2018
DOI: 10.5507/fot.2018.008
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Polyphasic approach to a characteristic Ulva population from a limno-rheocrenic, mineral (chloride, sodium, sulphate) spring in the Siwa Oasis (Western Desert of Egypt)

Abstract: An interesting population of ulvacean green algae was collected from a limno-rheocrenic, thermal, mineral (chloride, sodium, sulphate) spring known as "Ain Abu Sherouf" in the Siwa Oasis, the Western Desert of Egypt. A detailed combined investigation on its morphotaxonomy, autecology, and a multilocus sequence data set including the chloroplast-encoded rbcL gene and the nuclear-encoded nrDNA SSU and ITS allowed us to identify this population as Ulva flexuosa subsp. paradoxa (syn. Ulva paradoxa, Ulvales, Chloro… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Freshwater organisms in arid-climate biomes have different strategic adaptations to GW and SW availability, temperature, geochemistry, and also to drying through behavior, physiology (e.g., pigment and lipid profiles), morphology, distribution (e.g., [601,602]), and biotic relationships. For example, many desert stream biota have the ability to rapidly recolonize after floods or rains and are distinctly productive and diverse due to the high light availability and warmer temperatures.…”
Section: Arid-climate Freshwater Habitatsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Freshwater organisms in arid-climate biomes have different strategic adaptations to GW and SW availability, temperature, geochemistry, and also to drying through behavior, physiology (e.g., pigment and lipid profiles), morphology, distribution (e.g., [601,602]), and biotic relationships. For example, many desert stream biota have the ability to rapidly recolonize after floods or rains and are distinctly productive and diverse due to the high light availability and warmer temperatures.…”
Section: Arid-climate Freshwater Habitatsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ulva species grow attached to different substrates (such as soil, rocks, tree bark, leaves, and others macroalgae), but mature thalli are easily detached and become free living algae [1,2]. Due to the fact that Ulva species belong to the cosmopolitan genus, occurring in marine (with salinities ranging from 0.5-34%) and freshwater ecosystems [2][3][4] the seasonal massive growth (green tides worldwide) of the free living species is usually a result of high waters eutrophication [5,6]. The genus Ulva is one of the first marine genera described by Linneaus (previously known as Enteromorpha).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%