Nucleotide gene sequences for both the nuclear-encoded small-subunit
RNA (SSU) and plastid-encoded large subunit of RuBisCO (rbcL)
were determined for 16 species classified in the red algal order
Gelidiales. Sequence comparisons indicate that rbcL is evolving
at a faster
rate than SSU in these species and that there is a more even
distribution of changes across the length of the rbcL
gene compared with that
observed for the SSU gene. The rbcL sequences also showed a
marked anti-GC bias at synonymous third-codon base positions. Parsimony
and maximum-likelihood analyses were used to generate phylogenetic trees
from
both separate and combined analyses of the two
sequence data sets. Relationships among most taxa are resolved robustly;
however, the relative order of branching for the Capreolia and
Ptilophora clades remains uncertain. The molecular data
provide unambiguous, independent support for recognition of the newly
established genus Pterocladiella. Although the position of
Pterocladiella within the Gelidiales was not resolved clearly
by the
rbcL data
alone, analyses of both the SSU and combined data matrices indicate
that this genus is one of the three earliest-diverging lineages within
the order. These data also suggest that Gelidium as
currently circumscribed is not monophyletic. Molecular and morphological
evidence
suggests that the origin and, perhaps, diversification of the major
lineages of gelidialean algae is correlated with distinct, independently
evolved nutritional strategies for the developing carposporophyte.