Medlinella amphoroidea Frankovich, Ashworth & M.J. Sullivan, 2016
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.272.2.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C1237B-C460-1869-E4F1-9FF924F3F7A0 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Medlinella amphoroidea Frankovich, Ashworth & M.J. Sullivan |
status |
sp. nov. |
Medlinella amphoroidea Frankovich, Ashworth & M.J. Sullivan , sp. nov. ( Figs 1–26 View FIGURES 1–10 View FIGURES 11–18 View FIGURES 19–24 View FIGURES 25–30 )
LM morphology: Valve apices are rounded and slightly bent towards the ventral margin ( Figs 5–10 View FIGURES 1–10 ). Valve morphometrics are as follows: length 7.0–13.0 μm, n = 19, width 1.5–2.5 μm, n = 17, length-to-width ratio 3.3–6.5, n = 14. The dorsal and ventral stria densities are 22–30, n = 19, and 26–35 in 10 μm, n = 10, respectively (determined from LM and SEM images). The central area is formed by a wide asymmetric rectangular to bow tie-shaped fascia that extends towards the valve margins ( Figs 5–10 View FIGURES 1–10 ). The septa on the valvocopulae and 2 nd copulae extend over ca. 1/7 of the frustule length from the apices ( Figs 1–4 View FIGURES 1–10 ). SEM morphology: Externally, the valve face and mantle have uniseriate transapical striae ( Figs 11–18 View FIGURES 11–18 ). The dorsal striae are nearly parallel in the valve middle becoming radiate towards the apices, 25–34 in 10 μm, n = 17 ( Figs 12–16, 18 View FIGURES 11–18 ). The dorsal striae continue on to the valve mantle uninterrupted ( Figs 12–16, 18 View FIGURES 11–18 ) with up to 5 areolae per stria on the valve face and mantle in the middle of the valve adjacent to the fascia ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 11–18 ) gradually decreasing to 1 or 2 areolae that wrap around the apices ( Figs 12–16, 18 View FIGURES 11–18 ). The ventral striae are interrupted at the valve face-mantle transition with a single apical row of smaller circular to oval areolae located on the valve face adjacent to the raphe and a single row of larger transapically elongated areolae located on the valve mantle ( Figs 12, 13, 15–17 View FIGURES 11–18 ). The ventral striae are strongly radiate in the valve middle becoming parallel and finally convergent at the valve apices, 30–36 in 10 μm, n = 12, ( Figs 13, 15–18 View FIGURES 11–18 ). Smaller areolae are occluded by a single simple or branched vola ( Figs 13–16 View FIGURES 11–18 ). Wider, transapically elongated areolae are occluded by multiple volae (up to six observed) arranged in an alternate or irregular pattern ( Figs 13–16 View FIGURES 11–18 ). The central area is large, forming an asymmetric rectangular to bow tie-shaped fascia that extends to the valve margins and is wider on the ventral side ( Figs 11–13, 15, 17, 18 View FIGURES 11–18 ). Occasionally, shortened striae are present at the dorsal valve margin adjacent to the central area ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 11–18 ). The valvocopula and the second copula have a single row of apically elongated pores around the perimeter, pore densities: 28–30 in 10 μm, n = 5 ( Figs 22–28 View FIGURES 19–24 View FIGURES 25–30 ). The remaining copulae have a single row of slightly smaller pores, 32–45 in 10 μm, n = 6 ( Figs 11 View FIGURES 11–18 , 25, 26, 29, 30 View FIGURES 25–30 ).
Type:— UNITED STATES. Florida: Florida Bay , samples removed from the skin in the dorsal neck area of loggerhead sea turtles Caretta caretta , 24° 55’ 01” N, 80° 48’ 28” W, B. A. Stacy, 24 June 2015 (holotype CANA! 124075, illustrated as Figs 1–5, 7–30 View FIGURES 1–10 View FIGURES 11–18 View FIGURES 19–24 View FIGURES 25–30 ; paratypes CAS! 223049, illustrated as Fig. 6 View FIGURES 1–10 , ANSP! GC59142 , BM! 101808, BRM! ZU10 About BRM /31. The holotype slide and paratype slides are specimens from separate individual turtles) GoogleMaps .
Etymology:— refers to the resemblance of the valves of Amphora in the valve view.
Taxa relative abundances:— Forty-nine taxa from 24 genera were observed from the neck skin of five loggerhead turtles. The relative abundances of the newly described M. amphoroidea ranged from 13% to 50%. Medlinella amphoroidea was the most abundant taxon in 3 of the samples. Hyalosynedra cf. laevigata ( Grunow 1877: 166) D.M. Williams & F.E. Round (1986: 316) was the second most abundant taxon comprising 2% to 62% of the valve counts. At the third rank, the most abundant taxon was Tursiocola denysii Frankovich & Sullivan ex Frankovich et al. (2015: 228) , comprising 5% to 43% of the valve count. 5% of the valves remained undetermined at the genus and/or at the species rank. Only four other taxa (i. e. Mastogloia cuneata ( Meister 1937: 268) Simonsen (1990: 134) , Navicula sp. , Achnanthes sp. , and Nitzschia sp. exhibited mean relative abundances>1%). The remaining taxa observed were common benthic forms.
Re-examination of the type slides of Tripterion kalamensis and T. philoderma
Valves of both Tripterion kalamensis and T. philoderma are heteropolar and clavate with a broadly rounded head pole and a narrower foot pole ( Figs 31, 32 View FIGURES 31–32 ). For both species, the raphe is straight and the central area is formed by a wide asymmetric bow tie-shaped fascia that terminates at or near the edge of the valve face ( Figs 31, 32 View FIGURES 31–32 ).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.