Euastrum octogibbosum Willi Krieg. (1937: 586)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.391.3.2 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13727221 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FB1D87F6-FFCD-FFCB-FF7D-D565FE4B279E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Euastrum octogibbosum Willi Krieg. (1937: 586) |
status |
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Euastrum octogibbosum Willi Krieg. (1937: 586) ( Figs 26–27 View FIGURES 2–27 )
Cell dimensions: length 19,5–21 μm, breadth 13,5–15 μm, apical lobe 11–12 μm, isthmus 5–6 μm.
Habitat characteristics: Periphyton; water temperature 21ºC, pH 7.8, conductivity 10 μS. cm-1, dissolved oxygen 9.2 mg.L- 1.
Material examined: HUEFS 244149.
Notes: Krieger (1937) proposed Euastrum octogibbosum as a new name for Euastrum coralloides var. subintegrum West & G.S. West (1907: 198) based on specimens from Burma ( Myanmar), as that author considered E. coralloides an uncertain species.
Euastrum octogibbosum is a rare species, with known distributions on the Asian continent ( Krieger 1937, Hinode 1955, Scott & Prescott 1961). The main morphological features of this species are trapeziform semicells with four prominent verrucae near the margins of the lobes and a central inflation furnished with 3 verrucae arranged in a circle.
The Brazilian specimens are closest to Indonesian samples illustrated by Scott & Prescott (1961: Pl 13, Fig. 3 View FIGURES 2–27 , as Euastrum coralloides var. subintegrum ), although the central inflation is generally composed of 3 granules instead of a single large and smooth granule as in Asian specimens. That inflation having 3 verrucae was only seen by SEM, as the inflation always appeared to be simply one large spherical protrusion under LM. Euastrum octogibbosum is reported here for the first time for Brazil.
HUEFS |
Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana |
LM |
Secçáo de Botânica e Ecologia |
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