Four populations of the newly described freshwater red algal species
Batrachospermum spermatoinvolucrum were sampled from British
Columbia on the west coast of North America and Labrador on the east. The
rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) 1 and 2 sequences,
RUBISCO large subunit (rbcL) gene data for three of the
populations and morphometric characteristics were compared with those of
B.
gelatinosum. In addition, the key feature distinguishing
B. spermatoinvolucrum, spermatangia on the involucral filaments
of the carpogonial
branch, was investigated seasonally in one British Columbia population
of
this species. The ITS analysis suggested that the B.
spermatoinvolucrum populations were more closely related to particular
B. gelatinosum populations than to each other and did not form
a
monophyletic clade. Two populations of B. spermatoinvolucrum
from Labrador and British Columbia had identical rbcL sequences
that were
distinct from that of B. gelatinosum. However, the rbcL
sequence from the third population of B. spermatoinvolucrum differed
by only one
nucleotide substitution from the B. gelatinosum populations.
The tree generated from the morphometric data showed two groupings, each
containing populations of both taxa. The presence of spermatangia-bearing
involucral filaments was a stable character throughout the
year. On the basis of these findings, B. spermatoinvolucrum
is reduced to a form of B. gelatinosum. This form would encompass
variant
populations with characteristic carpogonial involucral filaments bearing
spermatangia.