Halofilum ramosum Darienko et Pröschold, 2017
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.324.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D3C63B-1D74-FFBD-FF29-A5861447FA47 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Halofilum ramosum Darienko et Pröschold |
status |
sp. nov. |
Halofilum ramosum Darienko et Pröschold sp. nov. ( Fig. 11D–G View FIGURE 11 )
Diagnosis: Filaments are relative long, consisting of 20–100 cells, richly branched and curved. The cells of primary branches are slightly shorter, equal to or to twice as long as broad; cylindrical or square; 7.8–12.5 μm long × 6.9–8.5 μm wide. The secondary branches appear laterally or bilateral. The terminal cells of secondary branches are cylindrical, often pointed, up to 5 times longer as broad. Cells are 16.0–28.0 μm long × 5.6–7.2 μm wide. The longest terminal cells very often contain 2–3 pyrenoids and nuclei. Such cells probably represent some special stage of vegetative dividing. In the primary filaments, irregular cells containing up to 4 pyrenoids were observed. The cells later formed package-like structures, and from these cells the secondary branches often arise. Reproduction by budding or by zoospores was not observed.
Differs from other species by SSU-ITS sequences and the absence of reproduction by budding.
Habitat: marine, photobiont of Wahlenbergiella striatula .
Type locality: Wales, Anglesey (Ynys Mon), Porth Trecastel, in stone cracks of coastal rocks.
Holotype (designated herein): The strain SAG 2050 View Materials is permanently cryopreserved in a metabolically inactive state (cryopreserved in liquid nitrogen) in the SAG, University of Göttingen , Germany.
Iconotype (designated herein in support of the holotype): Fig. 11F View FIGURE 11 in this study.
ITS-2 DNA Barcode: HAL 3a/b in Figs S2.
Comment: This species is probably widely distributed as photobiont and free-living. Additional strains: SAG 2235 and ULVO-28 were isolated from Verrucaria maura, Roscoff , Brittany, France and ULVO-19 was isolated from a green crust on the wall of ruins in Carthage, Tunisia (see Hoffmann & Darienko 2010).
Note: The budding-like reproduction of Halofilum is quite rare among microalgae and has only been reported for few green algal genera, which belong to the Trebouxiophyceae ( Pseudomarvania, Eliaš & Neustupa 2009 ; Marvania , Nannochloris, Yamamoto et al. 2007 ).
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