Taxonomic notes on desmids from the Netherlands II, with a description of six new species
Author
Van Westen, Marien C.
Author
Coesel, Peter F. M.
text
Phytotaxa
2018
2018-12-20
385
1
1
12
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.385.1.9
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.385.1.9
1179-3163
13725813
Cosmarium spierense
Van Westen et Coesel
sp. nov
(
Figs 7–8
,
27–40
)
Cells slightly longer than broad to about as long as broad, deeply constricted; sinus linear and closed for the most part. Semicells in frontal view suboblong with broadly rounded angles and convex lateral sides. Lateral sides, including the apical angles, 5–6-crenate, the crenations near the basal angle with one granule, the other ones generally with two granules. Apex truncate and bi-undulate. Cell wall ornamented with small granules, arranged in short, intramarginal, radiating series, the upper 4–5 lateral series doubled near the margin. In addition, a central tumour ornamented with 6 bended vertical series of granules, the inner two as a rule mutually fused to a big, central wrath. Semicells in apical view broadly elliptic with a more or less triangular tumour on either side, in lateral view subovate with a faint inflation near the base. Chloroplast axile with one pyrenoid. Zygospore globose, furnished with long, stout, furcate spines.
Dimensions: cell length 24–31 μm, breath 22–28 μm, thickness 17–18 μm, isthmus 8.7–10.5 μm; L/B 1.07–1.14. Zygospore diameter (exclusive of spines) about 30 μm.
FIGURES 27–40
. 27, 29–38. Single cells of
Cosmarium spierense
(35–38. SEM microphotographs). 28. Zygospore of
Cosmarium spierense
.
39, 40. immature and mature zygospore of
Cosmarium spierense
with adhering gametangial cells. Scale bar = 10 μm.
Type:—
THE NETHERLANDS
.
Drenthe
: Shallow pool in nature restauration area in Dwingelderveld near Spier,
52.8324° N
,
6.4788° E
, among submerged mosses on sandy soil, pH 7.3, EC 22 μS
cm-1
. Van Westen,
4 May 2015
(
holotype
L! Hugo de Vries Lab 2018.04, preserved as a fixed natural sample).
Differential diagnosis
:—
Cosmarium spierense
belongs to the group of small crenate
Cosmarium
-species with a central ornamentation consisting of curved vertical rows of small granules. It could be compared with
C. subcostatum
Nordstedt (1876: 37
, pl. 12: 13) but semicells of that species are trapeziform in outline and have a less elaborate central ornamentation. Our algal
form rather
should be compared with
Cosmarium norvegicum
Strøm (1926: 214
, pl. 5: 15, 16). The latter is a but little known species and has been reported only a few times. In Europe, only by Strøm from
Norway
and by Förster (1967) from
Sweden
.
Taylor (1934)
reported this species from Newfoundland,
Irénée-Marie (1939)
from
Canada
and
Fučíková et al (2008)
from the
USA
. They invariably draw vertical rows of granules in the central ornamentation, nowhere the big, central wrath characteristic of our taxon is mentioned or depicted. Moreover, in
C. norvegicum
the outline of the semicells is semielliptic to semicircular (with the largest breadth at the base) rather than suboblong (with the largest breadth about halfway) as in our material. With respect to that latter feature, our taxon much resembles
C. subcostatum
var.
spetsbergense
Borge (1911: 18
, fig. 13). As, however, Borge does not describe or depict the central ornamentation of that variety, and we are of opinion that our taxon essentially differs from
C. subcostatum
, we prefer to render our alga the status of a separate species under a new name. The name of the species refers to the village where an abundant and sporulating population was found.
Ecology and geographical distribution:
—
C. spierense
was encountered at several locations in Drenthe between mosses in slightly acidic to neutral, oligotrophic, shallow pools on sandy soil. Remarkably, this species was also found in a sample from
Iceland
(leg. D. Vuijk, 2016) in a more or less comparable environment. It cannot be excluded that
C. spierense
is an arctic-alpine element in the desmid flora of
the Netherlands
.