Phormidium autumnale (Agardh) Trevisan ex Gomont

Novis, Phil M. & Visnovsky, Gabriel, 2011, Novel alpine algae from New Zealand: Cyanobacteria, Phytotaxa 22 (1), pp. 1-24 : 20-22

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.22.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4776666

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E93E87C3-5867-FFD0-FF00-1BAC17CB77F6

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Phormidium autumnale (Agardh) Trevisan ex Gomont
status

 

Phormidium autumnale (Agardh) Trevisan ex Gomont ( Figs 8A–Q View FIGURE 8 )

Trichomes uniseriate, cells (4–) 5–6 µm wide, 3–7 µm long, shorter than wide to approximately isodiametric, constricted at transverse walls, bright blue-green. Motile by slow gliding. Trichomes straight to slightly curved, except at terminus, where first 5–18 cells are tapered (down to 3–4 µm wide), straight to strongly curved or S-shaped ( Figs 8A–G View FIGURE 8 ). Terminal cell rounded, with prominent rounded calyptra. Sheath thin and translucent. Branching absent. Trichome reproduction through fragmentation into hormogonia, sometimes at regions of variable trichome width ( Figs 8M–O View FIGURE 8 ). Thylakoids peripheral but irregularly arranged ( Fig. 8Q View FIGURE 8 ).

Habitat:— Alpine herbfield soil, 1640 m, associated with scattered Chionochloa sp.

Distribution:— The species is reported world-wide ( Komárek & Anagnostidis 2005); another strain found in the Hutt River, Wellington region, New Zealand, is likely identical to our strain (see below).

Observations:— Our observations agree well with the strict concept ( Komárek & Anagnostidis 2005) of this very widely reported species. Some minor differences are that our material has not been observed to rotate or oscillate while gliding, and is more often curved, especially in the attenuated region at the terminus.

Nonetheless 16S rDNA data show that this strain is placed in a clade of taxa regarded as P. autumnale , containing the majority of strains by that name ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ; Palinska & Marquardt 2008). Other New Zealand strains have been sequenced and assigned to this species previously, though not from the alpine zone: in fact one such strain (VUW9, from the Hutt River; Heath et al. 2010) shares an identical 16S rDNA sequence for the 354 sites at which the two overlap, and seems likely to be identical overall. The 16S–23S intergenic spacer region of our strain contains both tRNA-Ile and tRNA-Ala genes ( Table 8), which is the case for all other strains of P. autumnale except one (UTEX 1580) where this region has been characterised.

Culture:— LCR-OSC3.

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