Pandorina morum

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Pandorina morum
Pandorina morum 297594677.jpg
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Clade: Viridiplantae
Division: Chlorophyta
Class: Chlorophyceae
Order: Chlamydomonadales
Family: Volvocaceae
Genus: Pandorina
Species:
P. morum
Binomial name
Pandorina morum
(O.F.Müller) Bory [1]

Pandorina morum is a species of green algae in the family Volvocaceae, and is the type species of the genus Pandorina. [1]

Contents

It is a freshwater species with a cosmopolitan distribution, and is common in lowland rivers, lakes, ponds, and ditches with circumneutral pH. It sometimes forms blooms of up to a thousand cells per mL. [2]

Naming

Pandorina morum was first described by Otto Friedrich Müller in 1786, who called it Volvox morum. Later in 1826, Jean-Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent transferred it to its own genus, calling it Pandorina. [1] The way the daughter colonies break out of the old parental layers reminded Bory of Pandora's box and therefore he named it Pandorina, with "-ina" being a French diminutive. [3]

The specific epithet "morum" likely refers to a mulberry or blackberry fruit, which Pandorina morum resembles. Müller, naming his organism Volvox morum, most likely named the organism "morum" as a Latin noun in apposition. When Bory transferred Volvox morum to Pandorina, he named it Pandorina mora, appearing to have interpreted "morum/mora" as an adjective. This is most likely in error, since "morum/mora" means silly or foolish. [1]

Description

Pandorina morum consists of subspherical colonies (coenobia) 20–60 μm in diameter, with cells 8–17 μm long; the colony is surrounded by a transparent layer of mucilage. Each coenobium has 8 or 16 cells, which are compressed into a dense spherical aggregate and conical at the base. Each cell has two flagella, longer than the cell, radially arranged around the coenobium. An apical contractile vacuoles is present, right beneath each flagellum. In each cell is a single, cup-shaped, longitudinally striated chloroplast with an anterior eyespot and basal pyrenoid. [2] The nucleus is located near the middle of the chloroplast. [4]

A similar species is Pandorina colemaniae , which has chloroplasts with at least two pyrenoids. [5]

Within Pandorina morum, several varieties have been described, but these may represent separate species. [4]

Reproductive isolation

Pandorina morum is defined by a morphological species concept, but within Pandorina morum there is extensive intraspecific variation. Within P. morum, there are at least 21 biological species which are reproductively isolated; two of these are cosmopolitan. Strains of P. morum grouped into seven clades, which differ in terms of chromosome number, zygote arrangement pattern, division time, and presence of loroxanthin. [6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Guiry, M.D.; Guiry, G.M. "Pandorina morum". AlgaeBase . University of Galway.
  2. 1 2 John, David M.; Whitton, Brian A.; Brook, Alan J. (2021). The Freshwater Algal Flora of the British Isles (2 ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 896. doi:10.1017/CHOL9781108784122. ISBN   978-1-108-78412-2.
  3. Lerche, Kai; Hallmann, Armin (2014). "Stable nuclear transformation of Pandorina morum". BMC Biotechnology. 14: 65. doi: 10.1186/1472-6750-14-65 . PMC   4115218 . PMID   25031031.
  4. 1 2 Ettl, H. (1983). Ettl, H.; Gerloff, J.; Heynig, H.; Mollenhauer, D. (eds.). Chlorophyta. 1. Teil / Part 1: Phytomonadina. Süßwasserflora von Mitteleuropa. Vol. 9. VEB Gustav Fischer Verlag. pp. XIV + 808. ISBN   978-3-8274-2659-8.
  5. Nozaki, H.; Kuroiwa, T. (1991). "Pandorina colemaniae sp. nov. (Volvocaceae, Chlorophyta) from Japan". Phycologia. 30 (5): 449–457. doi:10.2216/i0031-8884-30-5-449.1.
  6. Schagerl, Michael; Angeler, David; Coleman, Annette (1999). "Infraspecific phylogeny of Pandorina morum (Volvocales, Chlorophyta) inferred from molecular, biochemical and traditional data". European Journal of Phycology. 34: 87–93. doi:10.1080/09670269910001736122.