Charophytes of Australia’s Northern Territory - II. Tribe Nitelleae
Author
Casanova, Michelle T.
Author
Karol, Kenneth G.
text
Australian Systematic Botany
2023
2023-08-18
36
4
322
353
http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sb22029
journal article
10.1071/SB22029
1446-5701
10904369
Nitella boreali-australis
Casanova & Karol
,
sp. nov.
Type
:
Mitchell Creek
,
Northern Territory
,
24 May 2010
,
P
.Dostine 12DW23-2 (holo:
MEL
! [spirit])
.
Nitella pseudoflabellata
f.
bancroftii
R
.D.
Wood,
Nova Hedwigia
22: 69 (1971)
, nom. inval., nom. prov.
[
Nitella mucosa
auct. non. (Nordst.)
J
.Groves:
J
.Groves in
J
.Groves &
G
.
O
.Allen,
Proc. Roy. Soc
Queensland
46: 44 (1935)
].
Monoecious.
Plants
fine and flexible, mucus-covered,>
10 cm
high.
Axes
up to 500 µm wide;
internodes
up to
10 mm
long, shorter than the branchlet whorls (
Fig. 4
a
).
Fertile branchlets
7 or
8 in
a whorl, smaller and less furcate than the sterile whorls;
primary segments
up to
5 mm
long,
secondary segments
5 or 6,
0.5–1.5 mm
long, divided into 4–6
tertiary segments
of which one can be a dactyl, up to
0.5 mm
long, further divided into 4 or 5 dactyls (
Fig. 4
c
);
sterile branchlets
7 or
8 in
a whorl,
10–20 mm
long with longer segments than fertile branchlets;
primary segments
up to
10 mm
long,
secondary segments
4–7,
3–4 mm
long, divided into 3–6
tertiary segments
(=dactyls), up to
2 mm
long, sometimes 1 or 2 again divided into 3–5 dactyls (
Fig. 4
b
).
Fertile dactyls
3–5, up to
1 mm
long, but usually
0.5–0.7 mm
long, bicellulate; the end-cell conical and acute, confluent with the end of the penultimate cell (
Fig. 4
d
). Where a dactyl is formed at the second furcation, the dactyls can appear 3 cells long (i.e. a suppressed furcation).
Sterile dactyls
are similar to fertile dactyls but up to
2 mm
long. Mucus-covered
heads
present, really consisting of sequentially smaller whorls distally. Male and female
gametangia
on the same plant; antheridia single and central in the lowest 2 furcations (
Fig. 4
c
); oosporangia single, lateral at all but the lowest furcation (
Fig. 4
c
).
Oosporangia
up to 400 µm long, 300 µm wide with 8 or 9 helical stripes,
coronula
up to 30 µm high, the upper cells slightly longer than the lower cells.
Oospores
210–230 µm long, 190–210 µm wide with 8 or 9 flanged striae ~7 µm high (
Fig. 4
e
); the ornamentation fibrous-papillate and porate; the wall appears to be constructed of flocculate fibres, built into papillae occasionally, with rimmed pores (variolae) also occasional (
Fig. 4
f
).
Antheridia
up to 200 µm in diameter.
Chromosome numbers
not known.
Fig. 4.
Nitella boreali-australis
from specimen
P.Dostine 12DW23-2
(DNA). (
a
) Habit of whole plant, scale: 10 mm. (
b
) Sterile whorl, scale: 5 mm. (
c
) Fertile branchlet, scale: 1 mm. (
d
) Dactyls, scale: 100 µm. (
e
) Scanning electron microscope (SEM) image of oospore, scale: 100 µm. (
f
) SEM image of detail of oospore wall, scale: 20 µm.
Taxonomic notes
Three specimens
of
Nitella
were collected by
T
.
L
. Bancroft in
Queensland
, two growing at ‘Stannary Hills’ in 1909 (possibly at the same locality, but the collection details are not specific) and one in Murphy’s Creek in 1910. James Groves (in
Groves 1935
) identified the
two specimens
from Stannary Hills as
Nitella mucosa
(Nordst.) J.Groves
and
N. orientalis
T.F.Allen
, and the specimen from Murphy’s Creek as
N. phauloteles
J.Groves.
Wood and Imahori (1965)
referred only to the specimen from Murphy’s Creek and provided an illustration (
Wood and Imahori 1964
, icon 275).
Wood (1971)
listed a specimen ‘Stannary Hills: Bancroft in 1909’ under
N. pseudoflabellata
var.
imperialis
T.F.Allen
, allocating it the provisional designation of ‘form…(8)
bancroftii’
, but did not distinguish between the two Bancroft specimens collected in this locality.
Wood (1971)
also amalgamated
N. pseudoflabellata
with
N. mucosa
, and
N. orientalis
with
N. phauloteles
(all of which are separate species). Although the epithet
bancroftii
was provisionally attached to one of these specimens, neither is used here as
type
material, and owing to the potential for confusion, the name ‘
bancroftii’
is not adopted for the taxon at species rank.
Recognition
A
very soft, flabellate and mucus-covered monoecious species, distinguished from
Nitella limosa
Casanova & Karol
by the two-celled dactyls. On the basis of oospore similarity,
N. boreali-australis
is probably closely related to
N. imperialis
(T.F.Allen) Sakayama
from
Japan
, but that species has less porate oospores, gametangia missing from the first and last furcations, longer internodes and shorter branchlets.
Distribution
On the basis of the localities in
Queensland
and the
Northern Territory
, it is assumed that this species will be found across the wet tropics in northern
Australia
.
Etymology
The name
boreali-australis
literally means ‘northernsouthern’, but the intent is to refer to northern
Australia
.
Specimens examined
NORTHERN TERRITORY
:
Groote Eylandt
,
18 May 1948
,
R
.
L
.
Specht
A28
(
BM
,
NY
);
Groote Eylandt
,
18 May 1948
,
R
.
L
.
Specht
A29
a (
NY
);
Port Darwin
,
4 Apr. 1896
,
T
.
B
.
Blow
A103
(
BM
)
.
QUEENSLAND
:
Stannary Hills
, 1909,
T
.
L
.
Bancroft
(
BM
);
Lake Eacham
,
11 Sep. 1993
,
T
.
J
.
Entwisle
2310 (
MEL
);
Mareeba
,
28 Apr. 1962
,
H
.
S
.
McKee
9373 (
NY
)
.