Diploneis fossa, Jovanovska & Wilson & Hamilton & Stone, 2023

Jovanovska, Elena, Wilson, Mallory C., Hamilton, Paul B. & Stone, Jeffery, 2023, Morphological and molecular characterization of twenty-five new Diploneis species (Bacillariophyta) from Lake Tanganyika and its surrounding areas, Phytotaxa 593 (1), pp. 1-102 : 40

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.593.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7875145

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038487E2-FFF9-2665-BCF1-FF09BDF37584

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Diploneis fossa
status

sp. nov.

Diploneis fossa sp. nov. (LM Figs 178–185 View FIGURES 178–185 , SEM Figs 186–192 View FIGURES 186–192 )

Valves are weakly asymmetric, elliptical to linear–elliptical with parallel margins and bluntly round apices ( Figs 178–188 View FIGURES 178–185 View FIGURES 186–192 ). The length of the valve is 47.5–64 μm and the width of the valve is 23–27 μm. The axial area is narrow, lanceolate, widening at the center to form a longitudinally elongate and weakly asymmetric central area ( Figs 178 View FIGURES 178–185 , 187, 190 View FIGURES 186–192 ), 4–5 μm wide. Externally, the canal is lanceolate and slightly expanded in the middle of the valve with three rows of cribrate (<15 poroids) areolae narrowing into one at the valve apices ( Fig. 189 View FIGURES 186–192 ). Externally, the raphe is filiform, curved with simple proximal ends bent to the same side of the valve; the proximal fissures are positioned in expanded teardrop depressions ( Figs 187, 190 View FIGURES 186–192 ). The distal raphe ends are unilaterally bent to the same side and terminate at the valve face mantle junction ( Figs 188, 189, 192 View FIGURES 186–192 ). The striae are parallel at mid-valve becoming radiate towards the valve apices, 8–9 in 10 μm. Striae are uniseriate throughout ( Figs 189, 191 View FIGURES 186–192 ). The striae are composed of large round to rectangular areolae covered externally with fine pored cribra (>45 poroids), 8–10 in 10 μm. Externally, each areola opens into deep pits. The inter-areolar thickenings have fin-like crest silica ridges serrated with ca. 9–12 fine notched edges ( Fig. 189 View FIGURES 186–192 ). The fin-like ridges along the canal are slightly bent into semi-circular shape, positioned towards the striae whereas those of the striae are only slightly bent positioned towards the canal, changing opposite direction only at valve mantle ( Figs 187, 192 View FIGURES 186–192 ).

Type:— REPUBLIC OF ZAMBIA, Lake Tanganyika , Isanga Bay, at 768 m elevation; rock scrape, 20 m water depth, collected SCUBA diving, 8°39’10.7” S 31°11’34.8” E, A. Jordan, 8 th October 2021 (holotype designated here, circled specimen BM-108982! = Fig. 184 View FIGURES 178–185 , GoogleMaps isotypes ANSP-GC17211 !, CANA-129334!). Type material CANA-129329. Registration: http://phycobank.org/103708 GoogleMaps

Pictures of the isolated specimen:— LM micrograph on 1000× magnification ( Fig. S2c View FIGURES 2–11 ).

Sequence data:— Plastid gene rbc L sequence (GenBank accession: OQ 660301).

Etymology:— The specific epithet ‘ fossa ’ refers to the ditch-like formation of the fin-like crest ridges.

Ecology and distribution:— This species has only been observed on the Zambian and Tanzanian coasts of Lake Tanganyika. In the alkaline, moderately mineral-rich and highly transparent waters, it inhabits sandy and muddy substrates (sometimes with mollusk shells) and submerged rocks between 5 and 33 m water depth. The largest population sizes of this species have been found in the southern parts of the lake in Isanga Bay and Mutondwe Island. Smaller population sizes were found in Chituta Bay, Kalambo Falls Lodge, Ndole Bay and in the central parts of the lake in Kalya Bay and Mahale National Park ( Fig. 1c, e, f View FIGURE 1 ). In the type material, it mostly coexists with D. major sp. nov. while at all other sites it occurs with D. kilhamiana sp. nov., D. cocquytiana sp. nov., D. tumida sp. nov., D. cristata sp. nov., D. salzburgeri sp. nov., D. serrulata sp. nov., and D. duplex sp. nov.

Main differential characters:— Valve shape, striae pattern, striae density, external fin-like ornamentations across the valve, fins scattered on the longitudinal canals, areolae formation over the longitudinal canal (thickened virgae), and poroids>45 per areola.

Similar species:— Diploneis elongata sp. nov. and Diploneis raetica Lange-Bertalot & Fuhrmann (2020: 119) .

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