Taxonomic notes on desmids from the Netherlands III, with a description of five new species
Author
Van Westen, Marien C.
0000-0001-6905-9471
Podzolhamel 26, 9403 XC Assen, The Netherlands.
mvanwesten@home.nl
Author
Coesel, Peter F. M.
0000-0001-7709-4154
Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, Box 94240, 1090 GE Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
p.f.m.coesel@uva.nl
text
Phytotaxa
2020
2020-05-18
443
1
107
115
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.443.1.10
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.443.1.10
1179-3163
13878387
Cosmarium arcuatiporosum
Van Westen et Coesel
spec. nov
.
(
Figs 3
,
16, 17, 18, 19
,
27
).
Diagnosis: cells about as long as broad with a deep, median constriction. Sinus narrowly linear with a dilated extremity. Semicells in frontal view semicircular-trapeziform, the outline in the upper part of the sides often not quite firm. Cell wall smooth. Cell wall pores within the margin confined to two, disjunct zones: a single, arch-shaped series of pores just above the isthmus and some two, transversal series just below the apex. Semicells in lateral view subcircular, in apical view elliptic, in the middle of each side a little bit inflated. Chloroplast with a single, central pyrenoid. Dimensions: cell length 19–25 µm, cell breadth 17–22 µm, cell thickness 10–12 µm, isthmus 6–9 µm. Zygospores globose, furnished with furcate spines. Diameter without spines 22–24 µm, with spines 31–34 µm.
Type:—
THE NETHERLANDS
.
Drenthe
: shallow pool in estate Dwingelderveld near Lhee,
52.812811° N
,
6.240110° E
, between
Sphagnum
and filamentous algae, pH 5.6, conductivity 27 µS
cm-1
. Van Westen,
07 May 2018
(
holotype
L! Hugo de Vries Lab 2019.03, preserved as a fixed natural sample).
Differential diagnosis
:—In cell shape,
C. arcuatiporosum
somewhat resembles
C. subtumidum
Nordstedt
and to a lesser extent
C. phaseolus
Ralfs. Apart
from the fact that those latter species have larger cell dimensions, the main difference is found in the pattern of cell wall pores. Nordstedt (in
Wittrock & Nordstedt 1878: 72
) for
C. subtumidum
explicitly mentions a punctate cell wall.
Ralfs (1848: 106
, pl. 32: 5) describing
C. phaseolus
does not say anything about pores but depicts them as coarse dots all over the cell wall. So, neither of those species is characterized by the most peculiar pore pattern shown in our newly described species, a pattern for that matter that we do not know either of any other
Cosmarium
species.
Confusion with similar looking species is possible, especially when the characteristic arc of pores above the isthmus is not clearly visible.
This species was found at only two locations in the province of Drenthe, between
Sphagnum
in a shallow artificial pool on loamy, sandy soil that was dug for nature restoration purposes. Fortunately, this species was also found sporulating in a sample taken in 1988 from a pool from the west of
Ireland
(Frans Kouwets, personal communication), that was kindly put at our disposal. Zygospores (
Figs 3
,
19
) are depicted after Irish material.