Toxarium undulatum J.W. Bailey, 1854

Lobban, Christopher S., Ashworth, Matt P., Camacho, Terance, Lam, Daryl W. & Theriot, Edward C., 2022, Revision of Ardissoneaceae (Bacillariophyta, Mediophyceae) from Micronesian populations, with descriptions of two new genera, Ardissoneopsis and Grunowago, and new species in Ardissonea, Synedrosphenia and Climacosphenia, PhytoKeys 208, pp. 103-184 : 103

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https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.208.89913

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scientific name

Toxarium undulatum J.W. Bailey, 1854
status

 

Toxarium undulatum J.W. Bailey, 1854

Figs 23 View Figure 23 , 24 View Figure 24

References.

Bailey 1854, p. 15, plate (1), figs 24, 25; Peragallo and Peragallo 1897-1908, p. 314, pl. 78, fig. 7; Hustedt 1931-1959, p. 222, 224, fig. 714; Güttinger 1991 (both as Synedra undulata ); Poulin et al. 1986, figs 33-36; Hein et al. 2008, p. 33, pl. 15, fig. 3; Lobban et al. 2012, p. 260, pl. 17, figs 6-8; Álvarez-Blanco and Blanco 2014, p. 128, pl. 63, figs 4-6.

Description from literature.

Toxarium undulatum , the generitype, was said to differ only in the wavy outline of the valve ( Hustedt 1931-1959), stria density rarely reported but Peragallo and Peragallo (1897-1908) state 12 in 10 µm. The outline in Bailey’s (1854) plate is shown as undulating with a long wavelength, in Peragallo and Peragallo (1897-1908), with a shorter wavelength, and in Hustedt (1931-1959) the center clearly has a wavy edge but the “horns” are scarcely undulate. Micrographs in recent works ( Witkowski et al. 2000; Hein et al. 2008) show distinctly undulate outlines. In the SEMs shown by Poulin et al. (1986) we count 19-21 striae in 10 µm, whereas Güttinger (1991: 2.01.30-10) shows specimens with lengths of 485 and 580 µm, widths 8 µm at center, 5 µm at poles, but with 12 striae in 10 µm. Lobban et al. (2012) reported lengths of 270-400 µm, widths 5-9 at the center, 6 µm at poles, 4 µm in between, with some specimens having virtually no central inflation; no stria density stated but their fig. 7 shows 12-13 striae in 10 µm. T. undulatum has usually been illustrated as straight but curved specimens are shown by Hein et al. (2008) and Lobban et al. (2012). The genus was emended by Poulin et al. (1986), whose SEM images of T. undulatum show an asymmetrical polar pseudoseptum and internal transverse costae "in parts of the valve between the poles and the center and sometimes anastomosing" (also shown in Güttinger 1991). The T. undulatum from Guam (GU44S / HK210 / ECT 3802) used by Ruck et al. (2016) showed very shallow undulations, at least after culture, and additional images of the voucher stub show that it has a single row of areolae on the mantle (Suppl. material 4: Fig. S2A-C), so we would therefore identify it as T. hennedyanum . A similar specimen from wild material is also shown in the Suppl. material 4: Fig. S2D-F.

Materials examined.

Guam: GU44X-2!, GU44Z-15!, GU44BJ-4!, inter alia; Federated States of Micronesia: Chuuk, TK28 !; Yap, Y36-2!, Y42-3!. Marshall Islands: Majuro, M1!, Jaluit, J5 !

Observations.

Valves straight or commonly curved overall, strongly sinusoidal along the narrow part, the oval central portion with a wavy outline, apical portions straight sided (Fig. 23A, B, F View Figure 23 ), length 255-326 µm, width 5 µm at poles, 7 µm at the center, 3 µm in between, stria densities 14-17 in 10 µm (Fig. 23C-I View Figure 23 ). Mantles deep with typically 3-4 areolae in the stria there (Fig. 23H, I, K View Figure 23 ). Spines absent. Valvocopula plain except for single row of pores along the base of the pars interior, fimbriate edge to pars interior (Fig. 23G View Figure 23 ), knuckle-like structure at poles, as in T. hennedyanum (Fig. 23K View Figure 23 , compare with Fig. 22F View Figure 22 ). Copula with a regular pattern of small areolae on the pars exterior, forming striae consistently 34 in 10 µm (Fig. 23H-J, L View Figure 23 ), in which the pars interior, while similar to that of T. hennedyanum near the poles, quickly becomes a fringe of short, narrow fimbriae with a line of triangular pores along the junction with the pars exterior (Fig. 23H View Figure 23 ). The narrow pleura was largely or entirely obscured (Fig. 23L View Figure 23 ) (this pole identified as T. undulata by 2+ rows of areolae on the mantle, and pores on the poles of the copula; contrast Fig. 22H View Figure 22 ); a small exposed portion showed a fimbriate edge (Fig. 23M View Figure 23 ).

We also documented T. undulatum in Grunow’s Honduras sample (Fig. 24 View Figure 24 ). A whole valve was 700 µm long (Fig. 24A View Figure 24 ) with long-wavelength undulations. The deep mantle sometimes exhibited longitudinal waves in the areolae (not solely an artefact of the wave in the valve, shown by short additional longitudinal lines of areolae-Fig. 24D View Figure 24 , arrows). The striae on the valve face were two areolae long on each side bordering scattered areolae in the inflated center and poles (Fig. 24C, E View Figure 24 ), internally, the virgae were thickened into costae (Fig. 24C View Figure 24 ). Valvocopula (Fig. 24C, E-G View Figure 24 ) with a single line of areolae on the exterior, short fimbriae along the interior margin except at the sculpted poles, and a series of arched slits (Fig. 24F, G View Figure 24 ; compare Fig. 23K View Figure 23 ). Copula (Fig. 24C-E, H View Figure 24 ) wide with coarse fimbriae on the pars interior, forked at the tips, exterior with striae of pores tending to merge into slits, especially on the advalvar side. Fimbriate pleura clearly seen in Fig. 24H View Figure 24 .

Taxonomic comments.

The specimens from Grunow’s Honduras material are near the length ("about 35m" = 890 µm; see Itaki and Bjørklund 2006) and shape described by Bailey (1854) for specimens from Sargassum in Narragansett Bay. As noted by Hustedt (1931-1959), Grunow (1877) did not mention this species (in the context of presenting new species), but Hustedt says he observed it on Grunow’s slides.

In the Micronesian samples, depths of the mantle, and structure of the copula were different in the two species, so we can assert that the specimens shown here for T. hennedyanum and T. undulatum are different species. The large genetic variation in Toxarium materials we have sequenced (Fig. 33 View Figure 33 ) casts doubt on whether either of them might be identified to authentic Atlantic types, a question highlighted by the Grunow specimens. It similarly raises questions about the number of species there might be in Micronesia. Both questions require much more work to define the range of character states and their combinations, but the oft-repeated claim that the two species differ only in outline is already not supported by morphological evidence. The more important point for the present study is to establish generic characters for comparison to those of the genera in Ardissoneaceae and Climacospheniaceae .

The Toxarium spp. specimens shown here from sample GU44BJ-4 were in a community with the new species Ardissoneopsis gracilis (see above), which has a slightly undulate outline but is distinguished from T. undulatum by the cuneate girdle view, regular striae across the valve face, apical spines, and the decussate pattern of pores on the girdle bands (Fig. 18 View Figure 18 ). Also present were Synedrosphenia gomphonema , S. crystallina , Ardissoneopsis fulgicans , A. appressata , and Grunowago pacifica .