Extreme diversity in fine-grained morphology reveals fourteen new species of conopeate Nitzschia (Bacillariophyta: Bacillariales)

Phytotaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 401 (4) ◽  
pp. 199 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHRISTOPHER S. LOBBAN ◽  
MATT P. ASHWORTH ◽  
JERILYN J.M. CALAOR ◽  
EDWARD C. THERIOT

A study was made of the ultrastructural variation in a group of conopeate Nitzschia species, primarily marine species from Guam but also including one freshwater species from Costa Rica. Fourteen new species are described: Nitzschia alcyoneae, Nitzschia asteropeae, Nitzschia carahii, Nitzschia celaenoae, Nitzschia dagmannii, Nitzschia electrae, Nitzschia guamensis, Nitzschia jordanii, Nitzschia lascrucensis, Nitzschia maiae, Nitzschia meropeae, Nitzschia schefterae, Nitzschia spathulatoides, and Nitzschia taygeteae. The valves in all these taxa had a central raphe-sternum on a raised keel; from the keel arise silica flaps, the conopea, and the valve face was depressed below the conopea to form conopeal canals. The valve surface was thus differentiated into three regions, in which the areola pattern sometimes differed: the exposed valve face, the valve depression, and the peri-raphe zone, i.e., the exposed part of the keel wall between the conopeum and the raphe-sternum. We refer to this suite of characters as the tholophora (canopy-bearing) morphology. In one species, N. maiae sp. nov., the conopea occurred only at the apex and there was no valve depression. Thirty-eight morphological characters were used in addition to the usual morphometric data (length, width, densities of striae and fibulae); these included, inter alia, a remarkable range of areola shapes on the three valve regions and the copulae—oval/circular pores, transapical slits, longitudinal slits, small pores fields, continuous pores fields, and larger quadrate pores closed by hymenes or cribra; the extent of the conopea along the valve; the presence of longitudinal ribs on the valve, conopea, or copulae; and the extent of internal development of silica below the striae. Phylogenetic analysis of gene sequences from six species was entirely congruent with analysis of morphological characters.

Nematology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (8) ◽  
pp. 843-853
Author(s):  
Jianfeng Gu ◽  
Munawar Maria ◽  
Yiwu Fang ◽  
Xianfeng Chen ◽  
Lele Liu

Summary Laimaphelenchus spiflatus n. sp. isolated from declining Chinese pine, Pinus tabuliformis, is described and illustrated. The new species can be characterised by its relatively long body size of 1150 ± 108 (976-1437) μm for females and 1092 ± 78.6 (905-1235) μm for males, lateral field with four lines, females with a long vulval flap, and tail conoid, slightly ventrally curved and ending in a stalk having 8-12 projections when observed with SEM. Males are common, with 27.3 (23.4-28.8) μm long spicules having blunt (not well-developed) condylus and rostrum and truncate simple distal tip, and four caudal papillae. By having a vulval flap, four lateral lines and tail end with a stalk (without four tubercles), the new species comes close to L. preissii, L. simlaensis, and L. unituberculus, but can be differentiated from them by morphological characters and morphometric data. In phylogenetic analyses using near full length 18S and D2-D3 expansion segments of 28S rDNA, Laimaphelenchus spiflatus n. sp. appeared as an independent lineage separated from the other Laimaphelenchus spp. that are currently sequenced for their aforementioned genomic regions.


1983 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 82-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Hovenkamp ◽  
W. Hovenkamp ◽  
J.J. van der Heide

Two new amphipod species of the family Bogidiellidae were found in the hyporheal of two small rivers on Corsica. Both new species, Bogidiella (Bogidiella) cyrnensis n. sp. and B. paolii n. sp. (provisionally placed in the subgenus Medigidiella, but a definitive classification will have to wait till males are found), encountered at altitudes of 135 m and 750 m, respectively, show more affinities with certain freshwater species of Sardinia than with marine species of the Mediterranean.


Zootaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4651 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-113
Author(s):  
KOBRA HASHEMI ◽  
AKBAR KAREGAR

During a survey, 12 known and one new species of Ditylenchus Filipjev, 1936 were collected from southern provinces of Iran during 2013–2017. Ditylenchus paraparvus n. sp. is characterised by a short body length (441–543 µm), lateral field with four lines, delicate and short stylet (6–7.5 µm) with small rounded or posteriorly sloping knobs, pyriform and offset basal pharyngeal bulb, V = 67.7–76.4, short post-vulval uterine sac less than one vulval body width long, small spicules (12.5–15 µm) and almost cylindrical tail (71–90 µm) with rounded end. Morphometric data of studied species are presented and intraspecific variation of their morphometrics and morphological characters is discussed. The list of the world Ditylenchus species is updated, and a dichotomous identification key and an updated tabular compendium for 63 valid species is provided. 


Author(s):  
T.A. Schram ◽  
L. Iversen ◽  
P.A. Heuch ◽  
E. Sterud

Six specimens of an unknown Argulus species were found on a cod caught off the coast of Finnmark in northern Norway. All six were found to be sixth stage male larvae, ∼2·6 mm long and 1·6 mm wide. Argulus has not previously been recorded from cod and this is also the first record of a marine Argulus from Norwegian waters. The Argulus sp. from cod can be easily distinguished from other marine species found in northern European waters, and also from Norwegian freshwater species of Argulus. It is believed that it represents a new species, but a complete species description must await the finding of adult stages.


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4729 (4) ◽  
pp. 482-500
Author(s):  
KOBRA HASHEMI ◽  
AKBAR KAREGAR

During a survey conducted during 2013–2017, five known and two new species of Nothotylenchus Thorne, 1941 were collected from the southern provinces of Iran. N. brzeskii n. sp. is characterised by a body length of 774–922 µm, lateral fields with four incisures, delicate, short stylet (7–8 µm) with small rounded knobs, pyriform, offset or slightly overlapping basal pharyngeal bulb, posterior vulva position (V = 83.4–84.4), short PUS (5–10 µm), spicules 20.5–23 µm long, and thick tail with rounded to dull terminus. N. siddiqi n. sp. is characterised by a body length of 573–645 µm, six to nine incisures in lateral fields, delicate, short stylet (6.5–7.5 µm) with rounded knobs, pyriform or slightly elongate and offset basal pharyngeal bulb, V = 79.3–81.0, PUS = 26.5–40 µm, short spicules = 14.5–16.5 µm, and tail with rounded terminus. Morphometric data of the studied species are presented and intraspecific variation of their morphometrics and morphological characters is discussed. The list of world Nothotylenchus species is updated, and a dichotomous identification key and an updated tabular compendium for 41 valid species are provided. 


Crustaceana ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 86 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 802-819 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandra A. P. Bueno ◽  
Paula B. Araujo ◽  
Giovanna M. Cardoso ◽  
Kelly M. Gomes ◽  
Georgina Bond-Buckup

Two new freshwater species of amphipods from Brazil are described here. Hyalella xakriaba n. sp. occurs in the hydrographic basin of the São Francisco River, in a biome characterized by a semiarid climate, in the state of Minas Gerais. This new species constitutes the northernmost record of the genus in Brazil. Hyalella kaingang n. sp. occurs in the hydrographic basin of the Mampituba River, located in Rio Grande do Sul, the southernmost state in Brazil. Currently 14 species of Hyalella are known in Brazil, cave species among them. Some morphological characters and their respective states are analyzed, and constitute an important new tool for species identifications. In particular, we describe the cuticular structures, defined as denticles, on the distal inner margin of the carpus of gnathopods 1 and 2. These structures may have a polygonal pattern or appear as comb scales, and may be arranged in one or more rows.


2012 ◽  
Vol 93 (5) ◽  
pp. 1231-1244 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth H. Nicholls

Six new marine species of the silica-scaled heterotrophic genus Thaumatomastix are formally described: two were found in Canadian Atlantic Ocean coastal waters (T. asymmetrica sp. nov. and T. sablensis sp. nov.) and four from Canadian Pacific Ocean coastal waters (T. inornata sp. nov., T. multipora sp. nov., T. gwaii sp. nov. and T. curvata sp. nov.). These discoveries more than double the number of known marine species of this genus from four to ten. The scale structures of all differ significantly from those of previously known species and therefore warrant erection as new species. Amended descriptions of two previously little-known freshwater species (T. triangulata and T. nigeriensis) are provided based on specimens found in freshwater ponds and lakes in Ontario, Lanada, and provide evidence refuting the recent published proposals to transfer T. triangulata back to the photo-autotrophic genus Chrysosphaerella and to transfer T. nigeriensis to the related thaumatomonad genus Reckertia. Until now, all known species of Reckertia (including several taxa previously classified in Thaumatomastix) were marine. This paper describes the first known freshwater species of Reckertia (R. hindoni sp. nov.) found in two separate Ontario ponds. The similarities and differences among many of the marine and freshwater species of Thaumatomastix suggest a common ancestor but significant evolutionary divergence over time and space.


Zootaxa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 4363 (4) ◽  
pp. 489 ◽  
Author(s):  
MIRNA G. GARCÍA-CASTILLO ◽  
SEAN M. ROVITO ◽  
DAVID B. WAKE ◽  
GABRIELA PARRA-OLEA

Chiropterotriton is a relatively small genus that comprises 15 species with great morphological and ecological diversity. In previous studies, molecular data provided evidence for a considerable number of species that remain undescribed. In this study, we describe one new species, Chiropterotriton chico sp. nov. based on molecular and morphological characters. We present mtDNA phylogenetic analyses using Bayesian inference and maximum likelihood that include all described and several undescribed species. Morphometric data from eight recognized species provide evidence for the distinctiveness of the new taxon. Description of this new species adds to the already high salamander diversity of the state of Hidalgo, which is an important area for the diversification of the genus. 


Biologia ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
David Delmail ◽  
Pascal Labrousse ◽  
Philippe Crassous ◽  
Philippe Hourdin ◽  
Mathieu Guri ◽  
...  

AbstractA new freshwater epiphytic Prorocentrum species, Prorocentrum rivalis, from the temperate region of the Haute-Vienne, France, is described. This species is the third freshwater species identified among approximately 60 marine Prorocentrum species. This new species is described using scanning electron microscope and phylogenetic analyses by a polyphasic approach (LSU rRNA sequences combined with 9 morphological characters). The phylogenetic analysis attests that P. rivalis is close to other planktonic freshwater species and the freshwater Prorocentrum clade is evolutionarily derived from an epiphytic freshwater prorocentroid ancestor. The unique marine species in the freshwater clade results from an ecophysiological reversion. P. rivalis differs from other epiphytic taxa by its rarity, its temperate distribution and its ecophysiological needs. The phylogeny confirms also that all planktonic Prorocentrum species are evolutionarily derived from epiphytic/benthic ancestors.


Zootaxa ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 3440 (1) ◽  
pp. 63 ◽  
Author(s):  
VLADIMIR PEŠIĆ ◽  
TAPAS CHATTERJEE ◽  
NIKOLAOS V. SCHIZAS

The water mite family Pontarachnidae Koenike, 1910, the only family of the Hydrachnidia occurring in the marine environment, represents a diverse and widespread, but still neglected group of marine meiofauna. Most marine species live nearshore with the exception of few freshwater species found in estuaries or locations near the sea (Smit 2002; Smit & Alberti 2010). In this paper we describe a new species, Pontarachna nemethi, from substrata collected from El Seco, a mesophotic site near Vieques Island off Puerto Rico, from 52–67 m depth, more than 2 times the depth at which Pontarachnidae have been previously collected. The finding of the new species remarkably extended the potential area of the world ocean occupied by the Pontarachnidae.


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