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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Fiona Jean Hodge

<p>Hybridisation can result in new hybrid lineages, parental species extinctions, the transfer of adaptations, or the merging of parental lineages. Subsequently hybridisation has important implications for the species involved. Hybridisation has recently been confirmed between the Fucalean brown algae Carpophyllum angustifolium and Carpophyllum maschalocarpum using the ITS2 marker. This study conducted a detailed morphometric analysis combined with molecular data to investigate morphology distribution and exposure at two sites on the East Cape. Hybridisation was also morphologically investigated at Leigh, where the previous work had been unable to resolve hybrids using the ITS2 marker. Carpophyllum angustifolium, C. maschalocarpum and their hybrids had distinct and intermediate morphologies, and could be identified by stipe width alone. Individuals with hybrid genotypes with distinctive C. angustifolium morphotypes were also found, which suggests asymmetrical introgression is occurring. Some aspects of C. angustifolium and C. maschalocarpum morphology were found to be correlated with wave exposure. In the more exposed zones C. angustifolium individuals were longer, while C. maschalocarpum individuals were shorter, had thinner stipes and less frequent vesicle presence. There were also nonsignificant trends of C. maschalocarpum individuals having thinner lamina, and lower branch presence in higher wave exposures. The distributions of C. angustifolium, C. maschalocarpum and their hybrids were found to be correlated with exposure. Carpophyllum angustifolium was distributed only in the relatively exposed zones, while C. maschalocarpum was distributed mainly in the more sheltered zones. Hybrids were distributed in intermediate exposure zones where both parental species were present. The hybrid distributions could be a reflection of environmental selection or of the parental contact zone. Morphological evidence was found for hybridisation at Leigh, although there were differences between the morphologies of East Cape and Leigh clusters of C. angustifolium and hybrids. These differences could be due to environmental differences, genetic differentiation or different levels of introgression between the two locations. The general findings in this study support the existing literature on hybridisation, which mainly comes from terrestrial plant and animal species complexes.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Fiona Jean Hodge

<p>Hybridisation can result in new hybrid lineages, parental species extinctions, the transfer of adaptations, or the merging of parental lineages. Subsequently hybridisation has important implications for the species involved. Hybridisation has recently been confirmed between the Fucalean brown algae Carpophyllum angustifolium and Carpophyllum maschalocarpum using the ITS2 marker. This study conducted a detailed morphometric analysis combined with molecular data to investigate morphology distribution and exposure at two sites on the East Cape. Hybridisation was also morphologically investigated at Leigh, where the previous work had been unable to resolve hybrids using the ITS2 marker. Carpophyllum angustifolium, C. maschalocarpum and their hybrids had distinct and intermediate morphologies, and could be identified by stipe width alone. Individuals with hybrid genotypes with distinctive C. angustifolium morphotypes were also found, which suggests asymmetrical introgression is occurring. Some aspects of C. angustifolium and C. maschalocarpum morphology were found to be correlated with wave exposure. In the more exposed zones C. angustifolium individuals were longer, while C. maschalocarpum individuals were shorter, had thinner stipes and less frequent vesicle presence. There were also nonsignificant trends of C. maschalocarpum individuals having thinner lamina, and lower branch presence in higher wave exposures. The distributions of C. angustifolium, C. maschalocarpum and their hybrids were found to be correlated with exposure. Carpophyllum angustifolium was distributed only in the relatively exposed zones, while C. maschalocarpum was distributed mainly in the more sheltered zones. Hybrids were distributed in intermediate exposure zones where both parental species were present. The hybrid distributions could be a reflection of environmental selection or of the parental contact zone. Morphological evidence was found for hybridisation at Leigh, although there were differences between the morphologies of East Cape and Leigh clusters of C. angustifolium and hybrids. These differences could be due to environmental differences, genetic differentiation or different levels of introgression between the two locations. The general findings in this study support the existing literature on hybridisation, which mainly comes from terrestrial plant and animal species complexes.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 131 (1) ◽  
pp. 34
Author(s):  
A.H.M. VandenBerg

Two graptolites from the early Bendigonian (Early Floian, Early Ordovician) formerly placed in Didymograptus, D. eocaduceus Harris, 1933 and D. hemicyclus Harris, 1933, are shown to be members of a single population that shows extraordinary dimorphism. This is mainly expressed in the tubarium habit which ranges from strongly reclined to horizontal, and in stipe width which changes systematically with tubarium shape. The population is placed in the new genus Harrisgraptus and placed in the family Phyllograptidae, characterised by well-developed sicular and thecal rutella.


Paleobiology ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 116-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard A. Fortey

The geometry of the simpler types of graptolite stipes can be quantified by assuming them to consist of stacked cylinders representing the thecal tubes. It can be shown that specification of any three characters, for example, thecal inclination, thecal spacing, and stipe width, effectively defines the others (thecal overlap, thecal length and width, thecal “density”); hence the parameters commonly used in the definition of species are not independent. Variation within and between species can be represented by three-character plots. The effects of altering the apertural angle from 90° on such characters as thecal spacing can also be represented geometrically. If thecae are considered as cones rather than cylinders, it follows that as stipe width increases, thecal curvature will describe a sine curve if the thecae are to remain in contact; this observation is matched on real graptolites. Thecal curvature beyond 90° to the dorsal wall is generally impossible without thecae detaching from their neighbors to produce thecal isolation. Growth of thecae along a stipe can be represented graphically. Computer fits to growth curves for five dichograptids show that they can be closely described by an exponential decrease in growth increments along the stipe, and that this model is more accurate than two possible alternatives.


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