Chamaepinnularia taihangensis N.N. Cui & Q. Liu, 2023

Cui, Nini, Liu, Qi, Liu, Xudong, Nan, Fangru, Kociolek, John Patrick & Xie, Shulian, 2023, Chamaepinnularia taihangensis sp. nov. (Bacillariophyceae), a new diatom species from Taihang Valley, Shanxi province, China, Phytotaxa 587 (2), pp. 184-192 : 185-186

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.587.2.7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7731951

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/59078785-FFAB-FFE6-0DDC-F9CCFE17F844

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Chamaepinnularia taihangensis N.N. Cui & Q. Liu
status

sp. nov.

Chamaepinnularia taihangensis N.N. Cui & Q. Liu sp. nov. Figs 2–20 View FIGURES 2–11 View FIGURES 12–20

LM ( Figs 2–11 View FIGURES 2–11 ):— Large specimens, linear-lanceolate valves with capitate apices and margins with distinct triple curvatures ( Figs 2–8 View FIGURES 2–11 ). Small specimens, valves elliptic-lanceolate with capitate apices and with or without distinct triple curvature ( Figs 9–11 View FIGURES 2–11 ). Length 10–14 μm, width 3.0–3.5 μm. Axial area narrow, rhombic, widening toward the middle of valve and nearly reaching the valve margins. Central area rhombic. Striae slightly radiate in the central area and convergent toward the ends, 20–21 in 10 μm. Raphe straight, proximal raphe ends expanded and bent slightly to the same side, the terminal raphe fissures deflected to the same direction.

SEM ( Figs 12–20 View FIGURES 12–20 ):— Externally, striae composed of elongated chamber-like areolae and covered by vela ( Figs 12–16 View FIGURES 12–20 ). Raphe straight and filiform. Proximal raphe ends expanded and unilaterally deflected ( Figs 12, 14 View FIGURES 12–20 ). Terminal raphe curved to hook-shaped and continuing onto the mantle ( Figs 12, 13, 16 View FIGURES 12–20 ). Axial area narrow, rhombic. Fascias present, forming rhombic central areas ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 12–20 ). Internally, areolae openings interrupted by siliceous bridge that divides striae in two parts ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 12–20 ), one small, rounded and located on the valve face-mantle junction, whereas the other elongated and located on the valve face. Proximal raphe ends unilaterally hooked ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 12–20 ). Terminal raphe ends weakly deflected and terminated as well-developed helictoglossae ( Figs 18, 20 View FIGURES 12–20 ).

Type:— CHINA. Taihang Valley, Shanxi Province, epiphyton, 35°12’ N, 113°20’ E, 1760 m asl., June 2020 (holotype SXU! slide THS202006086 View Materials = Fig. 3 View FIGURES 2–11 , Freshwater Algal Herbarium of Shanxi University, Taiyuan, China; GoogleMaps isotype: COLO slide, J.P. Kociolek Collection). GoogleMaps

Etymology:— Named for the region in which it was found.

Ecology and distribution:— C. taihangensis sp. nov. was found in Eight spring gorge, Taihang Valley. Conditions in the type material were as follows: Temperature 17.2 ºC, pH = 8.32, EC = 318.6 µs̽ cm-1, AT = 679.4 mm Hg, dissolved oxygen = 9.57 mg ̽L- 1 and total dissolved solids = 279.50 mg ̽L- 1.

Associated diatom species: — The type population of C. taihangensis sp. nov. was found in samples associated with other species. In THS202006086, two dominant species were Achnanthidium minutissimum (Kützing) Czarnecki (1994: 157) (25.8 %) and Delicata sinensis Krammer & Metzeltin (2003: 121) ( Krammer 2003) (24.0 %). Diatoma moniliformis (Kützing) D.M. Williams (2012: 260) represented 7.5 % of the community with Cymbopleura kuelbsii ( Krammer 2003: 94) (5.8 %), Achnanthidium rivulare Potapova & Ponader (2004: 36) (4.0 %), Achnanthidium pyrenaicum (Hustedt) H.Kobayasi (1997: 148) (3.8 %), Denticula elegans Kützing (1844: 44) (3.0 %), Navicula antonii Lange-Bertalot (2000: 155) (Rumrich, U., Lange-Bertalot, H. & Rumrich, M. 2000) (2.8 %), and Chamaepinnularia taihangensis sp. nov. (2.0 %).

COLO

COLO

SXU

Shanxi University

COLO

University of Colorado Herbarium

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