Parodontellaceae (Komura, 1999)

Sims, Pat A., Williams, David M. & Ashworth, Matt, 2018, Examination of type specimens for the genera Odontella and Zygoceros (Bacillariophyceae) with evidence for the new family Odontellaceae and a description of three new genera, Phytotaxa 382 (1), pp. 1-56 : 47-49

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.382.1.1

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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/12590703-F432-FFA7-22DC-FA01FED52595

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Felipe

scientific name

Parodontellaceae
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Family: Parodontellaceae

Characters and relationships of Trieres and Parodontellaceae : As noted in the introduction and above, for branch 1 (Text-figure 2), in addition to molecular evidence ( Ashworth et al. 2013), the three species of Trieres currently recognised can be defined by the following morphological character: the valve margin is edged with a wall-like projection running between the ocelli ( Ashworth et al. 2013). As Ashworth et al. (2013) noted, this character is also present in members of Parodontellaceae , in the genera Acigonium (2 species), Parodontella (4 species), Stylorium (2 species) and Thamnodiscus (1 species) ( Komura 1999: 76). Above we have added to the data on Parodontella calamus , identified a three further species assignable to Parodontella Parodontella fimbriata , Parodontella ruthenica and Parodontella tenuicornis —and identified a third species of Acigonium , Acigonium spinosa , based on Biddulphia spinosa Greville.

The characteristic external spines from rimoportulae arising from the marginal ridge are present in both Komura’s Acigonium species and Mann and Brun’s images. Mann’s comparisons with Biddulphia spinosa are apt, as Greville’s

1 Obviously some comparison cannot be made as certain genera were not recognised at earlier times, Trieres for example.

2 Simonsen included Huttoniella Karsten (1928: 243) in Eupodiscoideae but with some reservations ( Simonsen 1979: 31–33, 51). Huttoniella is a superfluous substitute name for Huttonia Grove & Sturt (1887) for which the correct name is Neohuttonia Kuntze (1898: 417) .

illustration clearly shows the characteristic spines and a central sternum ( Fig 21 View FIGURES 21–28 , and Figs 22–27 View FIGURES 21–28 for our specimens).

Of significance, it was proposed that species in Trieres could be distinguished from those in Parodontellaceae by the lack of an obvious sternum in the former ( Ashworth et al. 2013: 1215, “ Trieres is distinguished from the most similar form, Parodontella Komura , by the lack of a sternum”). Examination of many more specimens of Trieres reveals further details with respect to the presence of a ‘sternum’. First we need to discuss the character ‘sternum’ to allow some understanding of what it actually is understood to be and how it is conventionally defined. The sternum is usually understood as the dividing ‘line’, the central strip of silica, found along the mid-point of most pennate diatoms valves, more obvious in many of the various ‘araphid’ diatom groups—where it was often referred to as the ‘axial area’ or ‘pseudoraphe’—as well as some of the bilaterally symmetrical centric diatoms ( Round et al. 1990). The term ‘sternum’ was first discussed by Mann (1978: 28) and later in Mann (1984: 121), the latter providing definitions in terms of the development of valve pattern centres. Thus, a sternum can be defined largely with respect to a pattern centre based on a longitudinal rib extending the length of the valve, contrasted with an annulus from which “the principal ribs radiate out from a ring” ( Mann 1984: 121). Different kinds of structures were described from these two basic plans, but only one is of significance here. The structure that occurs in species of Ardissonia, Climocosphenia and Synedrosphenia has been referred to as a bifacial, or elongated, annulus ( Mann 1984: 123, illustrations in Round et al. 1990). A bifacial annulus does have a central portion, which may well be referred to as a sternum (images in Round 1982, Mann 1984, Round et al. 1990, Kooistra et al. 2003, Medlin et al. 2008).

With all these definitions in mind, our specimens of Trieres (all three species) can be interpreted to have a kind of sternum-annulus, one that extends the length of the valve but structurally appears more similar to the typical annulus ( Lavigne et al. 2016, for Trieres mobiliensis , they refer to it as “an irregularly elliptic central annulus ( Fig. 80 View FIGURES 76–80 )”, Lavigne et al. 2016: 318; and a “linear annulus” for Trieres sinensis, Lavigne et al. 2016: 321 , Figs 94 View FIGURES 91–94 , 95 View FIGURES 95–100 ). Therefore, species in Trieres do have valves with a ‘sternum’ but more like that of an annulus (our Figs 1, 5, 6 View FIGURES 1–7 , 11, 13 View FIGURES 8–13 , 14, 17, 20 View FIGURES 14–20 ).

Komura described four species in Parodontella , three new, Parodontella clavifera , Parodontella obliqua and Parodontella paucispinosa , and one, Parodontella calamus (Tempère & Brun) Komura , based on Biddulphia calamus Tempère & Brun in Brun & Tempère (1889: 26, pl. 5, fig. 15). Evidence of a more classical kind of sternum—a thin central line—can be seen for Parodontella calamus ( Figs 30, 31 View FIGURES 29–35 and in Komura 1999: figs 76, 77, and 80, for an internal view, fig. 78), Parodontella paucispinosa (in Komura 1999: figs 100, 101, 102, for internal views, fig. 96), Parodontella obliqua (in Komura 1999: figs 111, 113) and Parodontella clavifera (in Komura 1999: figs 124–128, for internal view, fig. 130). For the new additions to Parodontella , the sternum/annulus in Parodontella fimbriata is not so obvious from the exterior view but evident when valves are viewed internally ( Fig. 45, 47 View FIGURES 44–50 ); the opposite might be said of Parodontella ruthenica ( Figs 36–37 View FIGURES 36–43 ) and Parodontella tenuicornis ( Figs 51–53 View FIGURES 51–55 ).

Komura included two species in Acigonium , describing one, Acigonium gladarmatum , as new, and basing the second on Biddulphia gladiorum Mann ( Mann 1907) . Mann compared his specimens of Biddulphia gladiorum with Biddulphia spinosa Grev. and B. cornuta Brun : “This diatom finds its nearest likeness in Biddulphia spinosa Grev. , though as to the flat top of the valve when seen in zonal view [valve view], as well as the delicate Pleurosigma -like markings, it resembles B. cornuta Brun ” ( Mann 1907: 304). For Acigonium gladarmatum , “…the axial sternum of the valve face” ( Komura 1999: 71) can best seen in Komura (1999: figs 162, 166), but it is less clear when viewed from inside the valve ( Komura 1999: figs 168, 169). Both Mann and Brun illustrated their species with a single image in girdle view, neither able to offer any insight as to the presence or otherwise of a sternum ( Mann 1907: 304, p1. 47, fig. 4; Brun 1894: 74, pl. 6, fig. 3and 5, respectively). A sternum is evident in Acigonium spinosa , from Greville’s drawing ( Fig. 21 View FIGURES 21–28 ) and the SEM images ( Figs 23–27 View FIGURES 21–28 ).

We have yet to make further observations on specimens from species in Stylorium or Thamnodiscus but Komura’s images of Stylorium suggest that there is a more conventional kind of annulus in the valves of Stylorium truncatum ( Komura 1999: Figs 40–45 View FIGURES 36–43 View FIGURES 44–50 ) but an elongated annulus in the valves of Stylorium alticole ( Komura 1999: Figs 54 View FIGURES 51–55 , 56, 58–60 View FIGURES 56–59 View FIGURES 60–64 ). It is, as yet, hard to come to any positive conclusions concerning Thamnodiscus ( Komura 1999: Figs 20–35 View FIGURES 14–20 View FIGURES 21–28 View FIGURES 29–35 ).

A further question remains: how widespread are valves with a sternum/annulus within the Eupodiscoids? A sternum is evident in Pseudictyota plana , visible only when viewed from the interior of the valve ( Fig. 123 View FIGURES 122–128 ), but not visible in other species of Pseudictyota ; an annulus is present in Zygoceros rhombus ( Figs 74–75 View FIGURES 72–75 ); and an annulus is present in Cerataulus strelnikovae ( Fig. 156 View FIGURES 153–156 ).

Thus the character of “valve margin edged with a wall-like projection running between ocelli” now relates all the species in the genus Trieres with most taxa placed in Komura’s Parodontellaceae (reservations concern the inclusion of the monotypic genus Thamnodiscus ), a group of species that has a sternum of some kind.

If the Eupodiscaeae of Ashworth et al. is considered an order and named Eupodiscales , then Komura’s Parodontellaceae is a sub-set of species within it which would include four genera: Trieres , defined by its elongated (‘pseudo-bifacial’) sternum, a character shared with the second group of Acigonium plus Stylorium defined by characteristic external spines from the rimoportulae arising from the marginal ridge. The third group is Parodontella , defined, at present, by its rather more conventional ‘sternum’. The latter genus appears paraphyletic (even aphyletic, Williams and Ebach 2018), but until further exploration of relevant characters, its relationships await determination:

Eupodiscales

Family: Parodontellaceae (branch 1 in Text-figures 1, 2, and in the expanded version in Text-figure 3 as branch 9) Trieres

Acigonium

Stylorium

Parodontella

As noted above, the remaining seven ‘Eupodiscaceae’ clades (Text-figure 1, branches 2–8 = node 01) have only molecular support.

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