Diploneis clara, Jovanovska & Wilson & Hamilton & Stone, 2023

Jovanovska, Elena, Wilson, Mallory C., Hamilton, Paul B. & Stone, Jeffery, 2023, Morphological and molecular characterization of twenty-five new Diploneis species (Bacillariophyta) from Lake Tanganyika and its surrounding areas, Phytotaxa 593 (1), pp. 1-102 : 63

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.593.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7875191

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038487E2-FFE0-267C-BCF1-FF09B91075E4

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Diploneis clara
status

sp. nov.

Diploneis clara sp. nov. (LM Figs 384–408 View FIGURES 384–408 , SEM Figs 409–418 View FIGURES 409–414 View FIGURES 415–418 )

Valves are weakly asymmetric, linear-elliptic with slightly convex margins and round ends ( Figs 384–409 View FIGURES 384–408 View FIGURES 409–414 ). Valve length is 17.5–43.5 μm and width is 9.5–16 μm. The axial area is linear to lanceolate, widening at the center to form a longitudinally elongate and weakly asymmetric central area ( Figs 386 View FIGURES 384–408 , 409, 411 View FIGURES 409–414 ), 2–3.5 μm wide. Externally, the canal is linear to lanceolate, slightly expanded in the middle of the valve with two rows of cribrate (ca. 15 poroids) areolae narrowing into one at the valve apices ( Figs 386 View FIGURES 384–408 , 409–411, 413 View FIGURES 409–414 ). Internally, a thick non-porous slightly raised silica plate encloses the longitudinal canal ( Figs 415, 418 View FIGURES 415–418 ). Externally, the raphe is filiform, curved with simple and deflected proximal ends; a linear expanded teardrop depression contains the proximal ends ( Figs 409, 411, 412 View FIGURES 409–414 ). The distal raphe ends are unilaterally bent to the same side as the proximal ends, terminating on the valve face at apex margin ( Figs 409, 410, 413, 414 View FIGURES 409–414 ). Internally, the raphe is present in a depression formed by the longitudinal canal; the raphe is curved with simple proximal and distal ends that are slightly elevated in helictoglossae ( Figs 415, 418 View FIGURES 415–418 ). The striae are parallel at mid-valve becoming radiate towards the apices, 10–12 in 10 μm. Striae are uniseriate becoming biseriate towards the valve margins (white arrow in Figs 410 View FIGURES 409–414 , 417 View FIGURES 415–418 ; Figs 409, 414 View FIGURES 409–414 ). The alveolate striae are composed of round to rectangular areolae covered externally with a pored cribra (10–15 poroids), 15–25 in 10 μm. Each areola opens into shallow pits ( Fig. 411 View FIGURES 409–414 ). The inter-areolar thickenings have serrated fin-like silica ridges (number of notched edges hardly visible on the illustrated images). The areolae increase in size towards the valve margins ( Figs 409, 413 View FIGURES 409–414 ). Internally, the alveoli open via a single elongated opening covered with a thin silica layer ( Fig. 416 View FIGURES 415–418 ). The valvocopula has serrated advalvar edges ( Figs 415, 416 View FIGURES 415–418 ).

Type:— REPUBLIC OF ZAMBIA, Lake Tanganyika , Chituta Bay, at 768 m elevation; mud and mussels, 33 m water depth, collected SCUBA diving, 8°42’56.0” S 31°09’15.0” E, W. Salzburger, 5 th September 2018 (holotype designated here, circled specimen BM-108991! = Fig. 399 View FIGURES 384–408 , GoogleMaps isotypes ANSP-GC17220 !, CANA-129333!). Type material CANA-129321. Registration: http://phycobank.org/103699 GoogleMaps

Pictures of the isolated specimen:— LM micrograph on 1000× magnification ( Fig. S3z View FIGURES 2–11 ).

Sequence data:— Plastid gene rbc L sequence (GenBank accession: OQ 660281).

Etymology:— The specific epithet ‘ clara ’ refers to bright, radiant appearance in the light microscope.

Ecology and distribution:— Diploneis clara sp. nov. has only been observed in Lake Tanganyika in the three sub-basins on the Tanzanian and Zambian sides. The species is abundant in the alkaline, moderately mineral-rich and highly transparent lake. It is typically found on sand and mud (sometimes with shells) between 7.5 and 30 m water depth at Kalambo Falls Lodge, Isanga Bay, Chituta Bay, Mutondwe Island, Cape Nangu at Kasaba Bay, Ndole Bay, Mahale National Park, and Kiganza Bay (see Fig. 1c–f View FIGURE 1 ). It has also been found on submerged rocks in the littoral areas at Jakobsen Beach near Kigoma, probably resulting from currents and water turbulence. This very common species cohabits with various Diploneis species at different sites, but mainly with D. cocquytiana sp. nov., D. serrulata sp. nov., D. kilhamiana sp. nov., D. duplex sp. nov., D. cristata sp. nov., D. salzburgeri sp. nov., and D. angusta sp. nov.

Main differential characters:— Valve shape, striae pattern, external fin-like ornamentations across the valve, fins fine at mid-valve, and poroids 10–15 per areola.

Similar species:— Diploneis angusta sp. nov. and Diploneis fontannella Lange-Bertalot in Werum & Lange-Bertalot (2004: 141).

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF