Algal Blooms and Marine Biotoxins: 2001
Publications
Author:
Steidinger, K., Landsberg,
J., Richardson, R.W., Truby, E., Blakesley, B., Scott, P., Tester, P., Tengs,
T., Mason, P., Morton, S., Seaborn, D., Litaker, W., Reece, K., Oldach, D.,
Haas, L., and Vasta, G.
Title: Classification
and identification of Pfiesteria and Pfiesteria-like species.
Publication:
Environmental Health Perspectives 109:
661-665, 2001.
© National Institute of Environmental
Health
Notes:Dinoflagellates
can be classified both botanically and zoologically; however, they are typically
put in the botanical division Pyrrhophyta. As a group they appear most related
to the protistan ciliates and apicomplexans at the ultrastructure level. Within
the Pyrrhophyta are both unarmored and armored forms of the dominant, motile
flagellated stage. Unarmored dinoflagellates do not have thecal or wall plates
arranged in specific series, whereas armored species have plates that vary
in thickness but are specific in number and arrangement. In armored dinoflagellates,
the plate pattern and tabulation is a diagnostic character at the family,
subfamily, and even genus levels. In most cases, the molecular characterization
of dinoflagellates confirms the taxonomy on the basis of external morphology;
this has been demonstrated for several groups. Together, both genetic and
morphological criteria are becoming increasingly important for the characterization,
separation, and identification of dinoflagellates species. Pfiesteria and
Pfiesteria-like species are thinly
armored forms with motile dinospore stages characterized by their distinct
plate formulae. Pfiesteria piscicida is the best-known member of the genus; however, there
is at least one other species. Other genetically and morphologically related
genera, now grouped under the common names of ''Lucy,'' ''Shepherd's crook,''
and cryptoperidiniopsoid, are being studied and described in separate works.
All these other heterotrophic dinoflagellate groups, many of which are thought
to be benign, co-occur in estuarine waters where Pfiesteria has been found.
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