Digenea arenahauriens C.W. Schneid., Hamzeh et G.W. Saunders, 2018

Schneider, Craig W., Hamzeh, Bilal F., Lane, Christopher E. & Saunders, Gary W., 2018, A new species of Digenea (Rhodomelaceae, Ceramiales) based upon a molecular assessment and morphological observations of plants historically known as D. simplex in Bermuda, Phytotaxa 338 (1), pp. 90-98 : 93-95

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.338.1.7

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E8977B-1F71-5321-CFBC-FA6FFA9C045C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Digenea arenahauriens C.W. Schneid., Hamzeh et G.W. Saunders
status

sp. nov.

Digenea arenahauriens C.W. Schneid., Hamzeh et G.W. Saunders , sp. nov.

Figures 2–8 View FIGURES 2–8

Description: Plants rigid, cartilaginous, to 7.3 cm high, light to dark purplish- to reddish-brown ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 2–8 ) arising from rhizoidal filaments coalesced into thick, pad-like holdfasts; erect indeterminate axes terete, dichotomously to irregularly branched, polysiphonous, axial rows surrounded by (8–) 9–12 pericentral cells (only seen below apices), heavily corticated and 0.9–4.1 mm diam. below the apices ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 2–8 ); indeterminate branches 0.7–3.1 mm diam.; indeterminate axes covered densely with thin, wiry determinate branches to 7.7 mm in length and 120–270 μm diam., lower axes often less densely covered ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 2–8 ), determinate branches deciduous, abraded or grazed, with regrowth of shorter determinate branches than the longer ones distally; determinate branches polysiphonous, with axial cells, 27–78 μm diam, surrounded by (8–) 9–12 pericentral cells, 14.4–38.4 (–44.0) μm diam., these in turn surrounded by 17–34 cylindrical outer cortical cells, 9.6–38.0 μm diam. ( Fig. 4 View FIGURES 2–8 ); determinate branches composed of 44–60 axial segments 110–170 μm long in median portions, with lengths defined by the single axial cell of each segment ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 2–8 ); outer cortical cells of determinate branches angular, lenticular to irregular in surface view forming in discrete packets over pericentral cells ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 2–8 ); apices with short vegetative trichoblasts remaining during development ( Figs 6, 7 View FIGURES 2–8 ); tetrahedral sporangia ellipsoidal to globose, 38–82 μm diam., swelling determinate branches subapically when forming ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 2–8 ), plants presumably dioecious, cystocarps urceolate ( Fig. 8 View FIGURES 2–8 ), 390–500 μm diam., formed laterally and subapically on determinate branches, one or more per branch ( Fig. 8 View FIGURES 2–8 ); spermatangia unknown.

Diagnosis: Differing from the morphologically cryptic Digenea simplex by its production of a greater number of axial segments in determinate branches, and greater numbers of pericentral and cortical cells with larger diameters in these branches. The new species is easily distinguished from D. cymatophila by its upright habit, and the much smaller D. subarticulata by its size.

Type locality: Bermuda, northwestern Atlantic Ocean, Captain Williams’ Bay, south shore of Bermuda I.

Holotype (designated here): BERMUDA – Thea R. Popolizio (TRP) / Craig W. Schneider ( CWS) 12-171-1 [ BDA1808 ], 10 Dec. 2012, Capt. Williams’ Bay, south shore Bermuda I., 32°18’08.2”N, 64°44’18.1”W, intertidal rock and tide pools [deposited in MICH] ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 2–8 ); isotypes NY, US, UNB, Bermuda Natural History Museum, Herb. CWS [ BDA1808 b, GenBank MG648071 ]. GoogleMaps

Selected collections (genetic isolates listed in Table 1): BERMUDA — Harris’ Bay, Bermuda I., 23 April 1913, A. B. Hervey [ P. B.- A. 1939, Collins et al. 1913, as D. simplex ] ; West Whale Bay, Bermuda I., 32°15.3’N, 64°48.6’W, on int. rock, 1 April 2003, CWS / Christopher E. Lane ( CWS / CEL) 03-21-3 GoogleMaps ; Capt. Williams’ Bay, south shore Bermuda I., loc. cit., int. rock/tide pools, 20 February 2008, CWS / CEL About CEL 08-44- 2 About CWS GoogleMaps ; Capt. Williams’ Bay , loc. cit., 23 August 2010, CWS / CEL About CEL 10-22- 9 About CWS [ BDA0344 , 0345 ] GoogleMaps ; Spanish Point Park, north shore Bermuda I., 32˚18’26.4” N, 64˚48’56.6” W, 0–2 m, 25 August 2010, CWS 10-33 - 14 [ BDA0503 ] ; Capt. Williams’ Bay , loc. cit., 15 January 2012, CWS / CEL About CEL 12- 2- 3 About CWS [ BDA0522 ] ; West Whale Bay, Southampton, Bermuda I., 32˚15’19.0” N, 64˚52’23.4” W, int. rock/boilers, 2–3 m, 20 January 2012, CWS / CEL / TRP About CEL 12-21- 18 About CEL [ BDA0712 , 0713 ] ; Ariel Sands, Cox’s Bay, south shore Bermuda I., 32˚17’45.5” N, 64˚44’50.0” W, int. rocks/pools, 31 January 2012, TRP/ CWS 12-27- 5 [ BDA0765 ] ; Grape Bay Beach, Paget, south shore Bermuda I., 32˚17’03.6” N, 64˚45’52.6” W, int. rocks/pools, 7 February 2012, TRP/ CWS 12-30- 18 [ BDA0827 ] ; Grape Bay , loc. cit., 18 June 2012, TRP/ CWS 12-77- 2 [ BDA1198 ] ; Rocky Bay, Devonshire Bay Park, south shore Bermuda I., 32˚17’53.2” N, 64˚44’40.8” W, int. rock, 20 August 2012, CWS / CEL / TRP About CEL 12-95- 2 About CEL [ BDA 1340 ] ; Grape Bay , loc. cit., 20 August 2012, CWS / CEL / TRP About CEL 12-96- 8 About CEL . LESSER ANTILLES– Sint Eustatius, Blue Bead Hole II, 16–18 m, 25 Jun. 2015, EUX 37.01 [ L 3960311 ] .

Geographic Distribution: Presently known only from Bermuda and Sint Eustatius, Dutch West Indies, Lesser Antilles, Caribbean Sea.

Etymology: The Latin participle arenahauriens is used for the epithet meaning “sand-drawing, drinking, sucking in” for this species’ habit of knocking down suspended sand and creating a sediment underneath a colony.

I

"Alexandru Ioan Cuza" University

W

Naturhistorisches Museum Wien

MICH

University of Michigan

NY

William and Lynda Steere Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden

UNB

Connell Memorial Herbarium, UNB Fredericton

A

Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum

B

Botanischer Garten und Botanisches Museum Berlin-Dahlem, Zentraleinrichtung der Freien Universitaet

P

Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants

E

Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

CEL

University of Illinois

N

Nanjing University

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