# Four novel taxa of cyanobacteria from a unique thermal cave habitat in Vromoner Canyon, Albania

**Authors:** Jan Pokorný, Alžběta Vondrášková, Michaela Wipplingerová, Jan Kaštovský

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/jpy.70082 · 2025-09-12

## TL;DR

This paper describes four new cyanobacteria species found in a unique thermal cave in Albania, expanding our understanding of microbial diversity in extreme environments.

## Contribution

The study introduces four novel cyanobacterial taxa, including a new genus and three new species, from an understudied thermal cave habitat.

## Key findings

- A new trichal genus Xomosiella and its type species X. audyi were identified with distinct genetic and morphological traits.
- Three new species were described: Loriellopsis vromonerensis, Mastigocladus boudae, and Pegethrix sulphurea.
- The findings highlight the diversity and adaptability of cyanobacteria in extreme sulfur-rich thermal cave environments.

## Abstract

Thermal and cave habitats on nearly all continents have been a substantial source of new cyanobacterial genotypes and morphotypes that expanded with the dawn of the era of molecular phylogenetics. In this study, we investigated the cyanobacterial flora of an extreme habitat of recently discovered caves with sulfur‐rich thermal springs, using the polyphasic approach. The methods included cultivation, light and transmission electron microscopy, and molecular methods, including those that can be employed on samples that are not unialgal. Here, we present data on morphological and ultrastructural characteristics, 16S rRNA gene and 16S–23S internal transcribed spacer (ITS) rRNA region sequences, and folding structures. We identified one new trichal genus Xomosiella with the type species X. audyi forming a distinctly isolated clade and three new species in Loriellopsis, Mastigocladus, and Pegethrix. Apart from genetic distance, Xomosiella is distinguished from Limnothrix by its high trichome motility and benthic habitat, with granules likely composed of cyanophycin rather than aerotopes. The coccal cyanobacterium initially identified as “Cyanosarcina” sp. has been proposed as a new species, Loriellopsis vromonerensis, although its classification is complicated by morphological plasticity and phylogenetic uncertainties. The erection of Mastigocladus boudae was supported by a significant genetic divergence and distinct morphological characteristics. A description of a newly revealed cryptic species, Pegethrix sulphurea, has been provided. These results advance our knowledge of the diversity of cyanobacteria in extreme and understudied environments, which could enrich our understanding of microbial adaptability.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** sulfur (PubChem CID 5362487)
- **Species:** Xomosiella audyi (taxon 3462368), Loriellopsis vromonerensis (taxon 3462371), Mastigocladus boudae (taxon 3462369), Pegethrix sulphurea (taxon 3462370)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** Pegethrix sulphurea (-), sulfur (MESH:D013455)
- **Species:** Cyanosarcina (genus) [taxon 431394]

## Figures

16 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12547637/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12547637