Cavinula scutelloides Lange-Bertalot

Cavinula scutelloides (W. Smith) Lange-Bertalot (Figs 101–106, 165–171) Basionym: Navicula scutelloides W. Smith 1856 (in Synopsis of British Diatomaceae, Vol. 2, 107, figs: 32–60, 61–62) Valves elliptical, to round in smaller specimens with widely rounded apices. Valve length 12–26 µm, width 9.5–20...

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Main Authors: Cvetkoska, Aleksandra, Levkov, Zlatko, Hamilton, Paul B., Potapova, Marina
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5149459
https://zenodo.org/record/5149459
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5149459
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Chromista
Bacillariophyta
Bacillariophyceae
Naviculales
Cavinulaceae
Cavinula
Cavinula scutelloides
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Chromista
Bacillariophyta
Bacillariophyceae
Naviculales
Cavinulaceae
Cavinula
Cavinula scutelloides
Cvetkoska, Aleksandra
Levkov, Zlatko
Hamilton, Paul B.
Potapova, Marina
Cavinula scutelloides Lange-Bertalot
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Chromista
Bacillariophyta
Bacillariophyceae
Naviculales
Cavinulaceae
Cavinula
Cavinula scutelloides
description Cavinula scutelloides (W. Smith) Lange-Bertalot (Figs 101–106, 165–171) Basionym: Navicula scutelloides W. Smith 1856 (in Synopsis of British Diatomaceae, Vol. 2, 107, figs: 32–60, 61–62) Valves elliptical, to round in smaller specimens with widely rounded apices. Valve length 12–26 µm, width 9.5–20 µm. Striae radiate, 8–10 in 10 µm, uniseriate with coarse elliptic to rounded areolae. Areolae internally occluded with hymen. Central area can be transversely expanded on one side. A few short striae present around valve center; all striae continue on mantle. Axial area narrow, linear-lanceolate. Raphe system linear; externally, proximal raphe features tear-drop like on valve face. Distal raphe fissures bent in the same direction, question mark-like, terminating on the valve mantle. Internally, raphe positioned on elevated sternum. Proximal raphe features curved in same direction, hook-like, and distal raphe features terminate with helictoglossae. Type :––Omersby, Norfolk, United Kingdom. Here presented in Figs 103, 104 (type material). Observations:— This taxon is identified (Figs 103, 104 from type material) based on shape, size and the enlarged areolae on the valve face. The closest taxon to compare with would be C . pseudoscutiformis , however they are separated by shape of proximal raphe fissures, length of alternating striae around the central area, and areolae size, and orientation. In addition, C . scutelloides and C . pseudoscutiformis are found under different water acidity conditions. Distribution:— Currently this taxon is recognized as a cosmopolitan species across the temperate zone of the northern hemisphere, and relatively absent from the northern tundra with the possible exception of a small deep lake from northern Alaska (Foged 1971). C. scutelloides was identified in 26 samples in the CANA database. According to those identifications, this taxon is present in the central part of North America e.g. the province of British Columbia, Ontario, Quebéc (Canada) and New York and Massachusetts (USA). The absence of C. scutiformis in the slides and samples in which they were reported, led us to the conclusion that specimens of C. scutelloides were often identified as C. scutiformis. Accordingly, C. scutelloides was verified from the following localities: Low Water Lake (Sudbury District, Ontario), Singleton Lake (southern Ontario), Flower Round Lake (southern Ontario), Hawkins Lake (Interior Douglas Fir, British Columbia) and Sneezie Lake (Cariboo Aspen-Lodgepole pine, British Columbia), Canada. In the northern United States verified specimens were observed from Walden Pond Massachusetts and Queer Lake (Adirondack Park, New York). Searches in the data from ANSP, indicated that C. scutelloides was identified from central North America in the states of Wisconsin, Maine, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Connecticut, Michigan, Illinois, Idaho and Minnesota. C . scutelloides is absent in low pH water bodies, found from Florida to the high Arctic. However, in circumneutral to alkaline environment it was often observed. In western Canada, C . scutelloides was found to occur in lakes with a TP range of 7–39 µg /L (Cumming et al. 1995). Distribution Records:— Krammer & Lange-Bertalot (1986, fig. 59: 16–19, Europe), Levkov et al. (2007, fig. 68: 1–4, fig. 68: 6, fig. 69: 5, Europe), Watanabe (2005, fig: II 2B 3 -18: 16, 17, Japan), Foged (1971, fig. 15: 21, 22, Alaska). : Published as part of Cvetkoska, Aleksandra, Levkov, Zlatko, Hamilton, Paul B. & Potapova, Marina, 2014, The biogeographic distribution of Cavinula (Bacillariophyceae) in North America with the descriptions of two new species, pp. 181-207 in Phytotaxa 184 (4) on page 196, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.184.4.1, http://zenodo.org/record/5146714 : {"references": ["Foged, N. (1971) Diatoms found in a bottom sediment sample from a small deep lake on the Northern Slope, Alaska. Nova Hedwigia 21: 1 - 114.", "Cumming, B. F., Wilson, S. E., Hall, R. I. & Smol, J. P. (1995) Diatoms from British Columbia (Canada) lakes and their relationship to salinity, nutrients and other limnological variables. Bibliotheca Diatomologica 31: 1 - 207.", "Krammer, K. & Lange-Bertalot, H. (1986) Bacillariophyceae, 1. Teil: Naviculaceae. In: Ettl, H., Gerloff, J., Heynig, H. & Mollenhauer, D. (Eds.) Gustav Fischer, Stuttgart. Susswasserflora von Mitteleuropa (begrundet von A. Pascher) 2 / 1: 876 pp.", "Levkov, Z., Krstic, S., Metzeltin, D. & Nakov, T. (2007) Diatoms of Lakes Prespa and Ohrid. About 500 taxa from ancient lake system. Iconographia Diatomologica 16: 603.", "Watanabe, T., Ohtsuka, T., Tuji, A., Houki, A. (2005) Picture book and ecology of the freshwater diatoms. Uchida-rokakuho, Tokyo, 666 pp."]}
format Text
author Cvetkoska, Aleksandra
Levkov, Zlatko
Hamilton, Paul B.
Potapova, Marina
author_facet Cvetkoska, Aleksandra
Levkov, Zlatko
Hamilton, Paul B.
Potapova, Marina
author_sort Cvetkoska, Aleksandra
title Cavinula scutelloides Lange-Bertalot
title_short Cavinula scutelloides Lange-Bertalot
title_full Cavinula scutelloides Lange-Bertalot
title_fullStr Cavinula scutelloides Lange-Bertalot
title_full_unstemmed Cavinula scutelloides Lange-Bertalot
title_sort cavinula scutelloides lange-bertalot
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2014
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5149459
https://zenodo.org/record/5149459
long_lat ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000)
ENVELOPE(-97.000,-97.000,-71.867,-71.867)
ENVELOPE(142.665,142.665,-66.993,-66.993)
geographic Arctic
Canada
British Columbia
Walden
Round Lake
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
British Columbia
Walden
Round Lake
genre Arctic
Tundra
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Tundra
Alaska
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5149459
https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.184.4.1
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5149459 2023-05-15T15:20:21+02:00 Cavinula scutelloides Lange-Bertalot Cvetkoska, Aleksandra Levkov, Zlatko Hamilton, Paul B. Potapova, Marina 2014 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5149459 https://zenodo.org/record/5149459 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/5146714 http://publication.plazi.org/id/7665E764A46CFF921D218F632070FFCC https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.184.4.1 http://zenodo.org/record/5146714 http://publication.plazi.org/id/7665E764A46CFF921D218F632070FFCC https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5146722 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5146734 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5149458 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Chromista Bacillariophyta Bacillariophyceae Naviculales Cavinulaceae Cavinula Cavinula scutelloides Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2014 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5149459 https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.184.4.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5146722 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5146734 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5149458 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Cavinula scutelloides (W. Smith) Lange-Bertalot (Figs 101–106, 165–171) Basionym: Navicula scutelloides W. Smith 1856 (in Synopsis of British Diatomaceae, Vol. 2, 107, figs: 32–60, 61–62) Valves elliptical, to round in smaller specimens with widely rounded apices. Valve length 12–26 µm, width 9.5–20 µm. Striae radiate, 8–10 in 10 µm, uniseriate with coarse elliptic to rounded areolae. Areolae internally occluded with hymen. Central area can be transversely expanded on one side. A few short striae present around valve center; all striae continue on mantle. Axial area narrow, linear-lanceolate. Raphe system linear; externally, proximal raphe features tear-drop like on valve face. Distal raphe fissures bent in the same direction, question mark-like, terminating on the valve mantle. Internally, raphe positioned on elevated sternum. Proximal raphe features curved in same direction, hook-like, and distal raphe features terminate with helictoglossae. Type :––Omersby, Norfolk, United Kingdom. Here presented in Figs 103, 104 (type material). Observations:— This taxon is identified (Figs 103, 104 from type material) based on shape, size and the enlarged areolae on the valve face. The closest taxon to compare with would be C . pseudoscutiformis , however they are separated by shape of proximal raphe fissures, length of alternating striae around the central area, and areolae size, and orientation. In addition, C . scutelloides and C . pseudoscutiformis are found under different water acidity conditions. Distribution:— Currently this taxon is recognized as a cosmopolitan species across the temperate zone of the northern hemisphere, and relatively absent from the northern tundra with the possible exception of a small deep lake from northern Alaska (Foged 1971). C. scutelloides was identified in 26 samples in the CANA database. According to those identifications, this taxon is present in the central part of North America e.g. the province of British Columbia, Ontario, Quebéc (Canada) and New York and Massachusetts (USA). The absence of C. scutiformis in the slides and samples in which they were reported, led us to the conclusion that specimens of C. scutelloides were often identified as C. scutiformis. Accordingly, C. scutelloides was verified from the following localities: Low Water Lake (Sudbury District, Ontario), Singleton Lake (southern Ontario), Flower Round Lake (southern Ontario), Hawkins Lake (Interior Douglas Fir, British Columbia) and Sneezie Lake (Cariboo Aspen-Lodgepole pine, British Columbia), Canada. In the northern United States verified specimens were observed from Walden Pond Massachusetts and Queer Lake (Adirondack Park, New York). Searches in the data from ANSP, indicated that C. scutelloides was identified from central North America in the states of Wisconsin, Maine, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Connecticut, Michigan, Illinois, Idaho and Minnesota. C . scutelloides is absent in low pH water bodies, found from Florida to the high Arctic. However, in circumneutral to alkaline environment it was often observed. In western Canada, C . scutelloides was found to occur in lakes with a TP range of 7–39 µg /L (Cumming et al. 1995). Distribution Records:— Krammer & Lange-Bertalot (1986, fig. 59: 16–19, Europe), Levkov et al. (2007, fig. 68: 1–4, fig. 68: 6, fig. 69: 5, Europe), Watanabe (2005, fig: II 2B 3 -18: 16, 17, Japan), Foged (1971, fig. 15: 21, 22, Alaska). : Published as part of Cvetkoska, Aleksandra, Levkov, Zlatko, Hamilton, Paul B. & Potapova, Marina, 2014, The biogeographic distribution of Cavinula (Bacillariophyceae) in North America with the descriptions of two new species, pp. 181-207 in Phytotaxa 184 (4) on page 196, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.184.4.1, http://zenodo.org/record/5146714 : {"references": ["Foged, N. (1971) Diatoms found in a bottom sediment sample from a small deep lake on the Northern Slope, Alaska. Nova Hedwigia 21: 1 - 114.", "Cumming, B. F., Wilson, S. E., Hall, R. I. & Smol, J. P. (1995) Diatoms from British Columbia (Canada) lakes and their relationship to salinity, nutrients and other limnological variables. Bibliotheca Diatomologica 31: 1 - 207.", "Krammer, K. & Lange-Bertalot, H. (1986) Bacillariophyceae, 1. Teil: Naviculaceae. In: Ettl, H., Gerloff, J., Heynig, H. & Mollenhauer, D. (Eds.) Gustav Fischer, Stuttgart. Susswasserflora von Mitteleuropa (begrundet von A. Pascher) 2 / 1: 876 pp.", "Levkov, Z., Krstic, S., Metzeltin, D. & Nakov, T. (2007) Diatoms of Lakes Prespa and Ohrid. About 500 taxa from ancient lake system. Iconographia Diatomologica 16: 603.", "Watanabe, T., Ohtsuka, T., Tuji, A., Houki, A. (2005) Picture book and ecology of the freshwater diatoms. Uchida-rokakuho, Tokyo, 666 pp."]} Text Arctic Tundra Alaska DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Canada British Columbia ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000) Walden ENVELOPE(-97.000,-97.000,-71.867,-71.867) Round Lake ENVELOPE(142.665,142.665,-66.993,-66.993)