Two newly cultivated eukaryotrophic flagellates represent distinct anaerobic lineages within Rhizaria
Abstract
Endomyxans are a poorly sampled and incompletely resolved aggregate of Rhizarian lineages that fall outside Filosa and Retaria. Among them, “Novel Clade 12” (NC12; Bass et al. 2009) is an environmental clade comprised primarily of sequences derived from anoxic sediments, hitherto lacking a morphologically-characterised representative. We have cultivated a marine anaerobic eukaryotroph, SSF, that we identify as the first representative of NC12. SSF is a teardrop-shaped cell with two unequal flagella emerging a third of the way down the cell behind a distinctive row of refractile globules. The posterior end of the cell is filled with food vacuoles. There is a surface thickening discernible in light microscopy. We also describe another distinct anaerobe eukaryotrophic lineage, also cultivated from marine sediment: PG. It consists of large pyriform cells with a substantial trailing “tail” and two unequal flagella, the posterior exceptionally long. In small subunit ribosomal RNA gene phylogenies, it falls outside the characterised clades and forms a distinct novel rhizarian lineage in its own right. Together, SSF and PG represent two additional independent adaptations to anoxic conditions within Rhizaria.
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