Nitella acanthospora Casanova & Karol, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1071/SB22029 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11148823 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A70387E4-942B-2747-7D73-29864AD8F921 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Nitella acanthospora Casanova & Karol |
status |
sp. nov. |
Nitella acanthospora Casanova & Karol , sp. nov.
Type: Nardoo Lake , 35 km south-east of The Granites, Tanami Desert, 16 Aug. 2001, P. K.Latz 17988 (holo: DNA!) .
Dioecious. Plants lightly calcified, with tiny, elongate homeoclemous fertile whorls ( Fig. 1 a View Fig ). Axes up to 200 μm wide; internodes upwards of 5 mm long, longer than the branchlet whorls. Fertile branchlets 6 or 7 in a whorl; whorls up to 7 mm in diameter, decreasing in diameter progressively up the axis, 1 or 2× furcate; primary segments up to 1 mm long; secondary segments 3 or 4, of which 1–3 are dactyls, up to 1 mm long, usually 1 of the segments longer and again furcate into 3 or 4 dactyls ( Fig. 1 b View Fig ). Sterile branchlets longer and more evenly furcate, up to 5 mm long, 2 or 3× furcate; primary segments 2–4 mm long; secondary segments up to 1 mm long, furcate into 1–5 segments, of which 1–3 are dactyls, the remainder up to 1 mm long and again furcate into 2–4 dactyls ( Fig. 1 d View Fig ). Dactyls up to 0.5 mm long, bicellulate; end-cell somewhat obtuse ( Fig. 1 e View Fig ), deciduous on older whorls. Heads (contracted reproductive whorls distinguished from the vegetative parts) not really formed, although the fertile branchlet whorls have consecutively shorter branchlets and are separated by long internodes. Gametangia on separate plants; oosporangia single, geminate or clustered at all furcations; antheridia single, central to the first furcation. Oosporangia up to 200–300 μm long, 250 μm wide, with 7 or 8 helical stripes, the coronula cells slightly longer in the upper row ( Fig. 1 c View Fig ). Oospores 180 – 240 μm long, 150–180 μm wide with 7 striae ( Fig. 1 k View Fig ), ornamentation densely spinose on the fossa and sometimes continuing up the flanges ( Fig. 1 i View Fig ), with 6–16 very small spines across the fossa ( Fig. 1 h–j View Fig ), sometimes in dentate rows ( Fig. 1 f View Fig ). Antheridia up to 300–400 μm in diameter. Chromosome numbers not known.
Taxonomic notes
The oospores of this species are distinctly and densely spinose, with spines sometimes continuing up the flanges on the oospore. Nitella acanthospora was compared with other species with elongate projections on the oospore wall. Of these, Nitella sonderi has generally sparse papillae that do not continue onto the flanges; N. penicillata has similar oospores, but the vegetative morphology is very different; N. mathuatae Allen is monoecious, with spines much less pronounced, and the vegetative morphology is very different; N. haageniae Raam is monoecious and the papillae are flattened terminally and much broader, and N. knightiae J.Groves & E.L.Stephens has unicellulate dactyls and projections that are much more conical and surrounded by iteratively smaller conical projections. There is variation in oospore size and number of spines across the fossa among populations of N. acanthospora , and further material is needed to clarify the limits of species characters.
Recognition
This species is distinguished from other arid-zone species on the basis of its homeoclemous whorls and the somewhat obtuse end-cells of the dactyls. The oospores are also distinctively different from those of other small Nitella species, with which it might be confused (see images for N. heterophylla (A.Braun) A.Braun , and N. biformis A.Braun ).
Distribution
Occurring in the arid zone of the Northern Territory and New South Wales, in tanks and bores.
Etymology
From the Greek ‘ akanthos ’ (spiny) and ‘ sporus ’ (a seed or spore) in reference to the spiny oospores.
Specimens examined
NORTHERN TERRITORY: 11 km S of Newhaven Homestead, common in clear, shallow gypsum lake, 29 Apr. 2001, P. K.Latz & D. E.Albrecht 17713 (DNA); 7 km S of Sangsters Bore, Tanami Desert , saline water, 14 Aug. 2001, P. K.Latz 17985 (DNA) [a mix of two species] . NEW SOUTH WALES: Dead Horse Tank , 11 Dec. 1998, J. L.Porter 169 ( MEL) .
P |
Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants |
K |
Royal Botanic Gardens |
S |
Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History |
E |
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh |
J |
University of the Witwatersrand |
L |
Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden University branch |
MEL |
Museo Entomologico de Leon |
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.
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