Gomphonema vancampianum Van de Vijver, Pottiez & Chavaux, 2024

Van de Vijver, Bart, Pottiez, Margaux & Chavaux, Rémy, 2024, Gomphonema vancampianum sp. nov. (Gomphonemataceae, Bacillariophyceae), a new large Gomphonema species from Europe, PhytoKeys 244, pp. 1-13 : 1-13

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/phytokeys.244.122153

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12611710

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A0870673-631B-5C1A-98DE-066D3CB047DB

treatment provided by

PhytoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Gomphonema vancampianum Van de Vijver, Pottiez & Chavaux
status

sp. nov.

Gomphonema vancampianum Van de Vijver, Pottiez & Chavaux sp. nov.

Figs 1 View Figure 1 , 2 View Figure 2 , 3 View Figure 3

Type materials.

Holotype. BR- 4839 (Meise Botanic Garden, Belgium). Fig. 1 C View Figure 1 represents the holotype . Isotype. Slide 441 (University of Antwerp, Belgium) .

Registration.

http://phycobank.org/104517.

Type locality.

Lac du Drapeau (Lyon, Département du Rhône, France), sample Drapeau-U 03 - VEG, (coll. date 22. viii. 2023, leg. R. Chavaux).

Etymology.

This species is named in honour of Prof. Dr Karel Van Camp, former Physics professor of the first author at Antwerp University ( Belgium) and life-long enthusiastic amateur diatomist and microscopist.

Description.

LM (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ). Frustules in girdle view narrowly clavate with transapical striae continuing on to the valve mantle without interruption; adjacent to the striae, a line of isolated areolae (Fig. 1 A View Figure 1 , arrow). Headpole much broader than the footpole. Valves apiculate-clavate with elliptic-lanceolate upper valve part and largest width right above the valve middle. Lower valve part abruptly narrowing near the valve centre, then gradually tapering towards the acute footpole. Headpole acutely rounded with a narrow protracted, cuneate apex. Occasionally, valves surrounded by marginal crest, visible by changing focal depth (Fig. 1 C, L, N View Figure 1 , arrows). Valve dimensions (n = 25): length 30–60 µm, width 10–12 µm. Axial area moderately broad, linear with distinct, shallow markings, visible by changing focal depth. Central area asymmetrical: primary side with more distantly spaced single long stria and stigmoid, well separated near the valve middle. Isolated stria on the secondary side markedly shortened. Raphe clearly lateral and weakly undulating. Central raphe endings indistinct, almost straight. Terminal raphe fissures not discernible in LM. Striae parallel in the middle, soon becoming radiate towards the headpole, but remaining almost parallel or slightly radiate towards the footpole, 10–11 in 10 µm, more closely spaced near the apices. Striae distinctly punctate, 18–24 areolae in 10 µm. SEM (Figs 2 View Figure 2 , 3 View Figure 3 ). Two types of valves present: with marginal crest (Fig. 2 A – C View Figure 2 ) and lacking marginal crest (Fig. 2 D, F View Figure 2 ). Valve face and mantle striae in crested valves interrupted at the valve face / mantle junction by the thickened marginal crest. Marginal crest with undulating border near the headpole (Fig. 2 A View Figure 2 ). Mantle striae in advalvar part composed of large, densely packed, c-shaped areolae, externally covered by small reniform siliceous flaps. Areolae in abvalvar part of the striae towards the mantle edge, smaller, c- to e-shaped (Fig. 2 A View Figure 2 ). Girdle bands broad with continuous row of transapically elongated narrow pores. Marginal crest lowering towards the apices (Fig. 2 B, C View Figure 2 ). Valves lacking crest with striae extending almost continuously across the valve face / mantle junction (Fig. 2 F View Figure 2 ). Axial area covered with dense irregular pattern of shallow, pit-like depressions (Fig. 2 B, D, E View Figure 2 ). Raphe branches clearly undulating (Fig. 2 C, D View Figure 2 ). Central raphe endings almost straight, small drop-like (Fig. 2 E View Figure 2 ). Distal raphe fissure at footpole bisecting apical pore field, continuing on to the mantle (Fig. 2 F View Figure 2 ), at headpole splitting the marginal crest (when present) and continuing shortly on to the mantle (Fig. 2 C View Figure 2 ). Apical pore field bisected, composed of several rows of densely packed, rounded pores (Fig. 2 F View Figure 2 ), only present at footpole. Striae composed of c-shaped areolae, occluded by small reniform siliceous flaps, near the central area slightly sunken into valve surface (Fig. 2 E View Figure 2 ), towards the apices on the same level as the virgae (Fig. 2 F View Figure 2 ). Stigmoid external opening small, rounded, sunken into valve face (Fig. 2 E View Figure 2 ). Internally valve face surface smooth (Fig. 3 A View Figure 3 ). Small pseudoseptum visible at footpole (Fig. 3 A, D View Figure 3 ). Striae located in shallow, narrow foraminal rows. Side walls of the areolae with continuous apical bars or small interrupted struts (Fig. 3 C View Figure 3 , arrows). Internal opening of the stigmoid short, transversely elongated, located in a long, shallow groove (Fig. 3 B View Figure 3 ). Central raphe endings long, right-angled, hook-shaped (Fig. 3 B View Figure 3 ). Terminal raphe endings terminating on to well-developed helictoglossae (Fig. 3 D View Figure 3 ).

Distribution and ecology.

Gomphonema vancampianum has so far only been found in several samples from the type locality in France. The largest population was found in a sample collected from submerged aquatic plants. The diatom flora is dominated by species typically found in calcium-carbonate rich, oligotrophic lakes with low nutrient concentrations and low saprobity. The sample is dominated by several cymbelloid taxa (e. g. Encyonopsis subminuta Krammer & E. Reichardt , Cymbella affiniformis Krammer , C. lange-bertalotii Krammer , Cymbopleura amphicephala (Nägeli) Krammer ) together with a, so far, unidentified, long-celled Fragilaria species, Brachysira neoexilis Lange-Bertalot , B. cf. chiaruccii Cantonati et al. and Nitzschia cf. subacicularis Hustedt , all indicating the environmental conditions mentioned above ( Lange-Bertalot et al. 2017). The species has also been found in several other French lakes, such as Lac du Réaltor (Provence, France) (Fig. 3 E View Figure 3 ) by Luc Ector and Carlos E. Wetzel ( LIST Luxemburg) who, despite an exhaustive review of existing Gomphonema literature, could not assign a name to this species (Wetzel, pers. comm.). It is likely that the species is more abundant than currently known due to confusion with similar taxa, such as G. jadwigiae Lange-Bertalot & E. Reichardt and G. turris Ehrenberg (see Discussion below).