Diploneis angusta, 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 : 56

publication ID

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

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7875177

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038487E2-FFE9-2675-BCF1-FF09BB427584

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Diploneis angusta
status

sp. nov.

Diploneis angusta sp. nov. (LM Figs 323–343 View FIGURES 323–343 , SEM Figs 344–348 View FIGURES 344–348 )

Valves are weakly asymmetric, linear-elliptic with parallel to weakly convex margins and round apices ( Figs 323– 345 View FIGURES 323–343 View FIGURES 344–348 ). Valve length is 28–48 μm and width is 11–14.5 μm. The axial area is linear to lanceolate, widening at the center to form a longitudinally elongate and weakly asymmetric central area ( Figs 326 View FIGURES 323–343 , 345, 348 View FIGURES 344–348 ), 2.3–4 μm wide. Externally, the canal is covered with two rows of cribrate (ca. 10 poroids) areolae narrowing into one at the valve apices ( Fig. 345 View FIGURES 344–348 ). Internally, a thick non-porous slightly raised silica plate encloses the longitudinal canal ( Fig. 346 View FIGURES 344–348 ). Externally, the raphe is filiform, curved with expanded proximal ends deflected to one side; the proximal ends are positioned within an elongated depression ( Figs 344, 345, 348 View FIGURES 344–348 ). The distal raphe ends are unilaterally bent to the same side and terminate on the valve face at the mantle ( Fig. 345 View FIGURES 344–348 ). Internally, the raphe is curved with simple proximal and distal ends that are slightly elevated in a deep depression formed by the longitudinal canal ( Fig. 346 View FIGURES 344–348 ). The striae are parallel at mid-valve becoming radiate towards the apices, 10–12 in 10 μm. Striae are uniseriate throughout (white arrow in Fig. 347 View FIGURES 344–348 ). The striae are composed of round areolae covered externally with fine pored cribra (>35 poroids), 15–20 in 10 μm. Inter-areolar thickenings at mid-valve (not ends) have scattered fin-like silica ridges serrated with ca. 4–7 notched edges ( Fig. 347 View FIGURES 344–348 ). The areolae increase in size towards the valve margins ( Figs 345, 347 View FIGURES 344–348 ). Internally, the alveoli open through a single elongated opening, typically closed by silica, which is corroded in the illustrated specimen ( Fig. 346 View FIGURES 344–348 ). The valvocopula has serrated advalvar edges ( Fig. 346 View FIGURES 344–348 ).

Type:— REPUBLIC OF ZAMBIA, Lake Tanganyika , Cape Nandu, Kasaba Bay, at 768 m elevation; sand and mud, 20 m water depth, collected with Van Veen grab sampler, 8°30’18.9” S 30°38’32.3” E, E. Jovanovska, 2 nd October 2021 (holotype designated here, circled specimen BM-108993! = Fig. 331 View FIGURES 323–343 , GoogleMaps isotypes ANSP-GC17222 !, CANA-130010!). Type material CANA-129326. Registration: http://phycobank.org/103698 GoogleMaps

Pictures of the isolated specimen:— LM micrograph on 1000× magnification ( Fig. S2k View FIGURES 2–11 ).

Sequence data:— Plastid gene rbc L sequence (GenBank accession: OQ 660295).

Etymology:— The specific epithet ‘ angusta ’ refers to the narrow shape of the valve.

Ecology and distribution:— This species has only been observed in Lake Tanganyika, which is an alkaline, moderately mineral-rich and very transparent system. The species is widespread in the southern, central, and northern sub-basins on the Tanzanian and Zambian sides, especially in Ndole Bay and Cape Nangu in Kasaba Bay, as well as in Isanga Bay, Kalambo Falls Lodge, Mahale National Park, Kiganza Bay, and the Rukoma area ( Fig. 1c–f View FIGURE 1 ). At all these sites it occurs on sandy (sometimes sandfish nests) and muddy substrates between 10 and 25 m water depth, typically together with D. serrulata sp. nov., D. cocquytiana sp. nov., D. gigantea sp. nov., D. salzburgeri sp. nov., D. kilhamiana sp. nov., D. disjuncta sp. nov., and D. clara sp. nov.

Main differential characters:— Valve shape, striae pattern, narrow canals, recessed areolae over the canals, external fin-like ornamentations across the valve, and poroids>35 per areola.

Similar species:— Diploneis clara sp. nov., Diploneis calcifuga Lange-Bertalot & Fuhrmann (2020: 28) , and Diploneis altana Kulikovskiy & Lange-Bertalot (2015: 86) .

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