Eunotia insularum Van de Vijver & Lange-Bertalot, 2022

Vijver, Bart Van De, Lange-Bertalot, Horst, Goeyers, Charlotte, Mertens, Adrienne, Schuster, Tanja M. & Ector, Luc, 2022, The identity of Eunotia paludosa Grunow 1862 (Eunotiaceae, Bacillariophyta), a revision, and the description of three new species of Eunotia Ehrenberg, Phytotaxa 545 (3), pp. 261-277 : 267-268

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.545.3.2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6543100

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F287F7-7D04-8016-CEFB-FA66FAD6E36F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Eunotia insularum Van de Vijver & Lange-Bertalot
status

sp. nov.

Eunotia insularum Van de Vijver & Lange-Bertalot , sp. nov. ( Figs 85–126 View FIGURES 85–119 View FIGURES 120–126 )

Type:— INDIAN OCEAN, La Grande Coulée, Ile de la Possession, Crozet Archipelago (sample BM290 , coll. date 4.I.1998, leg. B. Van de Vijver ), holo- BR-4717! ( Meise Botanic Garden , Belgium), iso- slide 405! (University of Antwerp, Belgium). The holotype is represented by Fig. 94 View FIGURES 85–119 .

PhycoBank registration:—http://phycobank.org/103147

Synonym:— Eunotia paludosa sensu Van de Vijver et al. (2014)

To exclude from synonymy:— Eunotia paludosa Grunow 1862

LM ( Figs 85–119 View FIGURES 85–119 ): Frustules rectangular in girdle view with barely to very slightly concave ventral margins, frustule width 3.5–6.0 µm ( Figs 85–87 View FIGURES 85–119 ). Valves weakly arched with more or less convex dorsal margins. Ventral margins moderately concave in all cell cycle stages down to the shortest valves. Apices distinctly narrowed, strongly protracted, subcapitate and dorsally reflexed in all stages. Valve dimensions (n=50): length 17–44 µm [up to 70 µm in other populations on the sub-Antarctic islands ( Van de Vijver et al. 2014)], width 2.0–2.5 µm (occasionally up to 3.5 µm), length-to-width ratio 17–20. Terminal raphe nodules close to the poles. Striae 18–20 in proximal parts, up to 22 in 10 µm in the distal parts. Areolae not discernible in LM.

SEM ( Figs 120–126 View FIGURES 120–126 ): Striae uniseriate throughout, composed of small, rounded areolae, ca. 50 in 10 µm ( Figs 120–122 View FIGURES 120–126 ). Mantle striae ventrally composed of up to 6 small, rounded areolae near the valve middle, only 2 near the apices ( Fig. 120 View FIGURES 120–126 ). Spines lacking ( Figs 121, 122 View FIGURES 120–126 ). Externally, raphe branches curving from valve mantle onto the valve face ( Figs 120, 122 View FIGURES 120–126 ). Terminal raphe fissures extending rather long onto the valve face in a distinct pore, more than halfway to the dorsal margin ( Figs 122, 124 View FIGURES 120–126 ). Single rimoportula present at one of both poles, external opening distinctly visible between the smaller areolae ( Fig. 123 View FIGURES 120–126 , arrow). Internally, rimoportula located close to the helictoglossa ( Figs 125, 126 View FIGURES 120–126 ). Helictoglossa prominent at both poles ( Fig. 125 View FIGURES 120–126 ). Girdle composed of 2–5 open, perforated copulae, including the valvocopula ( Fig. 121 View FIGURES 120–126 ).

Etymology:—The specific epithet insularum is a plural genitive in Latin indicating here the sub-Antarctic islands where this species is found.

Distribution and ecology:—Surprisingly, the new taxon appears to be a distinct, yet up until recently unidentfied Eunotia species. After revision of its taxonomic identity on all sub-Antarctic islands in the southern Atlantic and Indian Ocean, it becomes clear that E. insularum occurs over almost the entire sub-Antarctic region, encompassing the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. Currently, the new species was observed on seven archipelagos and islands, such as the Falklands/ Islas Malvinas (reported as E. pseudopaludosa in Jüttner & Van de Vijver 2018), South Georgia, Iles Crozet, Iles Kerguelen, and Heard Island (on the latter 4 localities reported as E. paludosa ; Van de Vijver & Beyens 1998, Van de Vijver et al. 2001, 2002, 2004, Van de Vijver et al. 2014). However, the species seems absent, so far, from all neighbouring continents and the entire Holarctic realm.

Eunotia insularum was frequently and abundantly observed (as E. paludosa ) from wet acid soils and submerged to wet terrestrial mosses and bog ponds, mostly in peat-dominated valleys. A particular feature of all sub-Antarctic localities is the complete absence of Sphagnum species, replaced by mosses such as Drepanocladus uncinatus (Hedw.) Warnst. in the peat formation on these islands. On Ile Amsterdam, the most northern of the sub-Antarctic islands in the southern Indian Ocean, E. insularum was found associated with Sphagnum -dominated bog ponds, as this is the only island with this kind of vegetation ( Van de Vijver et al. 2008, Flatberg et al. 2011, Chattová et al. 2021).

B

Botanischer Garten und Botanisches Museum Berlin-Dahlem, Zentraleinrichtung der Freien Universitaet

LM

Secçáo de Botânica e Ecologia

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