scholarly journals Three new species of Pleurothallis (Orchidaceae: Pleurothallidinae) in subsection Macrophyllae-Fasciculatae from northern South America

Lankesteriana ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Wilson ◽  
Luis Baquero ◽  
Katharine Dupree ◽  
Marco M. Jiménez ◽  
Cheryl M. LeBlanc ◽  
...  

The history of the taxonomy of Pleurothallis R.Br. subsection Macrophyllae-Fasciculatae and recent descriptions in that group are summarized. The phylogenetic position of the group based on preliminary molecular data and the appropriateness of the proposed genera Acronia C.Presl. and Zosterophyllanthos Szlach. & Marg. for this group are discussed. Three new species from northern South America are described: Pleurothallis rubrifolia from southeastern Ecuador and northeastern Peru; Pleurothallis nangaritzae from southeastern Ecuador; and Pleurothallis castanea. Labellar micromorphology examined by scanning electron microscopy for P. rubrifolia and P. nangaritzae is discussed in relation to taxonomy and possible pollinator interactions.

Zootaxa ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 2205 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-52
Author(s):  
CRISTINA DE VILLALOBOS ◽  
FERNANDA ZANCA ◽  
ALVARO BARRAGAN YANEZ

The presently known freshwater Nematomorpha from Ecuador include only three species. Seven species of hairworms are herein firstly recorded from this country, which makes 10 the known species inhabiting Ecuador. Four of them are redescribed and three new species of Chordodes (C. alticuspis, C. ecuatoriensis and C. ruginosus) are described. All species are described using scanning electron microscopy. A list of all species known from Ecuador is also included.


Zootaxa ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 2506 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
LIANG LI ◽  
HONG-ZHANG ZHOU

Three new species of the genus Craspedomerus from China are described and illustrated: C. giganteus Li & Zhou sp. n. from Sichuan, C. gongshanus Li & Zhou sp. n. from Yunnan and C. zhangi Li & Zhou sp. n. from Tibet. Four species are reported for the first time from China: C. sinetuber (Coiffait, 1977a) from Tibet, C. cyanipennis Scheerpeltz, 1976b, C. ganeshensis Coiffait, 1983 and C. glenoides (Schubert, 1908) from Yunnan. These four and two additional species previously recorded from China (C. beckeri Bernhauer, 1934 and C. violaceipennis Cameron, 1928 are redescribed and illustrated. Sensory peg setae located on the underside of the paramere of the aedeagus of all nine Chinese species are compared using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and the result shows that this character is useful for species identification. A key to the Chinese species of Craspedomerus is presented and geographical distribution of all sixteen species of Craspedomerus is mapped.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 489 (2) ◽  
pp. 171-181
Author(s):  
ANBUKKARASU VIGNESHWARAN ◽  
YAN LIU ◽  
JOHN PATRICK KOCIOLEK ◽  
BALASUBRAMANIAN KARTHICK

A new species, Epithemia agharkarii sp. nov., is described from the Mula River, Western Ghats, India. The new species is described based on light and scanning electron microscopy; it is characterized by having lanceolate to slightly elliptical valves with rounded apices and being 16–38 μm long and 12.5–17.5 μm wide. Based on morphology, especially the atypical position of the raphe, it is similar to E. reicheltii. The new species is differentiated from the latter by the valve outline, shape of the apices, specific position of the raphe and breadth. We discuss the possible phylogenetic position of these two taxa and recent proposals related to the classification of Rhopalodia and Epithemia.


2019 ◽  
Vol 152 (2) ◽  
pp. 219-247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Regine Jahn ◽  
Wolf-Henning Kusber ◽  
Oliver Skibbe ◽  
Jonas Zimmermann ◽  
Anh Tu Van ◽  
...  

Background and aims – Within the project “German Barcode of Life – Diatoms” common diatoms of German waters were routinely isolated and cultivated. In order to understand the taxonomy and phylogeny of the genus Gomphonema, one of the most common taxa of Central Europe, known currently either under the name Gomphonema olivaceum in Europe or Gomphoneis olivacea in America, was studied. Methods – Twenty unialgal strains were established from five different water bodies in Germany and one from Lake Balaton, Hungary, which supplied molecular data (18S V4 and rbcL) besides morphometric and ultrastructural data. In addition, on eight populations from different water bodies including the type from Denmark, morphometric and micromorphological studies by light and scanning electron microscopy were performed. Key results – Molecular and micromorphological data show that the target taxon neither belongs to Gomphonema Ehrenb. nor to Gomphoneis Cleve. By reinstating the genus name Gomphonella Rabenh., the nomenclatural and taxonomic enigma of this taxon is solved, and with the presentation of the type by Hornemann the authorship of the epithet is clarified. Molecular data for the unialgal strains and several environmental clones show that there is more diversity in the Gomphonella olivacea clade than can be identified morphologically. In addition, the establishment of the new species Gomphonella coxiae and Gomphonella acsiae is supported. The molecular data classified Gomphonella species as belonging to the Cymbellales but not to the Gomphonemataceae. In addition, molecular data put Gomphoneis tegelensis R.Jahn & N.Abarca also into Gomphonella. In order to make the genera Gomphoneis and Gomphonema monophyletic, their astigmate members are transferred to Gomphonella. Conclusions – The results clarify that the gomphonemoid outline is not restricted to the family Gomphonemataceae but seem to be distributed across the entire order Cymbellales. This is shown in this paper for the revived genus Gomphonella, which contains the astigmate group of Gomphoneis and Gomphonema besides the longly disputed G. olivacea. Only a polyphasic approach, combining molecular and micromorphological data for taxonomy, nomenclatural evaluation, and observations from clonal cultures can reveal the full intricacies of evolutionary relations.


Nematology ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 189-199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Blanca Landa ◽  
Gracia Liébanas ◽  
Pablo Castillo ◽  
Raquel Murillo Navarro ◽  
Domingo Jiménez Guirado

AbstractA new species of awl nematode, Dolichodorus mediterraneus sp. n., is described from southern Spain. The new species is described and illustrated by light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy studies from specimens collected in a sandy soil around roots of cork oak (Quercus suber L.) from Hato Raton, Aznalcázar (Seville), southern Spain. Dolichodorus mediterraneus sp. n. is characterised by a prominent, rounded, lip region, which is offset from the body and has four to six very fine annuli; lateral fields areolated with three lines, ending posterior to anus level; tail 72-122 μm long, abruptly tapering to an acuminate, often spicate, terminus; tail projection 51-79 μ m long; spicules ventrally arcuate, 33-42 μm long; gubernaculum slightly ventrally curved, 14-22 μm long. Scanning electron microscopy observations showed a similar en face pattern to other Dolichodorus spp. Molecular data from the ribosomal large subunit D2-D3 expansion segment of 28S rDNA from paratypes yielded a single fragment of approximately 800 bp. This is the first record of the genus Dolichodorus in Spain and only the second in Europe. A key to species is provided.


ZooKeys ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 953 ◽  
pp. 1-29
Author(s):  
Thomas Wesener

Six new species of the Spirobolida millipede genus Riotintobolus Wesener, 2009, are described from the spiny forest in southern Madagascar utilising genetic barcoding, drawings and scanning electron microscopy: Riotintobolus tsimelahysp. nov., R. mangatsiakasp. nov., R. lavanonosp. nov., R. bovinussp. nov., R. antafokysp. nov. and R. makayisp. nov. One other Riotintobolus population from the spiny forest might represent an additional species based on genetic data, but it cannot be described as no male specimens were collected. At present, the genus Riotintobolus Wesener, 2009 has eight species from the spiny forest and two species from the littoral rainforest. A determination key to all ten species of the genus is provided. Molecular data reveal that the two critically endangered species from the humid littoral rainforest are not closely related to one another, but have their closest relative in the dry spiny forest ecosystem. Riotintobolus mandenensis Wesener, 2009, only known from the southern littoral rainforest of Mandena is related to R. tsimelahysp. nov. from the nearby spiny forest at Tsimelahy with a p-distance of 11%, while R. minutus Wesener, 2009 from the littoral forest of Sainte Luce is more distant to all other Riotintobolus species, but more closely related to R. bovinussp. nov. from the southwestern forest of the Makay.


Author(s):  
Piotr Kuklinski ◽  
Paul D. Taylor

Study of type and other material using scanning electron microscopy has permitted the recognition of three new species and one new genus of Arctic and boreal calloporid anascans. Originally described from the Gulf of St Lawrence, Callopora whiteavesi is reassigned to Flustrellaria, a calloporid genus not previously reported extant. Material from north-east Greenland misidentified as C. whiteavesi is described as C. weslawski sp. nov. The new genus Septentriopora is introduced for calloporids lacking pore chambers, with a distolateral pair of small interzooidal avicularia that face proximally or proximolaterally, and a reduced ovicell. The type species of Septentriopora, Tegella nigrans, has frequently been misidentified. Many of the supposed records of this species belong to two other species, described here as Septentriopora karasi sp. nov. and S. denisenkoae sp. nov. The apparent ovicell in S. karasi is particularly unusual, being vestigial and kenozooid-like in morphology.


Zootaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4571 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
ASAKO K. MATSUMOTO ◽  
LEEN P. VAN OFWEGEN ◽  
FREDERICK M. BAYER

Octocorals of the Acanthogorgiid genus Calcigorgia have been examined, from Japan, Sea of Okhotsk, and Bering Sea. The four known species are re-described and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images of sclerites presented. Three other species are described and depicted, bringing the total number of Calcigorgia species to seven. Calcigorgia simushiri, Dautova 2018 is synonymized with C. spiculifera Broch, 1935. A neotype for C. spiculifera has been designated. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4802 (1) ◽  
pp. 129-140
Author(s):  
PAULA RAILE RICCARDI

The monotypic genus Chaethippus Duda is revised, including the description of four new species from South America and a key to all species. Detailed illustrations of morphological features are also given using light and scanning electron microscopy. The affinities of Chaethippus within Oscinellinae are briefly addressed. 


Phytotaxa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 306 (4) ◽  
pp. 241 ◽  
Author(s):  
BING LIU ◽  
DAVID M. WILLIAMS ◽  
LIN TAN

Three new species of Ulnaria from the Wuling Mountains Area, China, have been studied by light and scanning electron microscopy. All possess at least six closed girdle bands. The pattern of valve striation is not uniform as some do not have a corresponding opposite structure. The cells of Ulnaria sinensis sp. nov. are linked and form colonies with frustules connected by interlocking linking spines. U. sinensis has very long valves (296–512 µm) and uniseriate striae. Both Ulnaria ulnabiseriata sp. nov. and Ulnaria gaowangjiensis sp. nov. have biseriate striae. U. ulnabiseriata differs from U. gaowangjiensis in LM by its more lanceolate valve shape as the valves of U. ulnabiseriata taper towards the pole from one third of the length of the valve, whist U. gaowangjiensis tapers towards the pole from two thirds of the length of the valve, and by its larger valve length (105–229 µm vs 61–108 µm). The three new species are all epilithic and were found in freshwater streams in or near nature reserves.


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