Gato hyalinus Lobban & J.N. Navarro, 2013

Lobban, Christopher S. & Navarro, J. Nelson, 2013, Gato hyalinus gen. et sp. nov., an unusual araphid tube-dwelling diatom from Western Pacific and Caribbean islands, Phytotaxa 127 (1), pp. 22-31 : 23-28

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.127.1.6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5085439

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F50C878B-250D-D262-FF77-FA8318C8FB38

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Gato hyalinus Lobban & J.N. Navarro
status

sp. nov.

Gato hyalinus Lobban & J.N. Navarro sp. nov. ( Figs 1–21 View FIGURES 1–6 View FIGURES 7–11 View FIGURES 12–19 View FIGURES 20–26 )

Cellulae coloniales in tubis brevibus mucilaginis interdum ramosis. Chloroplasti numerosi lenticulares elongati. Valvae ovales parum angustatae versus basem, longitudine 30–40 µm, latitudine 13–15 µm. Striae transapicales tenuissimes, ca. 60–70 in 10 µm, paralleles praeter e extremo apicali sterni radians et prope polum basalem obliquaras. Rimoportula poli basalis in palla valvarum; rimoportula poli apicalis ad vel ultra extremum apicali sterni, prope pallam. Pori marginati non solum 3–5 in quoque lato poli basalis, in exemplum valvae rimoportula basali ferens una cum paribus striarum obliquarum e unusquaque versus sternum extensarum, sed etiam aliquot irregulariter in striis transapicalis prope marginem positis.

Cells colonial in short, sometimes branched mucilage tubes. Plastids numerous, elongate lenticular. Valves oval, slightly tapered toward foot pole, length 30–40 µm, width 13–15 µm. Transapical striae extremely fine, ca. 60–70 in 10 µm, parallel except radiating from head pole of sternum, and oblique at foot pole. Foot pole rimoportula on valve margin; head pole rimoportulae at or beyond end of sternum, near edge of mantle. Rimmed pores 3-5 on each side of the foot pole, on valve with basal rimoportula associated with pairs of oblique striae extending from each toward the sternum, and several others irregularly placed on transapical striae near margin.

Type:— GUAM. Apra Harbor, GabGab reef, 13° 26' 33.63" N, 144° 38' 34.25" E, acid cleaned material of diatoms, epiphytic on algal turf in farmer fish territories, collected 20 June 2009, GU44Z-15, strewn on microscope slide and filtered onto Millipore® filter paper. (Specimen circled on microscope slide marked CAS #223005, accession #627383, holotype, designated here; SEM stub of collection GU44Z-15 [deposited as holotype of the bleakeleyoid diatom Perideraion decipiens Lobban in Lobban et al. (2011)], CAS #627385, isotype, designated here).

Etymology:—hyaline, with reference to the lack of structure visible in LM.

Additional specimens examined: — GUAM: Agana Boat Basin , epiphytic on algal turf just below low water line, 29 November 1988, GU26A; GabGab, Apra Harbor, epiphytic on algal turf in farmer fish territories, 3 August 2008, GU44O-F, 1 September 2008, GU44P-B, 28 March 2009, GU44W- 10 and 10 May 2009, GU44Y-13; Pete’s Reef, Facpi Pt., 7 September 2008, GU55A-C . PALAU. Toachel ra Ngel, Ulebsechel I., 13 April 2009, PW2009-40 . PUERTO RICO: Caja de Muertos Island , 27 December 1985; Enrique Reef, 7 m deep epiphyte on the red alga Amphiroa sp. , 8 April 1994, slide #C94-6 . JAMAICA: Sponge Gardens , St Ann, 27 m deep, 19 November 1995, slide #A96-14 .

Observations:— Colonies ( Figs 1–4 View FIGURES 1–6 ) are a few cells long, sometimes branched, each cell at the end of a section of tube, from which the next section arose off-center; Fig. 4 View FIGURES 1–6 suggests at least a temporary septum within the tubes. In Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1–6 there appear to be cohabitant naviculoids in the tubes; these have not been commonly observed. Gato hyalinus cells are broadly oval, slightly narrower at the basal end, apparently with many elongate-lenticular plastids ( Figs 1–4 View FIGURES 1–6 ), and the cells arranged in the colonies with the narrower pole toward the base. Frustules are also slightly tapered in girdle view ( Fig. 4 View FIGURES 1–6 ). In acid-cleaned valves in LM ( Figs 5, 6 View FIGURES 1–6 ), the rimoportulae can be seen, and sometimes a faint sternum, but the striae are too fine to resolve and the valves appear hyaline.

In SEM, the valve surface is smooth, with rounded margins, striae 60–70 in 10 µm consisting of uniseriate rows of simple circular pores ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 12–19 ) that extend to the valve border ( Figs 7, 8, 10, 11 View FIGURES 7–11 , 20 View FIGURES 20–26 ). In places, the pattern could be described as quincunx (e.g., Fig. 13 View FIGURES 12–19 ) but the spacing between pores in the striae is generally insufficiently consistent. There is a narrow, irregular break in the striae along the centerline, barely constituting a sternum ( Figs 7–16 View FIGURES 7–11 View FIGURES 12–19 , 20 View FIGURES 20–26 ). Striae are parallel except at the head pole, where they radiate from the end of the sternum ( Figs 16 View FIGURES 12–19 , 20 View FIGURES 20–26 ), and in association with the rimmed pores ( Figs 8, 10 View FIGURES 7–11 ). Both valves have a small rimoportula at the head pole near the valve apex, at or beyond the end of the sternum ( Figs 9 View FIGURES 7–11 , 12, 13, 16 View FIGURES 12–19 , 20 View FIGURES 20–26 ), but the two valves are different at the foot pole. There, only one valve of the frustule has a rimoportula and more strongly oblique striae —the “cat’s whiskers” for which the genus is named ( Figs 8, 10 View FIGURES 7–11 ), the other valve lacks a rimoportula at the foot pole ( Figs 12–20 View FIGURES 12–19 View FIGURES 20–26 ). Both foot poles have several large rimmed pores, i.e., that have slightly thickened rims internally ( Figs 7, 8, 10, 11 View FIGURES 7–11 , 15, 17 View FIGURES 12–19 ). There are two series of rimmed pores, typically 4–5 on each side of the foot pole on the valve with a rimoportula; there are only 3 on those without a foot-pole rimoportula. In addition several irregularly placed pores occurred near the foot pole on both valves, interrupting 2 or more striae ( Fig. 15, 18 View FIGURES 12–19 ), but are not observed near the head pole. On valves with a basal rimoportula there are pairs of oblique striae extending from the sternum to the basal set of rimmed ( Figs 7, 8, 10, 11 View FIGURES 7–11 ); these are not obvious on valves without a basal rimoportula, where only some irregularity in the striae was observed ( Figs 14, 15, 17 View FIGURES 12–19 ). We have little information on girdle bands, but they appear to be finely punctate ( Fig. 21 View FIGURES 20–26 ), similar to the valve surface.

Genera morphologically most similar to Gato are Florella and Licmophora . We do not suggest that either of these is related to Gato . Besides Navarro’s (1982, 1996, 2002) descriptions, we have observed Florella portoricensis Navarro (1982: 248 , 258, emend Navarro 1996: 304) ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 20–26 ) and Florella pascuensis Navarro (2002: 284) ( Fig. 23 View FIGURES 20–26 ) from the Republic of the Marshall Islands; this is the first confirmed report of these species from that country, and the first confirmed record of F. portoricensis from the Pacific Ocean. In addition Lobban et al. (2012) observed and cultured samples of F. pascuensis from Guam. The valves of Florella spp. are isopolar with parallel striae of cribrate areolae continuing unbroken to the valve border from an indistinct sternum; there are no pore fields. F. portoricensis has a series of rudimentary rimoportulae at each apex, indistinguishable from areolae except in internal SEM views, whereas F. pascuensis has two labiate rimoportulae, one at each end of the sternum, visible even in LM ( Navarro 1996, 2002). F. pascuensis also has a unique pattern of slit-like areolae at each end.

Frustules of Licmophora spp. , on the other hand, are heteropolar and heterovalvar. A series of (5 to>30) simple slits at the foot pole is developed into a distinctive multiscissura ( Figs 24, 25 View FIGURES 20–26 ). The areolae ( Fig. 24 View FIGURES 20–26 ) are separated by virgae and viminae (Honeywill 1988). Although the rimoportulae of most Licmophora species are labiate rimoportulae ( Fig. 25 View FIGURES 20–26 ), in L. flabellata (Carmichael mscr. 1826, according to Agardh) C. Agardh (1831: 41, emend Sar & Ferrario 1990: 404) the head pole rimoportula and the unique series of extra rimoportulae along the sternum lack labia ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 20–26 ). These have been characterized by Sar & Ferrario (1990) as “sessile rimoportulae” and are perhaps similar in structure (though not position) to the rimmed pores in Gato .

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