Pinnularia qinghainensis Bing Liu & S. Blanco, 2021

Deng, Li-Ying, Blanco, Saúl, Liu, Bing, Quan, Si-Jin & Long, Ji-Yan, 2021, Pinnularia qinghainensis: a new diatom species (Bacillariophyta) found in the brackish Lake Qinghai, China, Phytotaxa 483 (1), pp. 80-84 : 80-81

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.483.1.5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6494629

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A487B8-224C-FFF0-FF0C-FBF8FA14F371

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Pinnularia qinghainensis Bing Liu & S. Blanco
status

sp. nov.

Pinnularia qinghainensis Bing Liu & S. Blanco sp. nov. ( Figs 1–25 View FIGURES 1–15 View FIGURES 16–20 View FIGURES 21–25 )

LM: Valves linear with broadly rounded apices ( Figs 1–15 View FIGURES 1–15 ), dimensions (n=31): 35–70 μm long, 8–11μm wide. Sternum narrow, widening towards central area. Central area hexagonal with three forms: reaching both margins (e.g. Figs 1, 5, 11 View FIGURES 1–15 ), meeting one margin and bordering the other with few short striae (e.g. Figs 2, 3 View FIGURES 1–15 ), or bordering both margins with a few short striae (e.g. Figs 8, 12, 15 View FIGURES 1–15 ). Raphe filiform, straight. Proximal raphe ends slightly bent toward same side with drop-shaped central pores. Distal raphe fissures sickle-shaped, deflexed to same side. Striae mostly curved, radiate at middle, gradually becoming convergent when approaching apices. Striae 13–16 (often 14) in 10 μm at centre, 15–17 in 10 μm near apices. Longitudinal lines absent.

SEM: Valves linear with broadly rounded apices ( Figs 16 View FIGURES 16–20 , 21 View FIGURES 21–25 ). Central area hexagonal, reaching both margins ( Figs 17 View FIGURES 16–20 , 23 View FIGURES 21–25 ), or bordering both margins with a few short striae ( Figs 21, 22 View FIGURES 21–25 ). External proximal raphe ends bent in one direction, slightly dilated ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 16–20 ). Distal raphe fissures hooked towards same side ( Figs 16, 18, 19 View FIGURES 16–20 ). Internally, raphe branches straight, proximal raphe fissures curved towards same side, central nodule not raised ( Figs 22, 23 View FIGURES 21–25 ); distal raphe terminating as helictoglossae ( Figs 24, 25 View FIGURES 21–25 ). Striae mostly composed of 4 rows of small areolae (rarely 3 rows) ( Figs 16–20 View FIGURES 16–20 ), covered by silicified plates ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 16–20 ); internally, alveoli open, their openings as depressed chambers.

Type:— CHINA. Qinghai province: Lake Qinghai, a sampling point near the lakeshore (see Liu et al. 2020, fig. 1, sampling site 1), 36°50’34” N, 99°42’39” E, 3210 m asl, Bing Liu , 19 th July 2019 (holotype BM! 98361= Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1–15 ; isotype JIU! G202002 View Materials = Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1–15 ) GoogleMaps .

Etymology: —Named after Lake Qinghai, where the species was found.

Ecology: —The following environmental parameters were measured in the field: Electrical conductance 16296.7 ± 86.2 µS∙ cm-1; pH 9.14 ± 0.01; water temperature 15.5 ± 0.3 °C.

Similar taxa: Pinnularia boliviana S. Blanco, Álvarez-Blanco & Cejudo-Figueiras (in Blanco et al. 2013: 15), P. rhombarea var. halophila Krammer (2000: 76) and P. halophila Krammer (1992: 146 ; see also Krammer 2000: 137) all live in brackish water and in some respects are similar to P. qinghainensis . Pinnularia boliviana differs from P. qinghainensis by its lower stria density (12–13 vs. 13–16 in 10 μm), its wider valves (10.8–16.4 vs. 8–11 μm), and its fascia (in P. qinghainensis the central area may not constitute a fascia). Pinnularia rhombarea var. halophila has broader valves (12–15 vs. 8–11μm) and lower stria density (10–11 vs. 13–16 in 10 μm). Pinnularia halophila has broader valves (17–22 vs. 8–11μm) and much lower stria density (8–9 vs. 13–16 in 10 μm). Pinnularia brebissonii ( Kützing 1844: 93) Rabenhorst (1864: 222) also has a lower stria density than P. qinghainensis (12–13 vs. 13–16 in 10 μm).

Pinnularia qinghainensis is only known from the type locality and is a rare species (its relative abundance is ca. 0.4%). The diatom samples that included P. qinghainensis were scraped off from stone surfaces immersed in brackish water, hence, the species may be recognized as a brackish-water epilithic diatom. Most of the companion species (e.g. Ctenophora sinensis Bing Liu & D.M. Williams (in Liu et al. 2020: 119), Entomoneis spp. , Halamphora spp. , Berkeleya sp. , Triblionella spp., Brachysira sp. and Surirella spp. ) in the samples are either marine or brackish-water diatoms which will be reported later.

BM

Bristol Museum

JIU

Jishou University

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF