Gloeotrichia raciborskii Wołoszyńska (1912: 687)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.359.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6B6487B2-180C-2610-EB9A-557CD137AB41 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Gloeotrichia raciborskii Wołoszyńska (1912: 687) |
status |
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Gloeotrichia raciborskii Wołoszyńska (1912: 687) Fig. 26 A–E View FIGURE 26 .
Thallus gelatinous, olive-green to brown in colour, colonies small spherical, attached to macrophytes or the substratum, later free floating, irregularly globose, up to 3–5 cm in diameter. Filaments long,> 800 μm, tapered from a spherical basal heterocyte, radially arranged from the colony centre. Trichomes clearly constricted at the cross walls, 7–10 μm wide in the basal area, narrowing to long, hair-like cells 2–6 μm broad. Vegetative cells barrel-shaped, slightly shorter or longer than broad. Heterocytes spherical, basal, 10–14 μm in diameter. Akinetes cylindrical, long ellipsoidal with widely rounded ends, arising from several vegetative cells, 10–60 μm long × (12–) 14–25 μm broad, with colourless to dull-brown coloured exospore.
Specimens examined:—Einasleigh R. at the Beach, Blacks Ck at Whitefords.
Other records:— Queensland: Baker & Fabbro (1992) .
Observations:—Colonies growing on sandy substrate amongst submerged aquatic vegetation, or sometimes free-floating in the littoral areas or backwaters of tropical streams and rivers. A variable species, with several subspecific taxa described.
Other species known from Australia: G. echinulata P.G. Richter , Victoria, Entwisle (1994); G. pisum Thuret ex Bornet & Flahault, SE Queensland, McLeod (1975); G. raciborskii f. lillienfeldiana (Wołoszyńska) Geitler, Ling & Tyler (2000) .
Hapalosiphonaceae Elenkin (1916: 278, 280)
Type: Hapalosiphon Nägeli ex Bornet & Flahault (1886: 53)
Filamentous, thallose; composed of true-branched filaments, with all filaments and branches morphologically similar. Trichomes unseriate, divicariate, but not morphologically divided into main trichomes and branches, often constricted at the cross walls, moniliform, but usually ± cylindrical, true-branched with T-, V, and Y-type branching. Branches cylindrical, or less frequently narrowed towards the ends, rarely attenuated to hair-like cells. Vegetative cells cylindrical, barrel-shaped or irregularly rounded; apical cells rounded. Heterocytes intercalary, barrel-shaped or spheroidal. Akinetes absent. Reproduction by production of hormogonia.
A cosmopolitan family of 13 genera; four genera and six species are known from freshwater habitats of north-eastern Australia.
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.