Platichthys krammeri Lange-Bertalot & Kulikovskiy, 2015

Lange-Bertalot, Horst, Witkowski, Andrzej, Seddon, Maxim S. Kulikovskiy Alistair W. R. & Kociolek, John P., 2015, Taxonomy, frustular morphology and systematics of Platichthys, a new genus of canal raphe bearing diatoms within the Entomoneidaceae, Phytotaxa 236 (2), pp. 135-149 : 141

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.236.2.3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0F048322-FFF2-DD3F-FF7D-FE59FAE2F993

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Platichthys krammeri Lange-Bertalot & Kulikovskiy
status

sp. nov.

Platichthys krammeri Lange-Bertalot & Kulikovskiy , sp. nov. ( Figs 39–60 View FIGURES 39–53 View FIGURES 54–58 View FIGURES 59–62 )

Frustules in girdle view 27–35 μm long, 9–10 μm broad. Valves 3.5–4.0 μm broad, not including copulae ( Figs 39–49 View FIGURES 39–53 ). The dorsal margins, are straight lightly convex or slightly concave proximally. Fibulae 5.5–7.5 in 10 μm, the two median ones are not ( Figs 48, 49 View FIGURES 39–53 ) or not distinctly ( Figs 40, 41 View FIGURES 39–53 ) wider spaced than the others. The occurrence of a central nodule can only be ascertained by observations in SEM ( Fig. 59 View FIGURES 59–62 ). SEM. The girdle is composed of a few, open perforated copulae ( Figs 54, 57, 58 View FIGURES 54–58 ). The number of rows of pores in a single copula was not counted. The raphe is positioned in a very narrow axial area ( Figs 50–53 View FIGURES 39–53 ), the external central endings are simple, point-like, approximate, and the apical endings are strongly hooked ( Figs 56, 57 View FIGURES 54–58 , 59 View FIGURES 59–62 ). Transapical striae, 60–70 in 10 μm, areolae ca. 80 in 10 μm ( Figs 57 View FIGURES 54–58 , 60 View FIGURES 59–62 ), areolae occlusions have not been observed thus far. The areolae are arranged in straight uniseriate rows. Fibulae massive, arched, positioned at some distance below the raphe. Similarly to P. darwiniana , internally a few striae merge in one fibula ( Fig. 57 View FIGURES 54–58 ).

Type: — CHILE. Province of Chacabuco: Chacabuco Bano, Andes Mountains, on wet grass in the efflux of the thermal spring, G. H. Schwabe, 1940 (holotype: FR! Individual in SEM stub no. A 77 in coll. Lange-Bertalot, illustrated in Fig. 50 View FIGURES 39–53 . Isotype: KASSEL! slide no. 415 ex collection G.H. Schwabe).

Etymology: —this species dedicated to Dr. Kurt Krammer.

Ecology: —so far only found at the type location in thermal, freshwater spring. Associated with a rather scarce number of specimens of the new species are: Achnanthes inflata (Kützing) Grunow (1867: 7 ; basionym Stauroneis inflata Kützing 1844: 105 ), which is generally found in springs of extra-tropical South America (Lange-Bertalot personal unpublished observations); Caloneis spp. , at least three unidentified taxa; Halamphora sp. ; Diploneis spp. small and larger sized unidentified forms; Achnanthes exigua Grunow in Cleve & Grunow (1880: 21), with moderately high abundance; Nitzschia linearis (Agardh) W. Smith (1853: 39) or aff. linearis , Nitzschia spp. moderately abundant; Stauroneis sp. , naviculoid specimens of an unknown genus, Planothidium sp.

Comments: —The new genus is represented by two species that have been discovered and characterized in LM and EM. Though similar in gross morphology, the two species show differences in both LM and EM, which allow them to be distinguished. Although the longitudinal frustule size ranges of both taxa overlap (23–33 μm in P. darwiniana and 27–35 μm in P. krammeri ), they differ in the width of frustules and valves, as P. krammeri has broader frustules (9–10 μm), but narrower valves (3.5–4.0) than P. darwiniana (7–8 μm and 4.0–5.5 μm, respectively). Platichthys darwiniana and P. krammeri also differ in ultrastructural characteristics. Whereas the stria density in P. darwiniana is 48–61 in 10 μm, in P. krammeri it is 60–70 in 10 μm. The two species also differ with respect to the areola density within a stria, with 56 to 72 in 10 μm being found in P. darwiniana and ca. 80 in 10 μm in P. krammeri .

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