identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
000887F07343FFEFFF45379DFDA77543.text	000887F07343FFEFFF45379DFDA77543.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Encyonema meghamalaiense V. Vigneshkumar, A. Vigneshwaran, C. Radhakrishnan, B. Karthick & S. Nagaraj 2025	<div><p>Encyonema meghamalaiense V.Vigneshkumar, A.Vigneshwaran, C.Radhakrishnan, B.Karthick &amp; S.Nagaraj sp. nov. (Figs 1–31; Fig. 6 = holotype)</p><p>Description Light microscopy (Figs 1–20): Valves lanceolate, asymmetric, slightly dorsiventral in apical axis. Apices protracted, rounded, rostrate to slightly subcapitate ends. Length 16.25–25.6 μm, width 3.78–4.3 μm. Valve Length to breadth ratio 3.78–6.92. Axial area asymmetric, narrow to wide towards central area. Central area, small and shortened striae on either side of the raphe. Raphe lateral to slightly curved. Central raphe ends simple and distal raphe ends curved towards ventral side. Striae radiate, becoming parallel near center area, 14–16 in 10 μm, 15–16 in 10 μm near apices. Areolae irregular, not visible in LM. Stigma absent.</p><p>Scanning Electron Microscopy (Figs 21–31): In external view (Figs 21–25), the axial area is narrow to broader towards the central area (Fig. 22). Raphe lateral undulates towards the center of the valve (Figs 21–22). Central raphe ends simple, slightly curved towards the dorsal side (Fig. 25). Distal raphe ends ventrally deflected (Fig. 23– 24). Striae irregular, mostly uniseriate but occasionally biseriate (Figs 21–22). Transapically, the striae transition to biseriate and sometimes multiseriate arrangements, then return to uniseriate near the raphe (Figs 23–25). Near the apices, striae consist of small, lineolate to oval areolae (Fig. 23). In internal view (Figs 26–31), Striae composed of lineolate to biseriate striae separated by distinct virgae (Fig. 27). At each side of the foramen, there are round, small silica depositions present. Central raphe openings not parallel, and one of the central raphe slightly curved towards the dorsal side (Fig. 26). Distal raphe ends in helictoglossae. Helictoglossae slightly angled towards the ventral margin (Figs 29–30). Girdle bands are highly silicified (Figs 27–28).</p><p>Type: — INDIA. Meghamalai Lake, Meghamalai, Theni, Tamil Nadu, India (9°38ʹ14.7ʺN 77°21ʹ17.4ʺE). Samples were collected by Mr. V. Vigneshkumar and Dr. S. Nagaraj on 25 February 2024. (Holotype AHMA! Slide #4770 = Fig. 6). Type material AHMA #4770.</p><p>Habitat: —Episammic.</p><p>Etymology: —The species epithet meghamalaiense is derived from “Meghamalai,” the mountainous region in Tamil Nadu, India, where this species was discovered. The suffix “-ense” denotes its origin from this specific locality. The name highlights the geographic significance of the Meghamalai Hills as a unique and ecologically important region contributing to diatom diversity.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/000887F07343FFEFFF45379DFDA77543	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Vigneshkumar, Venkatesan;Vigneshwaran, Anbukkarasu;Radhakrishnan, Cheran;Karthick, Balasubramanian;Nagaraj, Subramani	Vigneshkumar, Venkatesan, Vigneshwaran, Anbukkarasu, Radhakrishnan, Cheran, Karthick, Balasubramanian, Nagaraj, Subramani (2025): Encyonema meghamalaiense sp. nov. (Bacillariophyceae, Encyonemataceae): A New Cymbelloid Diatom from the Meghamalai Hills, Tamil Nadu, India. Phytotaxa 715 (1): 81-90, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.715.1.6, URL: https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.715.1.6
