Highly divergent morphology but a close molecular phylogenetic relationship between two little‐known ciliate genera Actinobolina and Papillorhabdos (Protozoa: Ciliophora: Litostomatea) with description of two new species

Author:

Chi Yong1ORCID,Tang Danxu2,Lei Jingtao3,Wei Fan1,Al‐Farraj Saleh A.4,Bourland William A.5,Chen Zigui1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Evolution & Marine Biodiversity Ocean University of China Qingdao China

2. Marine College, Shandong University Weihai China

3. Weishan Fishery Development Service Center Jining China

4. Zoology Department, College of Science King Saud University Riyadh Saudi Arabia

5. Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science Charles University Prague Czechia

Abstract

AbstractFree‐living litostomatean ciliates, prominent microeukaryote predators commonly encountered in freshwater and marine habitats, play vital roles in maintaining energy flow and nutrient cycles. Nevertheless, understanding their biodiversity and phylogenetic relationships remains challenging due to insufficient morphological information and molecular data. As a new contribution to this group, three haptorian ciliates, including two new species (Actinobolina bivacuolata sp. nov. and Papillorhabdos foissneri sp. nov.) and the insufficiently described type species, Actinobolina radians, were isolated from wetlands around Lake Weishan, China and investigated by a combination of living morphology, stained preparations, and 18S rRNA gene sequence data. An illustrated key of the valid species within the two genera is provided. In addition, we reveal the phylogenetic positions of these two genera for the first time. Although they differ in all key morphologic characters such as general appearance (ellipsoidal with numerous tentacles vs. cylindrical), extrusomes (stored in tentacles vs. anchored to pellicle), circumoral kinety (present vs. absent), composition of somatic kineties (kinetosome clusters vs. monokinetids), and number of dorsal brush rows (1 vs. 4), they both cluster in a fully supported clade in the phylogenetic tree, which indicates that the biodiversity and additional molecular markers of this group need further exploration.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Microbiology

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