Cymbella alexandrovichii Glushchenko, Mironov & Kulikovskiy, 2023

Glushchenko, Anton, Mironov, Andrei, Kuznetsova, Irina & Kulikovskiy, Maxim, 2023, Cymbella alexandrovichii sp. nov. (Cymbellaceae, Bacillariophyceae), a new cymbelloid diatom species with predominantly biseriate striae from South-East Asia, Phytotaxa 630 (2), pp. 112-122 : 113-117

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.630.2.2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10405705

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AF19775D-C237-9125-FF10-FAF4ED35709C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cymbella alexandrovichii Glushchenko, Mironov & Kulikovskiy
status

sp. nov.

Cymbella alexandrovichii Glushchenko, Mironov & Kulikovskiy sp. nov. Figs 1–20 View FIGURES 1–8 View FIGURES 9–14 View FIGURES 15–20 ; Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1–8 represents the holotype.

LM description ( Figs 1–8 View FIGURES 1–8 ):— Valves dorsiventral, asymmetrically lanceolate. Dorsal margin convex, ventral margin less convex. Some large specimens have a swelling in the central part. Ends not protracted, cuneate to bluntly rounded, sometimes subrostrate. Length 62.4–76.0 µm, breadth 14.9–16.5 µm. Maximal length/breadth ratio = 4.9. Axial area narrow, linear. Central area absent. Raphe filiform, reverse-lateral (see Krammer 2002, p. 324, pl. 67, fig. 3e), central raphe ends weakly deflected ventrally, tipped with inflated drop-shaped pores. Distal raphe ends are deflected to the dorsal margin. Stigmata 2–3, located on the ventral margin, sometimes not clearly separated from areolae. Striae almost parallel at the central part of valve, becoming radiate and condensing at the very valve ends, 7–8 in 10 µm in the central portion, 8–9 in 10 µm near the ends. Biseriate organization of striae is difficult to resolve in LM.

SEM, external valve surface ( Figs 9–14 View FIGURES 9–14 ):— The valve face is flat ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 9–14 ). The central branches of the raphe are slightly widened ( Figs 9–10 View FIGURES 9–14 , white arrowheads). Terminal raphe fissures do not reach the apical pore fields, strongly deflected to the dorsal margins ( Figs 9, 13–14 View FIGURES 9–14 , black arrowheads). Apical pore fields located on the valve margins, consist of round pores, similar in shape and size to the adjacent areolae ( Figs 13–14 View FIGURES 9–14 , white arrows). Stigmata are present ventrally, rounded and crater-like ( Figs 10–11 View FIGURES 9–14 , black arrows). Each of the striae consists of two rows of areolae, arranged alternately, the areola closest to the axial area is single ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 9–14 , white arrowheads). In the central part of the valve, several dorsal biseriate striae may become uniseriate ( Fig. 11 View FIGURES 9–14 , white arrowheads). Voigt discontinuities are present ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 9–14 , black arrow). Areolae openings in central part of the valve usually rounded ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 9–14 , black arrowheads). Areolae on the valve margins become uniseriate and slit-like ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 9–14 , white arrows), except for the striae at the valve ends, where they are rounded and biseriate ( Figs 13–14 View FIGURES 9–14 , black arrows). Areolae (in one of the rows of one striae), 27–32 in 10 µm.

SEM, internal view ( Figs 15–20 View FIGURES 15–20 ):— The raphe is arcuate ( Fig. 15 View FIGURES 15–20 ). Central raphe endings are covered by the outgrowth of silica ( Figs 16–17 View FIGURES 15–20 , black arrows). Distal raphe ends terminate with small helictoglossae ( Figs 19–20 View FIGURES 15–20 , black arrowheads). Helictoglossae deviated to the dorsal margin of the valve and adjacent next to the last dorsal striae ( Figs 19–20 View FIGURES 15–20 , black arrowheads). Alveolate striae are located in depressions between interstriae (virgae), occlusions absent ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 15–20 , black arrows). Voigt discontinuities are present ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 15–20 , white arrow). Interstriae wider than striae in the central part of the valves ( Figs 15–16 View FIGURES 15–20 , white arrows), becoming noticeably narrower than striae near the valve ends ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 15–20 , white arrows). The stigmata openings rounded or elongated, surrounded by fine ingrowths from their perimeter ( Figs 16–17 View FIGURES 15–20 , white arrowheads). The openings of the apical pore fields are closed ( Figs 19–20 View FIGURES 15–20 , black arrows).

Type:— Laos, Vientiane Province, Nam Hinboun River (17°53.783’N, 104°45.667’E), leg. E.L. Konstantinov, coll. date 02.11.2011. Slide no. 01612 , holotype specimen illustrated in Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1–8 (in collection of Maxim Kulikovskiy at the Herbarium of the Institute of Plant Physiology Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia) GoogleMaps .

Isotype: Slide no. 01612а , deposited in herbarium of Faculty of Forestry National University of Laos, Vietntiane ( NUOL) .

Etymology:— The specific name is given in honor of chamber singer Mikhail Davidovich Alexandrovich (1914– 2002).

Distribution: — As yet known only from the type locality.

Ecology:— Cymbella alexandrovichii sp. nov. was found in a periphyton from river of slightly alkaline pH (7.7), temperature—20 °C and low electrical conductivity (111 μS/cm).

NUOL

NUOL

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