An evaluation of species relationships in the Porphyra perforata complex (Bangiales, Rhodophyta) using starch gel electrophoresis. Lindstrom, S. C. & Cole, K. M. In Lindstrom, S. C. & Gabrielson, P. W., editors, Thirteenth International Seaweed Symposium, of Developments in Hydrobiology, pages 179–183. Springer Netherlands, 1990.
An evaluation of species relationships in the Porphyra perforata complex (Bangiales, Rhodophyta) using starch gel electrophoresis [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Traditional morphological features have formed the basis for distinguishing species of Porphyra. Among these features are number of cell layers, number of chloroplasts per cell, arrangement of reproductive structures on the thallus, and overall morphology. Chromosome number and chromosome morphology have helped corroborate some species identities. A survey of northeast Pacific species of Porphyra using starch gel electrophoresis of 15 soluble proteins has shown that electrophoretic banding patterns provide a reliable diagnostic tool for species identification. Data from starch gel electrophoresis are presented to confirm the identities of species formerly associated with the Porphyra perforata species-complex in British Columbia and northern Washington. Porphyra abbottae, P. fallax, P. kanakaensis, and P. torta are recognized as distinct species, and Porphyra sanjuanensis is synonymized with P. perforata.
@incollection{lindstrom_evaluation_1990,
	series = {Developments in {Hydrobiology}},
	title = {An evaluation of species relationships in the {Porphyra} perforata complex ({Bangiales}, {Rhodophyta}) using starch gel electrophoresis},
	copyright = {©1990 Kluwer Academic Publishers},
	isbn = {978-94-010-7419-3 978-94-009-2049-1},
	url = {http://link.springer.com.ezproxy.library.ubc.ca/chapter/10.1007/978-94-009-2049-1_25},
	abstract = {Traditional morphological features have formed the basis for distinguishing species of Porphyra. Among these features are number of cell layers, number of chloroplasts per cell, arrangement of reproductive structures on the thallus, and overall morphology. Chromosome number and chromosome morphology have helped corroborate some species identities. A survey of northeast Pacific species of Porphyra using starch gel electrophoresis of 15 soluble proteins has shown that electrophoretic banding patterns provide a reliable diagnostic tool for species identification. Data from starch gel electrophoresis are presented to confirm the identities of species formerly associated with the Porphyra perforata species-complex in British Columbia and northern Washington. Porphyra abbottae, P. fallax, P. kanakaensis, and P. torta are recognized as distinct species, and Porphyra sanjuanensis is synonymized with P. perforata.},
	language = {en},
	number = {58},
	urldate = {2016-06-08},
	booktitle = {Thirteenth {International} {Seaweed} {Symposium}},
	publisher = {Springer Netherlands},
	author = {Lindstrom, Sandra C. and Cole, Kathleen M.},
	editor = {Lindstrom, Sandra C. and Gabrielson, Paul W.},
	year = {1990},
	doi = {10.1007/978-94-009-2049-1_25},
	keywords = {Porphyra perforata},
	pages = {179--183},
}

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