Over the past 5 years, massive accumulations of holopelagic species of the brown macroalga in coastal areas of the Caribbean have created "golden tides" that threaten local biodiversity and trigger economic losses associated with beach deterioration and impact on fisheries and tourism. In 2015, the first report identifying the cause of these extreme events implicated a rare form of the holopelagic species (form ). However, since the first mention of in the 1930s, based solely on morphological characters, no molecular data have confirmed this identification. We generated full-length mitogenomes and partial chloroplast genomes of all representative holopelagic species, and alongside the putatively rare , to demonstrate small but consistent differences between and (7 bp differences out of the 34,727). Our comparative analyses also revealed that both and share a very close phylogenetic relationship with (94- and 96-bp differences of 34,727). We designed novel primers that amplified regions of the and marker genes with consistent polymorphic sites that enabled differentiation between the two forms ( and ) from each other and both from in over 150 samples including those from the 2014 golden tide event. Despite remarkable gene synteny and sequence conservation, the three forms differ in morphology, ecology, and distribution patterns, warranting more extensive interrogation of holopelagic genomes as a whole.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5243773PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2630DOI Listing

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