During the period of March 2004 to December 2007, samples of aerial litter (dead but still attached plant parts) and ground litter (dead plant material on the ground) were collected from 81 study sites representing a wide range of latitudes (34°S to 50°S) and a variety of different types of habitats throughout New Zealand (including Stewart Island and the Auckland Islands). The objective was to survey the assemblages of protosteloid amoebae present in this region of the world. Twenty-nine described species of protosteloid amoebae were recorded by making morphological identifications of protosteloid amoebae fruiting bodies on cultured substrates. Of the species observed, Protostelium mycophaga was by far the most abundant and was found in more than half of all samples. Most species were found in fewer than 10% of the samples collected. Seven abundant or common species were found to display significantly increased likelihood for detection in aerial litter or ground litter microhabitats. There was some evidence of a general correlation between environmental factors - annual precipitation, elevation, and distance from the equator (latitude) - and the abundance and richness of protosteloid amoebae. An increase in each of these three factors correlated with a decrease in both abundance and richness. This study provides a thorough survey of the protosteloid amoebae present in New Zealand and adds to a growing body of evidence which suggests several correlations between their broad distributional patterns and environmental factors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.296 | DOI Listing |
Protist
August 2024
University of Tsukuba, 1-1-1 Tennodai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8572, Japan.
Protosteloid amoebae are slime molds characterized by simple sporocarp comprised only of a stalk and typically single spore. Recent molecular phylogenetic studies showed that protosteloid amoebae are scattered among the Amoebozoa, but most of them belongs to the Variosea. The Cavosteliida is one of the largest protosteloid group of the Variosea.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe genus is one of the most morphologically diverse groups among the class . Recent phylogenetic studies suggest that is polyphyletic, but there are few taxonomic studies of this genus. We established strain YIP-40, observed in detail its of morphology and lifecycle, and conducted a phylogenetic analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Eukaryot Microbiol
July 2023
Department of Biological Sciences, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Mississippi, USA.
Protosteloid amoebae are a paraphyletic assemblage of amoeboid protists found exclusively in the eukaryotic assemblage Amoebozoa. These amoebae can facultatively form a dispersal structure known as a fruiting body, or more specifically, a sporocarp, from a single amoeboid cell. Sporocarps consist of one to a few spores atop a noncellular stalk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Eukaryot Microbiol
July 2019
Department of Biological Sciences, Mississippi State University, Starkville, Mississippi, 39762, USA.
Myxogastria (also called Myxomycetes or plasmodial slime-moulds) are mostly known through their usually conspicuous fruiting bodies. Another unifying trait is the presence of a facultative flagellate stage along with the obligate amoeboid stage. Here we show with two-gene phylogenies (SSU rRNA and EF-1alpha genes) that the incertae sedis, non-flagellate Echinosteliopsis oligospora belongs to the dark-spore clade (Fuscisporidia) of the Myxogastria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome Biol Evol
February 2018
Institute of Biochemistry I, Medical Faculty, University of Cologne, Germany.
Establishment of multicellularity represents a major transition in eukaryote evolution. A subgroup of Amoebozoa, the dictyosteliids, has evolved a relatively simple aggregative multicellular stage resulting in a fruiting body supported by a stalk. Protosteloid amoeba, which are scattered throughout the amoebozoan tree, differ by producing only one or few single stalked spores.
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