TY - JOUR
T1 - Nitzschia fenestralis
T2 - A new diatom species abundant in the holocene sediments of an eastern African crater lake
AU - Grady, David
AU - Mann, David G.
AU - Trobajo, Rosa
N1 - Funding Information:
Burfeid for very kindly arranging loans of Nitzschia types from the Hustedt collection at the Alfred Wegener Institut, Bremerhaven, Holly Wynne, Patrick Robson, Alan Cookson and Frieda Christie are gratefully acknowledged for their assistance and time in preparing samples and operating the equipment required for this research. Dr. Sarah Davies and Professor Henry Lamb are thanked for their time in supervising the PhD of D. Grady and for their helpful comments on this manuscript. We would like to thank the anonymous reviewer whose helpful comments improved the manuscript and we also express our gratitude to Dr. Carlos Wetzel for sharing with us some of his excellent, as yet unpublished observations of Hustedt‘s Nitzschia types. We appreciate the support given by the Masonic Charitable Foundation and Aberystwyth University in funding the studentship of D. Grady, including research time at the RBGE. The authors also acknowledge support from the CERCA Programme/Generalitat de Catalunya. The Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh is supported by the Scottish Government’s Rural and Environment Science and Analytical Services Division.
Funding Information:
We are thankful to Professor Sch?bitz of Universit?t zu K?ln for use of the BA?LC?2011 core and Dr Bank Beszteri and Dr Andrea Burfeid for very kindly arranging loans of Nitzschia types from the Hustedt collection at the Alfred Wegener Institut, Bremerhaven, Holly Wynne, Patrick Robson, Alan Cookson and Frieda Christie are gratefully acknowledged for their assistance and time in preparing samples and operating the equipment required for this research. Dr. Sarah Davies and Professor Henry Lamb are thanked for their time in supervising the PhD of D. Grady and for their helpful comments on this manuscript. We would like to thank the anonymous reviewer whose helpful comments improved the manuscript and we also ex-press our gratitude to Dr. Carlos Wetzel for sharing with us some of his excellent, as yet unpublished observations of Hustedt?s Nitzschia types. We appreciate the support given by the Masonic Charitable Foundation and Aberystwyth University in funding the studentship of D. Grady, including research time at the RBGE. The authors also acknowledge support from the CERCA Programme/Generalitat de Catalunya. The Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh is supported by the Scottish Government?s Rural and Environment Science and Analytical Services Division.
Publisher Copyright:
© Czech Phycological Society (2020).
PY - 2020/4/1
Y1 - 2020/4/1
N2 - Nitzschia is common in the phytoplankton of several East African lakes. A new species, Nitzschia fenestralis, sp. nov. D. Grady, D.G. Mann et Trobajo was encountered at numerous depths in a 16 m sediment core from Lake Babogaya, Ethiopia and is described using light and scanning electron microscopy. It is compared with several other morphologically similar taxa described from East and Central Africa (especially N. aequalis, N. mediocris, N. obsoleta and N. fabiennejansseniana), and from Europe (N. fruticosa). An unusual feature of some of these species (N. fenestralis, N. obsoleta and N. fabiennejansseniana) is that in the raphe canal each stria is represented by two narrower areolae (alternatively interpreted as a single subdivided areola). It is this feature that suggested the name of the new species (through the resemblance to a series of sash windows). Another characteristic of N. fenestralis and N. obsoleta, apparently never reported previously in any diatom, is that the more advalvar bands end approximately halfway along the frustules, rather than at the poles. In most respects (shape and size, stria and fibula densities, valve and girdle structure), N. fenestralis and N. obsoleta are very similar, but confusion is unlikely because they differ in whether central raphe endings are present (N. fenestralis) or absent (N. obsoleta). In Nitzschia fenestralis, and perhaps to a lesser extent in N. obsoleta, the striae usually become strongly radiate towards the poles. A preliminary assessment, based on the literature, suggests that N. fabiennejansseniana may be synonymous with N. obsoleta, which was described earlier.
AB - Nitzschia is common in the phytoplankton of several East African lakes. A new species, Nitzschia fenestralis, sp. nov. D. Grady, D.G. Mann et Trobajo was encountered at numerous depths in a 16 m sediment core from Lake Babogaya, Ethiopia and is described using light and scanning electron microscopy. It is compared with several other morphologically similar taxa described from East and Central Africa (especially N. aequalis, N. mediocris, N. obsoleta and N. fabiennejansseniana), and from Europe (N. fruticosa). An unusual feature of some of these species (N. fenestralis, N. obsoleta and N. fabiennejansseniana) is that in the raphe canal each stria is represented by two narrower areolae (alternatively interpreted as a single subdivided areola). It is this feature that suggested the name of the new species (through the resemblance to a series of sash windows). Another characteristic of N. fenestralis and N. obsoleta, apparently never reported previously in any diatom, is that the more advalvar bands end approximately halfway along the frustules, rather than at the poles. In most respects (shape and size, stria and fibula densities, valve and girdle structure), N. fenestralis and N. obsoleta are very similar, but confusion is unlikely because they differ in whether central raphe endings are present (N. fenestralis) or absent (N. obsoleta). In Nitzschia fenestralis, and perhaps to a lesser extent in N. obsoleta, the striae usually become strongly radiate towards the poles. A preliminary assessment, based on the literature, suggests that N. fabiennejansseniana may be synonymous with N. obsoleta, which was described earlier.
KW - Africa
KW - Girdle structure
KW - Lake Babogaya
KW - Morphology
KW - New species
KW - Nitzschia
KW - Plankton
KW - Taxonomy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85083328801&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5507/fot.2019.011
DO - 10.5507/fot.2019.011
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85083328801
SN - 1802-5439
VL - 20
SP - 36
EP - 48
JO - Fottea
JF - Fottea
IS - 1
ER -