Elliptochloris philistinensis Novis & Visnovsky, 2012

Novis, Phil M. & Visnovsky, Gabriel, 2012, Novel alpine algae from New Zealand: Chlorophyta, Phytotaxa 39, pp. 1-30 : 24-25

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.39.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4926559

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0391A571-2101-C66A-78AD-FC984EA4FEC4

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Elliptochloris philistinensis Novis & Visnovsky
status

sp. nov.

Elliptochloris philistinensis Novis & Visnovsky , sp. nov. ( Figs 6A–B View FIGURE 6 )

Cellulae juvenes cylindrico-ellipsoidales, 6.2–7.7 µm longae, 3.1–4.6 µm latae, aetate ellipsoideae vel sphaericae, usque ad 8.5 µm latae, unicae vel in greges aggregatae, cytoplasma vesiculis tribus vel pluribus instructa (ut videtur materiam lipidicam includentibus) continentes. Paries cellularis tenuis laevisque. Chloroplastus viridis , parietalis, cupulatus, pyrenoidem unicam per vagina valde segmentata amylacea circumdatam continens. Matrix pyrenoidis thylacoidibus pluribus penetrata sed forma non distincta. Autosporis 2–4 per sporangium regenerans.

Type:— NEW ZEALAND: Westland : Mt Philistine, 1400 m, preserved cultured specimen from sample collected 30 November 2007, CHR610490 View Materials .

Young cells cylindrical–ellipsoidal, 6.2–7.7 µm long, 3.1–4.6 µm wide, becoming ellipsoidal to spherical with age, up to 8.5 µm wide, singly or in groups, containing 3–numerous vesicles in cytoplasm (thought to contain lipid; Fig. 5A View FIGURE 5 ). Cell wall thin and smooth. Chloroplast green, parietal, cup-shaped, with single pyrenoid surrounded by highly segmented starch sheath ( Fig. 5B View FIGURE 5 ). Pyrenoid matrix penetrated by several thylakoids, but pattern indistinct. Reproduction by autospores, 2–4 per sporangium. Sequence data for the 18S rDNA gene placed E. philistinensis robustly in a clade of Elliptochloris species , but separated from others by a moderately long branch emerging at the first node ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ).

Habitat:— Alpine herbfield soil.

Distribution:— New Zealand.

Etymology:— Referring to Mt Philistine, the site of collection.

Observations:— Elliptochloris represents a well-defined genus in the Trebouxiophyceae. The pyrenoid of E. marina Letsch et al. 2009 is described as a “thylakoid free region” in the chloroplast, and appears similar to our observations. One other species, E. subsphaerica (Reisigl) Ettl & Gärtner (1995) has a pyrenoid, but this is clearly distinguished from E. philistinensis by young cells that are frequently curved, and by molecular data ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ).

Cultures:— LCR-CG5.

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