Precambrian palaeontology in the light of molecular phylogeny – an example: the radiation of the green algae

  • Teyssèdre B
ISSN: 1810-6285
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Abstract

The problem of the antiquity of the radiation of the green algae (phylum Viridiplantae) has been hotly debated and is still controversial today. A method combining Precambrian paleontology and molecular phylogeny is applied to shed light on this topic. As a critical method, molecular phylogeny is essential for avoiding taxonomic mistakes. As a heuristic method, it helps us to discern to what extent the presence of such and such clade is likely at such and such time, and it may even suggest the attribution of some fossil to a clade whose taxonomic position will be distinctly defined even though it has no previously known representative. Some well characterized Precambrian fossils of green algae are Palaeastrum and Proterocladus at Svanbergfjellet (ca. 750 Ma), Tasmanites and Pterospermella at Thule (ca. 1200 Ma), Spiromorpha at Ruyang (ca. 1200 Ma) and Leiosphaeridia crassa at Roper (ca. 1450 Ma). The position of these fossils in the taxonomy and the phylogeny of the Viriplantae is discussed. The conclusions are that the Chlorophyceae and the Ulvophyceae were separated long before 750 Ma, that the Chlorophyta and the Streptophyta were separated long before 1200Ma and that the last common ancestor of the Viridiplantae and the Rhodophyta was possibly two billion years old.

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APA

Teyssèdre, B. (2007). Precambrian palaeontology in the light of molecular phylogeny – an example: the radiation of the green algae. Biogeosciences Discussions, 4(5), 3123–3142.

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