Diploneis guangdongensis W.W.Wu, Y.H.Gao & C.P.Chen, 2022

Wu, Weiwei, Sun, Lin, Li, Xuesong, Liang, Junrong, Gao, Yahui & Chen, Changping, 2022, A new small marine Diploneis species (Diploneidaceae, Bacillariophyta) from Guangdong Province, China, Phytotaxa 560 (2), pp. 233-240 : 234-235

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.560.2.6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7046824

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C387E8-6342-7D67-DBC7-FA53FA98E04F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Diploneis guangdongensis W.W.Wu, Y.H.Gao & C.P.Chen
status

sp. nov.

Diploneis guangdongensis W.W.Wu, Y.H.Gao & C.P.Chen spec. nov. (LM Figs 1–20 View FIGURES 1–20 , SEM Figs 21–32 View FIGURES 21–26 View FIGURES 27–32 )

Description:— LM: The valves are elongated-elliptical with parallel margins and round apices ( Figs 1–20 View FIGURES 1–20 ). The valve length is 6.5–12 µm, and the breadth is 3.0–4.0 µm. The axial area is narrow. The central area is distinct and quadratic to slightly rectangular in shape. Longitudinal canals are narrow and lanceolate in the flat median portion. The raphe is a narrow straight slit. Striae are not visible under LM.

SEM: The valve surface is almost flat. Along both sides of the axial area, the longitudinal canal is lanceolate and linear, open outside by one row of C-shaped poroids throughout the whole length of the valve ( Figs 22–24 View FIGURES 21–26 ). The openings of the canal are covered with volate occlusions externally ( Figs 23, 26 View FIGURES 21–26 ). At the valve apices, the longitudinal canal circles the distal raphe endings ( Figs 21–23 View FIGURES 21–26 ). The axial area is very narrow and linear. The central area is quadratic to slightly rectangular, ca. 0.83–0.90 µm wide. Externally, the raphe is a narrow straight slit, with simple and slightly expanded drop-like proximal ends ( Figs 24–25 View FIGURES 21–26 ). The distal raphe ends are simple and bent to the same side of the valve, terminating at some distance from the valve apices ( Figs 22–23 View FIGURES 21–26 ). The area with volate occlusions occupies approximately one-fourth to one-sixth of the valve width ( Figs 21, 26 View FIGURES 21–26 ). The alveoli open externally via elongated slits ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 21–26 , white arrow). The slits are the areola occlusions, short and narrow, rarely branched. The striae are parallel in the middle of the valve, becoming slightly radiated at the valve apices, 30–35 in 10 µm. The elongated slits are formed as an interspace between costae with the same shape ( Fig. 24 View FIGURES 21–26 , white arrow). Each marginal flap is elongated to the margin of the valve. The other part of the alveolate striae is covered by a broadly semilune hyaline area at the middle of the valve, merging with the longitudinal canal ( Figs 21, 25 View FIGURES 21–26 ).

Internally, the longitudinal canal is nonporous and enclosed by a thick silica plate ( Figs 27, 29–30 View FIGURES 27–32 ). The internal longitudinal canal is less silicified, the raphe is not placed in a depression formed by the longitudinal canals. The proximal raphe ends are slightly expanded into small, drop-like central pores bent to the same side of the valve ( Figs 29, 32 View FIGURES 27–32 ). The distal raphe ends are slightly expanded and straight ( Figs 30–31 View FIGURES 27–32 ). Transapical costae are narrower than alveoli in both inner and outer valves ( Figs 24–25 View FIGURES 21–26 , 27, 29 View FIGURES 27–32 ). The intercostal spaces consist of elongated alveoli ( Figs 29–30 View FIGURES 27–32 ), each occluded by a thin siliceous layer, bearing perforations in a hexagonal array ( Figs 29–30 View FIGURES 27–32 ). The cingulum is composed of two copulae without ornamentation ( Figs 25 View FIGURES 21–26 , 28 View FIGURES 27–32 ).

Type: — CHINA. Guangdong Province, Shantou City , sandy beach, 23.4378°N, 117.1369°E, 10 May 2020, L.Y. Tan, (holotype slide ST-200510-1! = Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1–20 ; isotype Slide ST-200510-2, both deposited in the Biology Department Herbarium, Xiamen University (AU), China. GoogleMaps

Etymology: — The epithet “ guangdongensis ” refers to the site where the new taxon was collected.

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