Nitzschia obtusa W. Smith 1853 ...

Nitzschia cf. obtusa W. Smith (Figure 99) Literature: (Krammer and Lange-Bertalot 1988, p. 25, fig. 17:1, 2, fig. 18.1; Witkowski et al. 2000. p. 396, pl. 201, figs. 7–9). Description: Length 160–165 µm, width 13–14 µm, fibulae 10–11 in 10 µm, striae very fine. Remarks: This species appears very sim...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Al-Handal, Adil Y., Torstensson, Anders, Wulff, Angela
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11094505
https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.11094505
Description
Summary:Nitzschia cf. obtusa W. Smith (Figure 99) Literature: (Krammer and Lange-Bertalot 1988, p. 25, fig. 17:1, 2, fig. 18.1; Witkowski et al. 2000. p. 396, pl. 201, figs. 7–9). Description: Length 160–165 µm, width 13–14 µm, fibulae 10–11 in 10 µm, striae very fine. Remarks: This species appears very similar to N. obtusa but has denser fibulae and striae. Nitzschia obtusa, however, is a brackish-water species and unlikely to be found in marine habitats. Ecology and distribution: A widely distributed brackish-water species. Rare in Potter Cove. ... : Published as part of Al-Handal, Adil Y., Torstensson, Anders & Wulff, Angela, 2022, Revisiting Potter Cove, King George Island, Antarctica, 12 years later: new observations of marine benthic diatoms, pp. 81-103 in Botanica Marina (Warsaw, Poland) (Warsaw, Poland) 65 (2) on page 97, DOI: 10.1515/bot-2021-0066, http://zenodo.org/record/11000147 ...