Shedding Light on the Polyphyletic Thecate Amoeba Genus Plagiophrys: Transition of Some of its Species to Rhizaspis (Tectofilosida, Thecofilosea, Cercozoa) and the Establishment of Sacciforma gen. nov. and Rhogostomidae fam. nov. (Cryomonadida, Thecofilosea, Cercozoa)

Publication date: Available online 7 December 2016 Source:Protist Author(s): Kenneth Dumack, Hüsna Öztoprak, Lioba Rüger, Michael Bonkowski For over a century testate amoebae have been a favoured group of interest for protistologists, however there is still an endless amount of unanswered questions. The genus Plagiophrys, Claparède and Lachmann 1859, is still one of the unresolved mysteries as it comprises species with high morphological diversity of which no molecular data are available. To shed light on the phylogeny and taxonomy of Plagiophrys we (a) cultured four isolates of three Plagiophrys morphospecies and provided morphological observations (b) obtained three new SSU RNA gene sequences and conducted phylogenetic analyses of the Thecofilosea and (c) did intensive literature research, showing that Plagiophrys is polyphyletic. We partially untangle this polyphyly by combining several of its species with the genus Rhizaspis, Skuja 1948. Furthermore, we establish Sacciforma gen. nov. to accommodate P. sacciformis as it groups within the formerly known Rhizaspididae, which do not comprise our isolates of Rhizaspis (and therefore were renamed as Rhogostomidae) as it groups with maximum support as a sister-group to the Pseudodifflugiidae.
Source: Protist - Category: Molecular Biology Source Type: research