Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Type: Article
Published: 2015-04-02
Page range: 117–192
Abstract views: 23
PDF downloaded: 2

Revision of Navicula striolata (Grunow) Lange-Bertalot and N. rumaniensis Hustedt with the description of N. friedelhinziae sp. nov.

Institute of Nature Conservation, Polish Academy of Sciences, A. Mickiewicza 33, 31-120 Kraków, Poland
Department of Paleontology, Stratigraphy and Sedimentology, Geological Institute, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Acad. G. Bonchev-Street Build. 24, 1113 Sofia, Bulgaria
Department of Botany, Hungarian Natural History Museum, Könyves Kálmán krt. 40, 1476 Budapest, Hungary
Jagiellonian University, Institute of Geography and Spatial Management, Gronostajowa 7, 30-387 Kraków, Poland
Botanic Garden, Meise, Department of Bryophyta & Thallophyta, Nieuwelaan 38, B-1860 Meise, Belgium University of Antwerp, Department of Biology, ECOBE, Universiteitsplein 1, B-2610 Wilrijk, Belgium
Bacillariophyta collections diatoms Navicula taxonomy type material

Abstract

Navicula striolata was originally described as N. digitoradiata var. striolata from modern material collected in Sweden. After examination of a sample collected from Belgium, the variety was transferred to N. reinhardtii as N. reinhardti var. gracilior. From this time a large mix up of these and related taxa was observed in the literature. A similar species, Navicula rumaniensis had also been established in 1934 from Neogene Romanian materials but there has been much confusion regarding the status of these taxa, leading to a poor understanding of their distribution. In this study, type material of Navicula digitoradiata var. striolata, N. reinhardtii var. gracilior and N. rumaniensis are revised using light and scanning electron microscopy in order to clarify their identity and to investigate possible conspecificity. The results indicate that these species are not synonyms. Conspecificity of the modern N. digitoradiata var. striolata and N. reinhardti var. gracilior was confirmed and lectotypes of both varieties have been designated whereas N. rumaniensis proved to be a separate species. In addition, the study of Neogene material from Bulgaria revealed the presence of a new Navicula taxon—N. friedelhinziae. The morphology of these and similar taxa is discussed.