Published August 18, 2023 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Nitella silicea Casanova & Karol 2023, sp. nov.

Description

Nitella silicea Casanova & Karol, sp. nov.

Type: Woodford Lagoon, in 0.35 m of water, 3 Sep. 2010. M. T.Casanova & J.Schult r741 (holo: DNA!; iso MEL!, NY!).

Dioecious. Plants occurring as isolated, elongate plants with flabellate whorls; up to 4×furcate (Fig. 14 a). Axes up to 450 µm wide; internodes up to 100 mm long. Fertile branchlets 6 in a whorl, similar to the sterile branchlets but somewhat smaller (Fig. 14 c); primary segments up to 10 mm long; secondary segments 6 or 7, up to 11 mm long; tertiary segments 3–5, up to 11 mm long; quaternary segments (usually dactyls) 2 or 3, up to 1 mm long, rarely further divided, 2 dactyls up to 0.5 mm long; sterile branchlets 6 in a whorl; up to 30 mm long; hardly distinguished from fertile branchlets (Fig. 14 b). Fertile dactyls 2 or 3; bicellulate, the end-cell shortly conical and acute, confluent with the end of the penultimate cell; dactyls of variable lengths, up to 1 mm long (Fig. 14 d). Sterile dactyls similar to fertile; however, where there are fewer furcations the dactyls can be up to 3 mm long. Heads not formed, the upper whorls not much contracted. Gametangia on separate plants, antheridia single and central at the final 2 furcations. Oosporangia geminate or single, lateral to the upper-most fertile branchlet nodes (Fig. 14 d). Oosporangia up to 400 µm long × 350 µm wide with 8 helical stripes; coronula up to 35 µm high, the upper cells longer than the lower cells (Fig. 14 e). Oospores 290–300 µm long × 270–290 µm wide with 7 or 8 smooth striae (Fig. 14 f); the ornamentation consists of closely packed, rounded verrucae, similar to cobblestones (silice) (Fig. 14 g). Antheridia up to 250 µm in diameter. Chromosome numbers not known.

Taxonomic notes

These specimens would have been distinguished as Nitella furcata or N. mucronata (A.Braun) Miq. by Wood (1971) because of the short dactyls; however, Wood’s concept of those species was an amalgamation of morphologically similar monoecious (and ‘submonoecious’, in the case of N. flagelliformis A.Braun) species, including N. tumulosa Zaneveld, N. oligospira A.Braun, N. inversa Imahori, N. japonica T.F.Allen, N. axillaris A.Braun, N. axilliformis Imahori and N. orientalis, all of which are now recognised as distinct species (Sakayama et al. 2004, 2005; Sakayama 2008). Wood (1971) found that the herbarium specimens that he called N. furcata in Australia were almost invariably sterile or poor material. Nitella silicea is dioecious rather than monoecious, and appears to be restricted to the Northern Territory around Darwin. Other dioecious species in this group have different oospores (e.g. N. duthieae J.Groves & E.L.Stephens).

Recognition

Nitella silicea is distinguished by its very short dactyls (terminal branchlet segments), gametangia at the distalmost furcations, a lack of mucus and distinctive oospores.

Distribution

Nitella silicea grows in shallow lagoons at the end of the wet season around Darwin, possibly more widespread, fertile in September.

Etymology

Named for the ornamentation on the oospore wall, which resembles cobblestones (for which one translation is silice in Latin).

Specimens examined

NORTHERN TERRITORY: Lyons Lagoon, 3 Sep. 2010, M. T. Casanova & J. Schult r747 (MEL), r749 (MEL) .

Notes

Published as part of Casanova, Michelle T. & Karol, Kenneth G., 2023, Charophytes of Australia's Northern Territory - II. Tribe Nitelleae, pp. 322-353 in Australian Systematic Botany 36 (4) on pages 345-348, DOI: 10.1071/SB22029, http://zenodo.org/record/10904369

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
J , M, T , MEL
Event date
2010-09-03
Family
Characeae
Genus
Nitella
Kingdom
Plantae
Order
Charales
Phylum
Charophyta
Scientific name authorship
Casanova & Karol
Species
silicea
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Verbatim event date
2010-09-03
Taxonomic concept label
Nitella silicea Casanova & Karol, 2023

References

  • Wood RD (1971) Characeae of Australia. Nova Hedwigia 22, 1 - 120.
  • Sakayama H, Hara Y, Nozaki H (2004) Taxonomic re-examination of six species of Nitella (Charales, Charophyceae) from Asia, and phylogenetic relationships within the genus based on rbc L and atp B gene sequences. Phycologia 43, 91 - 104. doi: 10.2216 / i 0031 - 8884 - 43 - 1 - 91.1
  • Sakayama H, Miyaji K, Nagumo T, Kato M, Hara Y, Nozaki H (2005) Taxonomic reexamination of 17 species of Nitella subgenus Tieffallenia (Charales, Charophyceae) based on internal morphology of the oospore wall and multiple DNA marker sequences. Journal of Phycology 41, 195 - 211. doi: 10.1111 / j. 1529 - 8817.2005.04133. x
  • Sakayama H (2008) Review: Taxonomy of Nitella (Charales, Charophyceae) based on comparative morphology of oospores and multiple DNA marker phylogeny using cultured material. Phycological Research 56, 202 - 215. doi: 10.1111 / j. 1440 - 1835. 2008.00502. x