Haslea staurosigmoidea Sterrenburg & Tiffany, 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 : 146-148

publication ID

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

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13637752

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6E1687D3-927A-093D-FF40-A7A63BFBFBB8

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Haslea staurosigmoidea Sterrenburg & Tiffany
status

sp. nov.

Haslea staurosigmoidea Sterrenburg & Tiffany , sp. nov. ( Figs 10, 11 View FIGURES 10–20 : LM, 21–26: SEM)

Type:—” Itacorubi, Florianopolis, Brasil, August, 21, 1987, leg. de Souza Mosimann”, geographic coordinates 27°34’ S, 48°29’ W. Holotype BRM ZU9/87, slide coordinates 15.0 E, 18.1 S. Isotypes in collection Sterrenburg #596.

FIGURES 12, 13. H View FIGURES 10–20 . feriarum sp. nov. Fig. 12 View FIGURES 10–20 . Holotype. Fig. 13 View FIGURES 10–20 . Isotype.

FIGURES 14, 15. H View FIGURES 10–20 .tsukamotoi sp. nov. Fig. 14 View FIGURES 10–20 . Holotype. Fig. 15 View FIGURES 10–20 . Isotype.

FIGURES 16, 17. H View FIGURES 10–20 . meteorou sp. nov. Fig. 16 View FIGURES 10–20 . Holotype. Fig. 17 View FIGURES 10–20 . Isotype.

FIGURE 18. H View FIGURES 10–20 . clevei sp. nov., holotype, complete frustule.

FIGURES 19, 20. H View FIGURES 10–20 . avium sp. nov. Fig. 19 View FIGURES 10–20 . Holotype, inset: arrow marks continuous fissures. Fig. 20 View FIGURES 10–20 . Isotype.

Valve ( Figs 10, 11 View FIGURES 10–20 , 21, 22 View FIGURES 21–26 ) delicate, sigmoid with a narrow pseudostauros, 100–120μm long, 6.5–7.5 μm wide, almost parallel-sided in the middle portion, with acute apices. Raphe sternum central over most of the valve length but becoming eccentric near the apices, curved. Raphe angle circa 7°. Striae perpendicular, transverse circa 30 in 10 μm, longitudinal circa 40 in 10 μm. In LM, axial and central area so narrow that there is no clear hyaline space separating striae and raphe sternum, central raphe node minute. In SEM, the tegumental layer shows little surface relief ( Figs 23, 25, 26 View FIGURES 21–26 ) and broad marginal zones not perforated by longitudinal fissures. External central raphe endings very approximate and slightly curved either to the same side ( Fig. 25 View FIGURES 21–26 ) or oppositely ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 21–26 ); apical raphe endings more or less straight; ( Fig. 23 View FIGURES 21–26 ); small apical fissure present (arrow in Fig. 23 View FIGURES 21–26 ). Internally, transverse silica ridges (pseudostauros) are present on both sides of the very narrow central raphe node, extending over the full width of the valve, only about 1 interstria wide; the pseudostauros is joined to a longitudinal ridge along the raphe on one side and a long central bar on the other ( Fig. 24 View FIGURES 21–26 ). Helictoglossa prominent ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 21–26 ). Basal layer: transverse bars of the perpendicular grate slightly broader than the longitudinal, foramina more or less square in the central portion ( Fig. 24 View FIGURES 21–26 ), apically elongated oblong near the apices ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 21–26 ).

Etymology:— The specific epithet refers to the sigmoid valve contour and pseudostauros.

Habitat:— Muddy marine-littoral sediment.

Distribution:— Brazil, marine littoral, not rare in the sample. One of us (WEH) has observed diatoms matching H. staurosigmoidea (in LM!) in the Adriatic Sea.

Observations:— The species resembles a Gyrosigma in LM because of its sigmoid contour but the pseudostauros, minute central raphe node (in contrast to the evident round to oval node usual in Gyrosigma ) and inconspicuous axial and central areas indicated that SEM investigation was necessary, which revealed the Haslea - type valve structure. A particularly noteworthy finding is the variability of the central raphe ending deflection, which in the same population was either to the same, or to opposite sides. Saepes not satisfactorily visualized, no fragmented valves found.

In LM, this species is readily separated from H. nipkowii by the presence of the pseudostauros, in SEM there are additional major differences, e.g. in the shape of the apical and central external raphe fissures. The sigmoid species H. sigma Talgatti, Sar & Torgan ( Talgatti et al. 2014) also has a pseudostauros like H. staurosigmoidea . The characters separating these two species are given in Table 1.

BRM

Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung

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