Guiry 2016
) in
Atti della terza
Riunione
degli Scienziati italiani tenuta in Firenze nel
Settembre 1841
(
Savi 1841
). Indeed, the latter is a congress acta in the form of a book with various sections. During the meeting of the Botany and Plant Physiology group, Meneghini showed his manuscript to the assembly. The secretary of the group, Pietro Savi, recorded the meeting events in the acta, and transcribed part of Meneghini’s manuscript, reportedly titled
Algologia Dalmatica
, including its novelties. With specific reference to
Chondrus
?
vidovichii
, Savi
copied the Latin diagnosis and noted the lack of reproductive structures, and made reference to an illustration that does not appear in the acta. No
holotype
is designated, nor is there an iconotype that might serve as one.
Fig. 3. A
. Elliptical outline of a subapical nemathecial sorus.
B
. Lugol-stained l.s. of a tetrasporangial nemathecium.
C
. Schematic drawing of terminal tetrasporangia and jacketing nemathecial filaments.
D
. Horizontally aligned cruciate and decussate-cruciate tetrasporangia within the palisade of nemathecial filaments. Scale bars: A = 200 μm; B, D = 20 μm.
In the Library of Natural and Environmental Sciences of the University of Pisa,
Italy
, we found numerous manuscript documents belonging to Meneghini, among them the original complete manuscript of the so-called
Algologia Dalmatica,
actually
Alghe Dalmate, enumerate ed illustrate dal professor Giuseppe Meneghini
(
Fig. 5
A–B), along with plates including his illustration of
Chondrus
?
vidovichii
(
Fig 6
). Unfortunately, the manuscript was never published.
Interestingly, in other documents there is evidence that: a) Meneghini received material from Dalmatia (
Croatia
) collected either by Vidovich in Sebenico (Šibenik), by Sandri in Zara (Zadar), or by Stalio in Spalato (Split); b) Menegnini received material from Vidovich in
July 1841
(including a
Chondrus
?
); and c) Meneghini dedicated to Vidovich all the new species collected by him. Consequently, it can be inferred that the
type
material should have been collected by Vidovich in Sebenico in
July 1841
.
Finally, we found that the
Herbarium Horti Botanici Pisani
(PI) holds a number of Meneghini specimens. In a folder labelled “
742. 4.
Euhymenia dichotoma Kg.
” is an envelope and three sheets numbered “11”. The envelope contains ten specimens of
A. vidovichii
, three of them on numbered sheets (224, 778, 783). Two of the three sheets (upper and lower left) each have a fragment of the specimen drawn in the abovementioned plate (
Fig. 7
). Consequently, we designate as
type
material of
Chondrus
?
vidovichii
Fig. 4.
Recorded sites of
Acrodiscus vidovichii
(Menegh.) Zanardini
along the shores of the Mediterranean Sea.
Fig. 5. A
. Detail of front page of Meneghini’s 1841 manuscript “
Alghe Dalmate, Enumerate ed Illustrate dal Professor Giuseppe Meneghini
”.
B
. Detail of protologue page of
Chondrus
?
vidovichii
(Menegh.) Zanardini.
Fig. 6.
Plate and caption of
Chondrus
?
vidovichii
(Menegh.) Zanardini
from Meneghini’s manuscript “
Alghe Dalmate, Enumerate ed Illustrate dal Professor Giuseppe Meneghini
”.
Fig. 7.
Two fragments (
B–C
, arrows) of the specimen (
A
) of
Chondrus
?
vidovichii
(Menegh.) Zanardini
illustrated in Meneghini’s protologue manuscript. The sheets are currently filed in folder
742.4
, labelled “
Euhymenia dichotoma Kg
.
” at the
Herbarium Orti Botanici Pisani
(PI). Scale bars = 1 cm.
Meneghini the two fragments on two of the “11” sheets that were portions of the single specimen he illustrated in the unpublished figure accompanying his manuscript.
Phylogenetic analyses
The DNA barcode region was generated for 15 samples from different Mediterranean localities, including the
type
area; the sequences are now lodged in BOLD and Genbank (
Table 1
). Divergence among generated sequences ranged from 0–3 bp (0–0.53%), which is a typical level of within-species variation.
Phylogenetic analyses inferred from both
rbc
L and LSU markers (
Fig. 8
and trees not shown) resolved three strongly supported supergeneric lineages within the
Halymeniales
: a) one of
A. nitidissima
J.Agardh
and species of
Pachymenia
J.Agardh
; b) a second comprised of
Polyopes
J.Agardh
and
Glaphyrosiphon intestinalis
(Harv.) Leister & W.A.Nelson
; and c) a third consisting of
Grateloupia
C.Agardh
,
Yonagunia
Kawag. & Masuda
,
Pachymeniopsis
Yamada ex Kawab.
,
Prionitis
J.Agardh
,
Phyllymenia
J.Agardh
,
Mariaramirezia
M.S.Calderon, G.H.Boo, A.Mansilla & S.M.Boo
,
Kintokiocolax
Tak.Tanaka & Nozawa
and
Dermocorynus
P.Crouan & H.Crouan. The
relationships among the remaining halymeniacean genera included in our analyses were poorly or not resolved.
Cryptonemia
J.Agardh
was polyphyletic and
Thamnoclonium
Kützing
was paraphyletic in
rbc
L analyses, and the genus
Halymenia
C.Agardh
was polyphyletic in both
rbc
L and LSU trees.
The exact alliance of
Acrodiscus
was uncertain, as it varied depending on the phylogenetic reconstruction methods and the marker. In
rbc
L analyses,
A. vidovichii
was included in an unsupported lineage encompassing
Felicinia marginata
(Roussel) Manghisi, L.Le Gall, Ribera, Gargiulo & Morabito and
Corynomorpha prismatica
(J.Agardh) J.Agardh. This
assemblage in turn grouped with particular, especially
type
, species of
Halymenia
,
Cryptonemia
,
Carpopeltis
F.Schmitz
,
Codiophyllum
J.E.Gray
,
Spongophloea
Huisman, De Clerck
, Prud’homme & Borow.,
Thamnoclonium
Kütz.
,
Epiphloea
J.Agardh
and
Gelinaria
Sond. In
LSU trees,
Acrodiscus
grouped with
Corynomorpha
and species of
Pachymeniopsis
,
Dermocorynus
,
Grateloupia
and
Prionitis
. In concatenate LSU-
rbc
L analyses (
Fig. 8
), it was sister to
Corynomorpha
with variable degrees of support, both genera being included in a deeper lineage encompassing
Felicinia
Manghisi, L.Le Gall, Ribera, Gargiulo & Morabito,
Halymenia
,
Cryptonemia
,
Gelinaria
,
Epiphloea
and
Isabbottia
M.S.Balakr.