Haslea clevei, 2015

Sterrenburg, Frithjof A. S., Tiffany, Mary Ann, Hinz, Friedel, Herwig, Wulf E. & Hargraves, Paul E., 2015, Seven new species expand the morphological spectrum of Haslea. A comparison with Gyrosigma and Pleurosigma (Bacillariophyta), Phytotaxa 207 (2), pp. 143-162 : 152-155

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.207.2.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13637770

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6E1687D3-9270-0934-FF40-A7F93AACFD7C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Haslea clevei
status

sp. nov.

H. clevei Hinz, Hargraves & Sterrenburg , sp. nov. ( Figs 18 View FIGURES 10–20 : LM, 47–57: SEM)

Type:— “ E251, Finnmark, Maasö, a, P. T. Cleve, 12.1881, von E. Weissflog ”, geographic coordinates 71°00’ N, 24°00’E. Holotype BRM ZU9 About BRM /89, slide coordinates 10.2 E, 2.3 S. This material is a subsample of Cleve & Möller 312, “ Finnmark, Maasö”. GoogleMaps

Valve ( Figs 18 View FIGURES 10–20 , 47, 48 View FIGURES 47−57 ) delicate, inconspicuous in LM even with contrast enhancement, slender lanceolate, 85–110 μm long, 10–12 μm wide, apices acute. Striae perpendicular, transverse circa 23, longitudinal circa 30 in 10 μm. Most of the transverse striae are offset, the striae on one side of the raphe ridge aligning with the interstriae on the other ( Fig. 47 View FIGURES 47−57 , inset). Axial and central area so narrow as to be inconspicuous in LM. In SEM, the tegumental layer shows little surface relief ( Figs 50, 51 View FIGURES 47−57 ). External raphe fissures slightly undulating in the centre, central external raphe endings extremely approximate and depressed as two tiny pits so close together that they tend to fuse ( Fig. 50 View FIGURES 47−57 and inset; Fig. 56 View FIGURES 47−57 , horizontal arrow), terminal raphe fissures long and curved ( Fig. 51 View FIGURES 47−57 ). Internally, the raphe ridge is not markedly twisted sideways ( Fig. 49 View FIGURES 47−57 ). Central bars highly variable: from an elevated central bar on one side and two elevated small ridges on the other ( Fig. 49 View FIGURES 47−57 ) to only one vestigial bar ( Fig. 57 View FIGURES 47−57 ). At the apices, there is a prominent projecting helictoglossa ( Fig. 52 View FIGURES 47−57 ). Basal layer: foramina practically square, transverse bars of the grate clearly wider than the longitudinal ( Figs 49, 57 View FIGURES 47−57 ). The two layers of the valve sandwich are joined by longitudinal upright saepes with large perforations ( Fig. 53 View FIGURES 47−57 inset, Figs 54, 55, 56 View FIGURES 47−57 oblique arrows). These perforations are located underneath (in Fig. 53 View FIGURES 47−57 ) the transverse bars of the basal layer grate.

Etymology:— named after P.T. Cleve, as the sample is part of the collection Cleve & Möller.

Habitat:— littoral-marine sediment.

Distribution:— The type locality is now known as Måsøy, Norway. Rare in the type material, less so in a sample from the Indian River Lagoon, Florida, see under Observations.

Observations:— In several slides of Cleve & Möller 312 examined, no additional specimens have been seen, but the species is so delicate that we may simply have overlooked it. Samples (collection Hargraves) from the Indian River Lagoon, Florida, USA, contained specimens matching the type, including the central external raphe endings in “pits” (horizontal arrow in Fig. 56 View FIGURES 47−57 ), but the central bars ( Fig. 57 View FIGURES 47−57 ) are obviously as variable as in Gyrosigma and Pleurosigma . In several specimens observed ( Figs 54–56 View FIGURES 47−57 ) valve development is not yet complete: the basal layer and saepes are fully formed, the fissures in the tegumental layer are being filled in. All perforations of the saepes are located on top (in the figure!) of the transverse bars of the basal layer.

The offset of the striae on either side of the raphe ridge has not so far been described in Haslea and is not limited to H. clevei . It is also evident in H. salstonica , see Massé et al. 2001: Plate II, figure E, and H. provincialis sp. inedit., see Gastineau et al. 2014, Fig. 15.3 View FIGURES 10–20 , but is not mentioned in the texts of these publications.

Of the smaller ostrearia -like taxa, H. hyalinissima superficially resembles H. clevei , but the latter is almost double the size of the former and has much coarser transverse striae (23 as against 27–28 in 10 μm). H. crystallina also has finer transverse striae (26 in 10 μm) than H. clevei and is longer and broader.

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

BRM

Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung

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