Syzygiella manca
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Recently Gradstein (2013) placed S yzygiella
geminifolia ( Mitten 1864a: 164) Stephani (1902a: 467)
in the synonymy of
Syzygiella manca ( Montagne 1856:63) Jack & Stephani (1892: 14)
. His opinion was based on a single specimen collected in Ecuador (Nöske 163, GOET) which he had assigned to
Syzygiella manca
. This specimen was resolved in a clade with African accessions of
Syzygiella geminifolia
by Feldberg et al. (2010a), who noted that (l.c., p. 302) “An Ecuadorian accession is nested in the
Syzygiella geminifolia
clade and morphologically inseparable from the African accessions”.
Syzygiella geminifolia
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and
Syzygiella manca
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were separated by assumed differences in stem cross section, undulation of leaves, and cell surface ( Inoue 1966). However, our study of a larger series of specimens from the African mountains and South American material collected in the Andes ( Peru to Venezuela) and on Mt. Roraima (Guayanan/Brazilian border), shows that
Syzygiella manca
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is highly variable in terms of gametophyte size, stem cross section, dimensions and also shape and undulation of leaves, and cell size. The South American taxa placed in the synonymy of
Syzygiella manca
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[
Syzygiella quelchii Stephani (1901a: 96)
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,
Syzygiella subundulata Inoue (1966: 188)
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and
Syzygiella colombiana Robinson (1967: 322)
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] are possibly habitat modifications caused by somewhat different growth conditions; as are African populations [
Syzygiella geminifolia
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,
Syzygiella ruwenzorensis Stephani (1911: 117)
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]. Large, well developed plants have a 2-3 layers thick stem cortex [
Syzygiella manca
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,
Syzygiella colombiana Robinson (1967: 322)
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], smaller and younger plants only +/- one, often ill-defined layer of cortical cells (
Syzygiella geminifolia
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,
Syzygiella subundulata
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). Some phenotypes have leaves with an undulate, reflexed ventral margin (
Syzygiella subundulata
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,
Syzygiella colombiana
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and the isolectotype, but not the lectotype of
Syzygiella quelchii
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). The cell surface is usually smooth; trigones are large and nodulose. According to the key to the species of
Syzygiella sect. Anomalae
of Inoue (1966: 183),
Syzygiella manca
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should have a smooth cell surface (cuticle) and
Syzygiella subundulata
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a verrucose cell surface. However, in the original description of
Syzygiella subundulata
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the cell surface is described as “cuticula laevi” (Inoue, l.c. p.188) or “cuticle smooth” (p. 190). Inoue (1966) was not able to examine the type of
Syzygiella quelchii
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. He wrote that “according to the original description, this species seems to belong to sect. Anomalae and is very close to
Syzygiella manca
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and
Syzygiella anomala ” ( Inoue 1966: 210)
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. Grolle (in sched. 2002 and in So & Grolle 2003), after revising the “ holotype ” of
Syzygiella quelchii
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(BM; must be regarded as lectotype instead), confirmed the conspecificity of
Syzygiella quelchii
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and
Syzygiella manca
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. The type of
Syzygiella quelchii
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was collected in the same locality as the type of
Syzygiella subundulata
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. Robinson (1967) apparently did not study the types of
Syzygiella quelchii
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and
Syzygiella subundulata
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. According to his description and determination key, plants of
Syzygiella colombiana
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have larger leaves (3.5-4.0 mm long vs. 2.2-3.0 mm long) and a broadly auriculate ventral leaf base. He considered the leaf base of
Syzygiella subundulata
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not auriculate, in contrast to that of
Syzygiella colombiana
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. In fact, plants from Mt. Roraima identified as
Syzygiella quelchii
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are somewhat smaller than the Colombian ones (also additional specimens from Colombia). Colombian and Guyanan plants are linked by a Venezuelan specimen ( Venezuela, Amazonas, Dept. Rio Negro, Cerro de Neblina, 1985, Halling 4355, F, NY) assigned to
Syzygiella quelchii
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which is intermediate in size. All examined specimens, incl. the type of
Syzygiella subundulata
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, have auriculate ventral leaf bases (cf. Inoue 1966: 190, who described ventral bases of leaves as “ampliate”). The only existing difference between Mt. Roraima specimens assigned to
Syzygiella quelchii
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or
Syzygiella subundulata
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and Colombian plants of
Syzygiella colombiana
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is the size of the gametophytes, a character which is possibly influenced by environmental conditions and not suitable to separate taxa. A large variation in size was already demonstrated for
Syzygiella concreta ( Feldberg et al. 2011)
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. In the absence of comprehensive molecular data we accept a wide species concept for
Syzygiella manca
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.