TY - JOUR
T1 - Comparative morphology of five species of symbiotic and non-symbiotic coccoid cyanobacteria
AU - Usher, Kayley
AU - Kuo, John
AU - Fromont, J.
AU - Toze, Simon
AU - Sutton, David
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - The morphology of five unicellular cyanobacterial species from two genera was compared using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and statistical analyses. Cyanobacteria symbiotic with marine sponges from Australia and the Mediterranean were investigated, together with cyanobacteria from the water column in Western Australia. The aim was to establish whether phenotypic characteristics are useful for distinguishing cyanobacterial species, and to investigate the possible relationships of host species and geographic location on cyanobacterial morphology. Analysis of variance ( ANOVA) demonstrated that cell size of the symbionts, Synechococcus spongiarum and Aphanocapsa feldmannii, is directly correlated with the number of turns of the thylakoid, and this must be accounted for in comparative morphological analyses. S. spongiarum cells were approximately one third smaller than those of A. feldmannii, but did not vary significantly in size in Chondrilla australiensis collected from different localities, or in different hosts, including C. nucula and Ircinia variabilis. Other symbionts, including Oscillatoria sp. from Cymbastela marshae, and Aphanocapsa raspaigellae from I. variabilis, were readily distinguished in the sponges examined, both by size and ultrastructural features. While morphological differences appear to be useful in differentiating A. feldmannii from S. spongiarum, morphological similarities are not a reliable indication that coccoid cyanobacteria are the same species.
AB - The morphology of five unicellular cyanobacterial species from two genera was compared using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and statistical analyses. Cyanobacteria symbiotic with marine sponges from Australia and the Mediterranean were investigated, together with cyanobacteria from the water column in Western Australia. The aim was to establish whether phenotypic characteristics are useful for distinguishing cyanobacterial species, and to investigate the possible relationships of host species and geographic location on cyanobacterial morphology. Analysis of variance ( ANOVA) demonstrated that cell size of the symbionts, Synechococcus spongiarum and Aphanocapsa feldmannii, is directly correlated with the number of turns of the thylakoid, and this must be accounted for in comparative morphological analyses. S. spongiarum cells were approximately one third smaller than those of A. feldmannii, but did not vary significantly in size in Chondrilla australiensis collected from different localities, or in different hosts, including C. nucula and Ircinia variabilis. Other symbionts, including Oscillatoria sp. from Cymbastela marshae, and Aphanocapsa raspaigellae from I. variabilis, were readily distinguished in the sponges examined, both by size and ultrastructural features. While morphological differences appear to be useful in differentiating A. feldmannii from S. spongiarum, morphological similarities are not a reliable indication that coccoid cyanobacteria are the same species.
U2 - 10.1080/09670260600631352
DO - 10.1080/09670260600631352
M3 - Article
SN - 0967-0262
VL - 41
SP - 179
EP - 188
JO - European Journal of Phycology
JF - European Journal of Phycology
IS - 2
ER -