Stauroneis lacusvulcani Rioual, 2013

Rioual, Patrick, Gao, Qiang, Peng, Yumei & Chu, Guoqiang, 2013, Stauroneis lacusvulcani sp. nov. (Bacillariophyceae), a new diatom from volcanic lakes in northeastern China, Phytotaxa 148 (1), pp. 47-56 : 49-52

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.148.1.3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/284587CB-826B-FF8A-6CD2-F8AA9F46FDC4

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Stauroneis lacusvulcani Rioual
status

sp. nov.

Stauroneis lacusvulcani Rioual sp. nov. ( Figs 2–21 View FIGURES 2–15 View FIGURES 16–21 )

Type:— CHINA: Inner Mongolia, Great Xing’An Mountains, Sifangshan Tianchi , 869 m, 49º 22'33''N, 123º 27'51''E, April-2008, surface sediment collected by Dr Guoqiang Chu, IGG-CAS GoogleMaps , Beijing. (holotype slide IGGDC-DB-SIFA- 1204!, holotype specimen illustrated in Fig 7 View FIGURES 2–15 , located using England Finder K 45/1); BM 101 674 (isotype slide) .

LM ( Figs 2–15 View FIGURES 2–15 ): Valves lanceolate with long protracted capitate apices ( Figs 2–15 View FIGURES 2–15 ); length 62–83 µm, width 9.2–12.0 µ m. Raphe moderately lateral, becoming filiform at distal ends, with strongly unilaterally deflected (hooked) distal ends. Axial area narrow, linear. Shape of central area varies from narrow rectangular ( Figs 2– 3, 5–6, 10–13 View FIGURES 2–15 ) to asymmetrical stauros expanding towards valve margins ( Figs 1 View FIGURE 1 , 4, 7–9, 14–15 View FIGURES 2–15 ). Shortened striae may be present at valve margins ( Figs 2, 5–8, 9–12 View FIGURES 2–15 ) or not ( Figs 3–4, 13–15 View FIGURES 2–15 ). Striae parallel along border of stauros becoming radiate to more steeply radiate near valve apices, 21–28 in 10 µm.

SEM ( Figs 16–21 View FIGURES 16–21 ): Areolae round to transapically oblong, irregularly spaced, 18–28 in 10 µm. Weakly developed hyaline area present, thus striae next to stauros appear discontinuous ( Figs 17, 20 View FIGURES 16–21 ). Raphe bordered by wide sternum on each side. Proximal raphe ends straight and slightly expanded ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 16–21 ), apical external raphe endings hooked with hooks opening toward secondary side ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 16–21 ). Internally, raphe-sternum bears longitudinal ribs and well-developed helictoglossae ( Fig. 21 View FIGURES 16–21 ).

Etymology:—Based on its occurrence in volcanic lakes.

Distribution and ecology:— Stauroneis lacusvulcani was found in the surface sediment of two volcanic lakes of NE China, Sifangshan Tianchi and Lake Xiaolongwan. Lake Xiaolongwan located in the Long Gang volcanic field in Jilin Province, is a small maar lake (i.e. formed by a phreatomagmatic eruption) with a maximum water depth of 15 m ( Chu et al. 2009). Sifangshan Tianchi, located in the Great Xing’An Mountains (Inner Mongolia) is a much smaller water body as only a small pond, less than 1 m deep, persists at the center of the crater. In both sites, the water is slightly acidic with low electrical conductivity and relatively high dissolved organic carbon concentration ( Table 1). For Sifangshan, however, the values for total phosphorus (TP), total nitrogen (TN) and dissolved silica were measured on a water sample that was contaminated with sediment.

In both surface-sediment samples, S. lacusvulcani is rare and represents less than 1% of the assemblages. In the sediment core from Lake Xiaolongwan, S. lacusvulcani is most abundant (14.4%) in the sample taken at 400 cm core depth from the early part of the Holocene.

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