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Type: Article
Published: 2016-03-08
Page range: 31–42
Abstract views: 27
PDF downloaded: 1

Description of a new fossil diatom genus, Cribrionella gen. nov. (Bacillariophyta) from Quaternary sediments of Lake Ohrid

Department of Animal Ecology and Systematics, Justus-Liebig University Giessen, Heinrich-Buff-Ring 26-32, 35392 Giessen, Germany
Palaeoecology, Department of Physical Geography, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, Heidelberglaan 2, 3584 CS Utrecht, Netherlands
Institute of Biology, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Arhimedova 3, 1000 Skopje, R. of Macedonia
Department of Paleontology, Stratigraphy and Sedimentology, Institute of Geology, Bulgarian Academy of Science, Acad. G. Bunchev str. Bldg. 24. 1113 Sofia, Bulgaria
Institute of Biology, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Arhimedova 3, 1000 Skopje, R. of Macedonia
Cribrionella fossil diatoms Lake Ohrid sediment record taxonomy Algae

Abstract

A new diatom genus, Cribrionella gen. nov., is described from Quaternary sediments of Lake Ohrid. Cribrionella comprises distinct morphological features, such as: i) presence of submarginal alveoli followed by regularly or irregularly arranged areolae, ii) cribra on external areolar openings, iii) absence of silicate layers on internal areolar openings, but presence of thick and inwardly raised circumferential silica trabeculae, iv) rimoportulae positioned on costae, and v) absence of central fultoportulae. Detailed light and scanning electron microscope analyses were undertaken and used for comparison to morphologically related genera. The typus generis Cribrionella ohridana is compared to species from its morphologically closest genus Cyclotella sensu stricto (e.g., C. atomus, C. delicatula, C. bifacialis). Cribrionella ohridana has not been reported from the extant diatom flora of Lake Ohrid, nor in the nearby Lake Prespa. The discovery of a new genus in Lake Ohrid confirms again the importance of the lake, not only in light of species richness and endemicity, but also in evolutionary history of the family Stephanodiscaceae.