Nitella C.Agardh, Syst. Alg.

Casanova, Michelle T. & Karol, Kenneth G., 2023, Charophytes of Australia’s Northern Territory - II. Tribe Nitelleae, Australian Systematic Botany 36 (4), pp. 322-353 : 324

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1071/SB22029

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A70387E4-942B-2741-7EE8-2BAC4B18FD47

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Nitella C.Agardh, Syst. Alg.
status

 

Nitella C.Agardh, Syst. Alg. View in CoL xxvii (1824)

Monoecious or dioecious. Plant axis and branchlets ecorticate. Stipulodes absent; branchlets in 1 whorl, or more than 1 whorl, per node, ecorticate; primary segments usually distinctly forked into 2–8 secondary segments, or further furcate. Terminal end segments (dactyls) 1–8 cells long. Gametangia arranged at the branchlet nodes, rarely at the axial nodes; antheridia terminal and oosporangia lateral. Helical cells of the oosporangium terminated by a coronula of 10 cells, in 2 rows of 5. Oospores usually flattened spheres or ovals, with 1–3 basal-cell impressions.

Type: Nitella opaca (C.Agardh ex Bruzelius) C.Agardh.

Key to the species of Nitella View in CoL in the Northern

Territory

Oospores are a reliable morphological means of identifying species of Nitella . A comparison of specimen oospores with the pictures provided in the illustrations can provide definitive identification. In the absence of oospores (or a microscope), the following key can assist in distinguishing among species. A good-quality hand-lens is necessary to see features of the dactyls and whorls in most species.

1. Plants monoecious…......................................................................2 Plants dioecious…..........................................................................5

2. Branchlets once-furcate; dactyls consisting of a single cell….......... ................................................................................... N. belangeri Branchlets 2 or 3× furcate; dactyls consisting of 2 cells…...........3

3. Axes narrow, 0.4–0.5 mm in diameter; plants less than 15 cm high; dactyls long….............................................................................4 Axes ~ 1 mm in diameter; plants up to 25 cm high; dactyls very short (brachydactylous)…......................................... N. tumulosa

4. Plants unevenly 2(–3)× furcate; sterile branchlets ~ 5 mm long; end-cells long-conical….......................................... N. townsendii Plants evenly 3(–4)× furcate; sterile branchlets up to ~ 10 mm long; end-cells shortly conical…..................... N. boreali-australis

5. Branchlets in a single whorl of 6–8 at a node…...........................8 Branchlets in more than 1 whorl, with more than 10 (up to ~40) branchlets arising at the nodes…...............................................6

6. Branchlets in 2 whorls, up to ~ 10 in the shorter (secondary) whorl….......................................................................................7 Branchlets in 3 whorls, or so many branchlets as to be difficult to count…....................................................................... N. congesta

7. Plants up to 10 cm high; branchlets up to 5 mm long; primary branchlet whorl 1–2× furcate…................................. N. biformis Plants up to 40 cm high; branchlets up to 10 mm long; primary branchlet whorl 2–3× furcate….......................... N. heterophylla

8. Branchlets 2 or 3× furcate; end-cells conical and acute…..........10 Branchlets 3 or more× furcate; end-cells long and obtuse…........9

9. Branchlet segments at all fucations 4–7; fertile whorls dispersed, with long primary segments…...................................... N. limosa Branchlet segments at all furcations 2–5; fertile whorls compact, with short primary segments…............................. N. myriotricha

10. Plants less than 10 cm high; in arid- and semi-arid-zone waters…......11 Plants greater than 10 cm high; in wet–dry tropics….................12

11. Dactyls notably wider than the branchlet segments (inflated), tapering towards the end-cell…................................... N. micklei Dactyls similar to branchlet segments; end-cell an obtuse bristle on the branchlet tips…............................................ N. acanthospora

12. Primary branchlet segment>60% of branchlet length (the remaining segments make up little brushes on the tips) …................13 Primary branchlet segment up to 50% of the total branchlet length…....................................................................................15

13. Plants with mucus; 6 branchlets in a whorl…........... N. crocodylus Plants without mucus; 6–8 branchlets in a whorl…....................14

14. Branchlets without a central (percurrent) secondary segment…...... ........................................................................................ N. nitida Branchlets with a central (percurrent) secondary segment….......... ................................................................................ N. oollooensis

15. Axes wiry and tangled, gametangia at the branchlet tips…............ ..................................................................................... N. martinii Axes soft and flabellate….................................................. N. silicea

A

Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Charophyta

Class

Charophyceae

Order

Charales

Family

Characeae

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