Diversity and distribution of foliose Bangiales (Rhodophyta) in West Greenland: A link between the North Atlantic and North Pacific

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Abstract

Greenland is a continental island in the northern part of the North Atlantic where the foliose Bangiales flora is poorly known. It is an important area for the study of algal biogeography because of the region's glacial history, in which Greenland has been alternately exposed to or isolated from the North Pacific via the Bering Strait. A molecular study using 3′ rbcL + 5′ rbcL-S sequences was undertaken to assess the diversity of foliose Bangiales on the west coast of Greenland and rbcL sequences were used to study the Greenland flora in a larger phylogenetic and floristic context. New and historic collections document seven species in four genera from the west coast of Greenland. All species had a close link to North Pacific species, being either conspecific with them or North Atlantic-North Pacific vicariant counterparts. © 2014 British Phycological Society.

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Mols-Mortensen, A., Neefus, C. D., Pedersen, P. M., & Brodie, J. (2014). Diversity and distribution of foliose Bangiales (Rhodophyta) in West Greenland: A link between the North Atlantic and North Pacific. European Journal of Phycology, 49(1), 1–10. https://doi.org/10.1080/09670262.2013.871062

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