Micropaleontology; December 2004; v. 50; no. Suppl_1;
p. 45-54; DOI: 10.2113/50.Suppl_1.45
© 2004 Micropaleontology Project
New keys to the Past: Current and future DNA studies in Coccolithophores
Colomban de Vargas1 and
Ian Probert2
1 Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences, group of Molecular Ecology and Evolution of Open Ocean Plankton -MEEOOP, Rutgers University, 71 Dudley Road, New Brunswick NJ 08901 USA
2 ALGOBANK, Université de Caen, Esplanade de la Paix, 14032 Caen, France, email: vargas{at}imcs.marine.rutgers.edu
Despite the immense ecological, biogeochemical and paleontological/paleoecological importance of living and fossil coccolithophores, fundamental gaps exist in the biological knowledge of this group of marine protists. The traditional approach of examining the morphology of their beautiful skeletons to study their ecology and evolution has important limitations. Simple questions, such as: When did the coccolithophores first appear? How many species exist in the contemporary ocean, and existed in past oceans? What are the phylogenetic links between these species and between the lineages to which they belong? What is their life-cycle, and are they autotrophic or heterotrophic organisms? Are still poorly understood due to a paucity of information on their genotypic and phenotypic (other than the coccoliths) characters?
Analysis of mutations within the DNA of coccolithophores using population genetics, phylogenetic, and genomic approaches may help to answer these questions. Here we synthesize the first conclusions resulting from the still very limited number of molecular studies on coccolithophores and emphasize some of the most important questions that have consequently arisen. We finally propose new approaches using combined optic and genetic techniques to explore the ecology and evolution of coccolithophores at the boundary between molecular biology, oceanography, and paleontology.
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