Fragilaria rinoi sp. nov. (Fragilariales, Fragilariophyceae) from periphytic river samples in Central Portugal
Author
Cristina Delgado
Author
M. Helena Novais
Author
Saúl Blanco
Author
Salomé F. P. Almeida
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2016
248
1
16
journal article
10.5852/ejt.2016.248
937013b6-9d34-4f60-8c36-daf47e7652b4
193001
Fragilaria vaucheriae
(Kütz.) J.B.Petersen
Figs 2
,
83–90
Exilaria vaucheriae
Kütz.,
Linnaea
8: 560 (1833a). – Type: Alg. Dec. III. No. 24 (syntypes: BM 78023, BM 78024).
The type material of
Fragilaria vaucheriae
(
Kützing 1833b
)
was published in Kützing’s exiccata set
Algarum Aquae Dulcis Germanicarum
(Decas III, No. 24) without either description or figure. This material was observed by Lange-Bertalot (1980, pl. 4, figs 82–94, 97–102) with a broader concept that was later narrowed in Krammer & Lange-Bertalot (2004: pl. 108, figs 10–15). In the present study, the type material from the Natural History Museum of London was photographed with a scanning electron microscope (
Figs 83–90
). Micrographs from the recently published paper by
Wetzel & Ector (2015)
, which were acquired from Van Heurck’s collection housed at the Botanic Garden Meise, Belgium (BR) were also used for the morphometrical measurements of
F. vaucheriae
.
Description
Fragilaria vaucheriae
is characterized by the presence solitary cells with valves linear and narrow and rostrate to subcapitate ends (
Fig. 83
). Frustules rectangular in girdle view with interruption of striation in the middle portion (
Figs 84–85
). Axial area narrow, linear, central area larger than
F. rinoi
sp. nov.
, unilateral in all specimens. Striae coarse, uniseriate, parallel to the transapical axis and slightly radiate at the poles (
Figs 83, 88
). External valve face presents small spines in some specimens (
Figs 83, 88
). A single rimoportula is present at one pole, aligned with the first stria at the valve face apex (Figs 83, 88). Girdle bands are open (
Figs 84, 85, 87
), with small, unoccluded perforations. Striae composed of round areolae (12–13 areolae in 1 μm) on both valves (
Figs83
, 89). Each valve has two apical pore fields (APF) composed of simple fine porelli arranged in regular rows parallel to the apical axis (Fig. 83) and made up of 6 rows, each composed of 10 to 11 poroids (
Figs 85–88
). Outer areolar are closed with siliceous depositions (
Figs 83–90
). Siliceous plaques are present along the valve mantle edge (
Figs 85, 87, 90
).
The photographs of the other
Fragilaria
species (
Fragilaria candidagilae
,
F. recapitellata
,
F. perminuta
,
F. neointermedia
,
F. intermedia
,
F. capucina
and
F. microvaucheriae
) were further digitally measured and included in comparative boxplots and scatterplots here discussed (
Figs 91–92
). Whenever possible (i.e., when valves were more than 20 µm long) four measures of striae density were taken from each valve.