User:SamanthaDeCuollo

=Akashiwo sanguinea=

Akashiwo sanguinea is marine protist. an autotrophic, non-thecate (or naked) dinoflagellate. Blooms cause red tides. (1) easily recogniziable known for its size, widely distributed and often forms blooms. No confirmed reports of toxicity (2)

Description
cells contain peridinin as major carotenoid (2) apical groove (look up) appears large clockwise spiral when seen from front of cell rather than straight. no usually visible in light microscope. a prominent feature is absence of vesicular differentations of the nuclear envelope (2) Most prominent features: the lack of nuclear envelope chambers and path of apical groove- most characteristic of the species! together w/observations and data from rDNA, transfer species to new genus (hansen & Moestrup, gen. nov.) (2)

entemology
akashiwo (jJapanese for red tide) (2)

Context and Content
synonyms Gymnodinium splendens, Gymnodinium sanguineum , Gymnodium nelsoni The genus Gymnodium was a large genus redefined into four genera. based on a study species' ultrastructual details were identified by Hansen and Moestrup, which led them to classify it under a different genus. See add link to article here for more specific information. (1)

confusion stems from it lacking thecal plates

The genus Gymnodium was one of many dinoflagellate genera originally definied during the late 1800s and early 1900s. The taxonomy was based on features that were only visible with the light microscope. Thus, the naked or unarmored species of dinoflagellates have been unchanged since the 19th century.

As recently as 2000, large-subunit (LSU) rDNA sequencing has led scientists to identify specific ultrastructural features of the organism. . changed misleading genera into more specific major genera

data split large genus gymnodium into for genera. Akashiwo sanguinea was one of four new genera that was redefined using the analysis.

studied flagellar apparatus sequencing declares path of the apical groove to be a good indicator of differences between the unarmored flagellates.