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The ciliophoran afffinity of Alphonse Meunier's enigmatic Radiosperma

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Abstract
The acritarch genus Radiosperma was originally described as an "enigmatic organism" by the Belgian biologist Alphonse Meunier (1857-1918). Two species were described: R. corbiferum from Arctic waters and R. textum from the Belgian coast. It has been widely reported from plankton and sediments since the late 19th century, with suggested biological affinities ranging from invertebrate eggs to tintinnids. The genus description is now improved and both congeners are redescribed. Based on SSU and LSU rRNA sequences, Radiosperma textum is shown to be a ciliate cyst related to the ciliate genus Askenasia and positioned among the classes Prostomatea, Plagiopylea and Oligohymenophorea. Radiosperma is considered closely related to Hexasterias and Halodinium, two former acritarchs that were assigned previously to the ciliophora. The spatiotemporal distribution and ecology of both species are discussed, revealing a common confusion in species assignment by mosth authors. R. corbiferum apears limited to Arctic waters and the Baltic Sea, while R. textum is found in temperate coastal waters in other parts of the world. The chemical composition is documented based on micro-Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy. Its refractory nature provides potential for fossilization and applicability as indicator of freshwater influence in palynological studies. In addition, newly obtained SSU and LSU rRNA seuqences for several flask shaped ciliate cysts (e.g., Fusopsis and Strombidium) are also included in the phylogenetic analysis and the occurence of fossilizable cysts in the ciliophoran clade in the marine environment is reviewed. It is confirmed that ciliate cyst morphology has taxonomic significance and that morphological identification of cysts can be reliable. Further elucidating cyst stages in ciliate life cycles will improve understanding of ciliate biology and ecoogy and their applicability as (paleo)environmental tracers.

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MLA
Gurdebeke, Pieter, et al. “The Ciliophoran Afffinity of Alphonse Meunier’s Enigmatic Radiosperma.” Geologica Belgica, 8th International Meeting, Abstracts, 2024, p. 216.
APA
Gurdebeke, P., Mertens, K. N., Rajter, L., Meyvisch, P., Potvin, E., Yang, E. J., … Louwye, S. (2024). The ciliophoran afffinity of Alphonse Meunier’s enigmatic Radiosperma. Geologica Belgica, 8th International Meeting, Abstracts, 216.
Chicago author-date
Gurdebeke, Pieter, Kenneth Neil Mertens, Lubomir Rajter, Pjotr Meyvisch, Eric Potvin, Eun Jin Yang, Coralie André, Vera Pospelova, and Stephen Louwye. 2024. “The Ciliophoran Afffinity of Alphonse Meunier’s Enigmatic Radiosperma.” In Geologica Belgica, 8th International Meeting, Abstracts, 216.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
Gurdebeke, Pieter, Kenneth Neil Mertens, Lubomir Rajter, Pjotr Meyvisch, Eric Potvin, Eun Jin Yang, Coralie André, Vera Pospelova, and Stephen Louwye. 2024. “The Ciliophoran Afffinity of Alphonse Meunier’s Enigmatic Radiosperma.” In Geologica Belgica, 8th International Meeting, Abstracts, 216.
Vancouver
1.
Gurdebeke P, Mertens KN, Rajter L, Meyvisch P, Potvin E, Yang EJ, et al. The ciliophoran afffinity of Alphonse Meunier’s enigmatic Radiosperma. In: Geologica Belgica, 8th International Meeting, Abstracts. 2024. p. 216.
IEEE
[1]
P. Gurdebeke et al., “The ciliophoran afffinity of Alphonse Meunier’s enigmatic Radiosperma,” in Geologica Belgica, 8th International Meeting, Abstracts, Liège, 2024, p. 216.
@inproceedings{01J797WRB36VB1AVVNJ4F0M7N0,
  abstract     = {{The acritarch genus Radiosperma was originally described as an "enigmatic organism" by the Belgian biologist Alphonse Meunier (1857-1918). Two species were described: R. corbiferum from Arctic waters and R. textum from the Belgian coast. It has been widely reported from plankton and sediments since the late 19th century, with suggested biological affinities ranging from invertebrate eggs to tintinnids.

The genus description is now improved and both congeners are redescribed. Based on SSU and LSU rRNA sequences, Radiosperma textum is shown to be a ciliate cyst related to the ciliate genus Askenasia and positioned among the classes Prostomatea, Plagiopylea and Oligohymenophorea. Radiosperma is considered closely related to Hexasterias and Halodinium, two former acritarchs that were assigned previously to the ciliophora.

The spatiotemporal distribution and ecology of both species are discussed, revealing a common confusion in species assignment by mosth authors. R. corbiferum apears limited to Arctic waters and the Baltic Sea, while R. textum is found in temperate coastal waters in other parts of the world. The chemical composition is documented based on micro-Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy. Its refractory nature provides potential for fossilization and applicability as indicator of freshwater influence in palynological studies.

In addition, newly obtained SSU and LSU rRNA seuqences for several flask shaped ciliate cysts (e.g., Fusopsis and Strombidium) are also included in the phylogenetic analysis and the occurence of fossilizable cysts in the ciliophoran clade in the marine environment is reviewed. It is confirmed that ciliate cyst morphology has taxonomic significance and that morphological identification of cysts can be reliable. Further elucidating cyst stages in ciliate life cycles will improve understanding of ciliate biology and ecoogy and their applicability as (paleo)environmental tracers.}},
  author       = {{Gurdebeke, Pieter and Mertens, Kenneth Neil and Rajter, Lubomir and Meyvisch, Pjotr and Potvin, Eric and Yang, Eun Jin and André, Coralie and Pospelova, Vera and Louwye, Stephen}},
  booktitle    = {{Geologica Belgica, 8th International Meeting, Abstracts}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  location     = {{Liège}},
  title        = {{The ciliophoran afffinity of Alphonse Meunier's enigmatic Radiosperma}},
  url          = {{150th anniversary of the société géologique de Belgique : history, heritage and collections in geosciences - session 7}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}