Chaetoceros rostratus Ralfs

Bosak, Sunčica & Sarno, Diana, 2017, The planktonic diatom genus Chaetoceros Ehrenberg (Bacillariophyta) from the Adriatic Sea, Phytotaxa 314 (1), pp. 1-44 : 11-14

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.314.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038587FE-514E-FFE9-6AE5-F905DF61FCAD

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Chaetoceros rostratus Ralfs
status

 

Chaetoceros rostratus Ralfs View in CoL in Lauder (1864a: 79) ( Figs 33–41 View FIGURES 33–41 )

References:— Hustedt (1930), Giuffrè & Ragusa (1988), Rines & Hargraves (1988), Hernández-Becerril (1996), Hernández-Becerril & Flores Granados (1998), Shevchenko et al. (2006), Sunesen et al. (2008), Lee et al. (2014b).

Synonym: — Chaetoceros glandazi Mangin. View in CoL

Morphometry: —a.a.: 10–22 μm; p.a.: 16–48 μm.

LM: —The chains are robust, straight and short (usually 2–5 cells) ( Fig. 33 View FIGURES 33–41 ). Cells in girdle view rectangular with more or less rounded corners ( Fig. 34 View FIGURES 33–41 ). Cells and setae contain numerous plastids ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 33–41 ). Valve face slightly to strongly convex; the mantle is high with a visible constriction near the edge, girdle small and equidimensional with the mantle ( Fig. 34 View FIGURES 33–41 ). Cells are held in a chain by the fusion of a central linkage process (linking spine) and not by the joining of setae. Very long, straight and thick setae originate close to the valve margin and diverge perpendicular to the chain axis ( Fig. 33 View FIGURES 33–41 ). In the intercalary cells the sibling valves are twisted about 60° between them so the setae arise without touching the setae emerging from the neighbouring valve ( Figs 34–35 View FIGURES 33–41 ). In valve view, the sibling setae diverge at an angle of ca. 30–45° from the apical plane.

EM: —The conically shaped linking spines are of variable length, and can become very short and wide in culture but in field material they are usually long and narrow ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 33–41 ). Their surface is completely smooth and may be perforated with a few poroids at the base. The terminal valve lacks the linking spine. A rimoportula is present in each valve and it is positioned slightly eccentric to one side of the spine ( Figs 36, 37 View FIGURES 33–41 ). The rimoportula appears as a simple slit on the internal side of the valve ( Fig. 37 View FIGURES 33–41 ) and brings a small protuberance on the external side ( Figs 36, 39 View FIGURES 33–41 ). Valves are perforated by round poroids irregularly scattered across the valve face, mantle and setae bases ( Fig. 39 View FIGURES 33–41 ). The valve face is ornamented with a pattern of dense branching costae which radiate from the eccentrically positioned annulus ( Fig. 39 View FIGURES 33–41 ). The setae are four-sided in cross section with rows of arrowhead-shaped spines along each edge ( Figs 38, 41 View FIGURES 33–41 ). The ornamentation on the setae wall consists of five transverse rows of poroids arranged in a cross pattern between transverse thickened costae. After each 4–9 costae there is often one larger round pore located near the side edge and close to the costae ( Fig. 40 View FIGURES 33–41 ).

Distinctive features: —Sibling cells connected with central linking spine of variable length. Four-sided setae having a wall ornamented with thick transverse costae interspaced with five poroid rows.

Subgenus Hyalochaete Gran 1897

Kingdom

Chromista

Phylum

Ochrophyta

Class

Bacillariophyceae

Order

Chaetocerotales

Family

Chaetocerotaceae

Genus

Chaetoceros

Loc

Chaetoceros rostratus Ralfs

Bosak, Sunčica & Sarno, Diana 2017
2017
Loc

Chaetoceros rostratus

Lauder, H. S. 1864: 79
1864
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