Diploneis tenera, 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 : 37

publication ID

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

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7875139

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038487E2-FFFA-2666-BCF1-FF0AB8A675D9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Diploneis tenera
status

sp. nov.

Diploneis tenera sp. nov. (LM Figs 152–171 View FIGURES 152–171 , SEM Figs 172–177 View FIGURES 172–177 )

Valves are asymmetric, linear-elliptic with parallel to weakly convex margins and round apices ( Figs 152–172 View FIGURES 152–171 View FIGURES 172–177 ). Valve length is 29–47.5 μm and valve width is 14.5–20 μm. The axial area is linear to lanceolate, widening at the center to form a longitudinally elongate and weakly asymmetric central area ( Figs 153 View FIGURES 152–171 , 172 View FIGURES 172–177 ), 2.5–4 μm wide. Externally, the canal is linear to lanceolate, slightly expanded in the middle of the valve with three rows of cribrate areolae narrowing into one at the valve apices ( Figs 152–172 View FIGURES 152–171 View FIGURES 172–177 ). Internally, a thick non-porous slightly raised silica plate encloses the longitudinal canal ( Fig. 174 View FIGURES 172–177 ). Externally, the raphe is filiform, curved with expanded proximal ends deflected to one side; the proximal ends are positioned within tear drop depressions ( Fig. 172 View FIGURES 172–177 ). The distal raphe ends are unilaterally bent to the same side and terminate at the valve face mantle junction ( Figs 172, 173 View FIGURES 172–177 ). Internally, the raphe is curved with simple proximal and distal ends that are slightly elevated in a depression formed by the longitudinal canal ( Figs 174, 175, 177 View FIGURES 172–177 ). The striae are parallel at mid-valve changing to radiate towards the valve apices, 10–11 in 10 μm. Striae are uniseriate becoming biseriate towards the valve margins ( Figs 173, 175 View FIGURES 172–177 ). The striae are composed of round to rectangular areolae covered externally with a dense cribra (>15 poroids), 15–20 in 10 μm. The inter-areolar thickenings have fin-like crest shaped silica ornamentations serrated into ca. 3–5 notched edges ( Fig. 173 View FIGURES 172–177 ). The fin-like ornamentations around the canal are bent into semi-circular shapes, positioned towards the striae whereas those of the striae are only slightly bent and positioned towards the canal, changing opposite direction only at valve mantle ( Figs 172, 173 View FIGURES 172–177 ). The areolae increase in size towards the valve margins ( Fig. 173 View FIGURES 172–177 ). Internally, the alveoli open via a single elongated opening covered with a thin silica layer ( Fig. 176 View FIGURES 172–177 ). The valvocopula has serrated advalvar edges ( Figs 174, 176 View FIGURES 172–177 ).

Type:— REPUBLIC OF ZAMBIA, Lake Tanganyika , Kalambo Falls Lodge, at 782 m elevation; sand from fish crater, 7.5 m water depth, collected SCUBA diving, 8°37’22.9” S 31°12’01.8” E, W. Salzburger, 29 th September 2021 (holotype designated here, circled specimen BM-108981! = Fig. 157 View FIGURES 152–171 , GoogleMaps isotypes ANSP-GC17210 !, CANA-130009!). Type material CANA-129325. Registration: http://phycobank.org/103719 GoogleMaps

Pictures of the isolated specimen:— LM micrograph on 1000× magnification ( Fig. S3q View FIGURES 2–11 ).

Sequence data:— Plastid gene rbc L sequence (GenBank accession: OQ 660297).

Etymology:— The specific epithet ‘ tenera ’ refers to structurally simple valves and valve ornamentations.

Ecology and distribution:— Diploneis tenera sp. nov. has only been observed along the Zambian and Tanzanian coasts of Lake Tanganyika. In the alkaline, moderately mineral-rich and highly transparent waters, the species occurs mainly in sandy substrates (sometimes with mollusk shells) and rarely in submerged rocks between 15 and 20 m water depth in the southern sub-basin at Kalambo Falls Lodge, Isanga Bay, Mutondwe Island, and Cape Nangu in Kasaba Bay, and less so in the central sub-basin in Mahale National Park (see Fig. 1c, e, f View FIGURE 1 ). It is quite abundant especially at Kalambo Falls Lodge and in Kasaba Bay where it occurs together with D. kilhamiana sp. nov., D. gigantea sp. nov., D. decora sp. nov., D. serrulata sp. nov., D. salzburgeri sp. nov., D. duplex sp. nov., and D. clara sp. nov.

Main differential characters:— Valve shape, striae pattern, external thick fin-like ornamentations across the valve, and poroids 15–20 per areola.

Similar species:— Diploneis tessellata sp. nov. and Diploneis rumrichorum Lange-Bertalot & Fuhrmann (2020: 121) .

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