identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03B008573302FFB9FF52FA947EC9C57A.text	03B008573302FFB9FF52FA947EC9C57A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Frustulia hengduanensis Luo & You & Yu & Wang 2022	<div><p>Frustulia hengduanensis sp. nov. Fen Luo &amp; Quanxi Wang (LM Figs 1–14, SEM Figs 15–24)</p> <p>Description:— LM: Valves elliptico-lanceolate or rhomboid with slightly undulate margins. Apices narrowly rounded and moderately protracted. Valve length 43–55 μm, breadth 11–14 μm (n=30). The longitudinal ribs slightly curved. On the valve face, the striation patterns are weakly discernible under LM. Striae absent within the central area, forming a dumbbell-shaped hyaline zone (Figs 1–14).</p> <p>SEM: External view, the striae parallel at the valve center and slightly convergent towards the apices, with 36–40 striae per 10 μm (Fig. 15). Striae wavy along the length of the valve (Figs 15–16). The valve ends circumradiated by one or two rows of areolae (Figs 18–19). Areolae rounded to elliptical at the valve center and more slit-like distally, with 33–36 areolae per 10 μm (Figs 17–18). Striae absent within the central area, forming a dumbbell-shaped hyaline zone (Figs 16–17). The raphe is filiform, and both the proximal and the terminal raphe ends are T-shaped (Figs 17–19). Internal view, areolae have circular to rectangular hymenes (Fig. 22). Both the longitudinal ribs and the raphe slightly curved (Fig. 20), while both proximal and terminal raphe ends are straight (Figs 21–24). At the apices, the longitudinal ribs and the helictoglossae fuse to form a small porte-crayon (Fig. 24).</p> <p>Type: — CHINA. Sichuan Province: Hengduan Mountains, Q.X. Wang, F. Luo and colleagues, August 2015 (holotype SHTU! SC201508131, Biology Department Diatom Herbarium, Shanghai Normal University, Shanghai, China = Fig. 2. Isotype YXNU! SC201508131, Biology Department Diatom Herbarium, Yuxi Normal University, Yuxi City, Yunnan Province, China).</p> <p>Etymology: —The species is named for its type locality in the Hengduan Mountains.</p> <p>Ecology: —All samples were collected from fen peat and a stream fen at elevations of 4160–4750 m asl in freshwater at 5.3–15.3 °C, with pH 6.9–8.1, salinity 0.01–0.08 ‰, and conductivity 20–91 μs∙ cm-1..</p> <p>Distribution: —This species is known from five samples collected in the Haizi Mountain Reserve, Daocheng County, Sichuan Province, China (slide nos. SC201508127, SC201508128, SC201508131, SC201508132, and SC201508137) and from one sample collected in Zuogong County, Tibet (slide no. HDS201810304).</p></div> 	http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B008573302FFB9FF52FA947EC9C57A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Luo, Fen;You, Qingmin;Yu, Pan;Wang, Quanxi	Luo, Fen, You, Qingmin, Yu, Pan, Wang, Quanxi (2022): Frustulia hengduanensis sp. nov. a new diatom (Bacillariophyceae) from Hengduan Mountains, China. Phytotaxa 559 (2): 193-199, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.559.2.8
