taxonID	type	description	language	source
A464225CFFA3FFD7C5CAFCD9FB5FF9B5.taxon	materials_examined	Type: — UNITED STATES. Maryland: under the ice in an ephemeral pond, east of Belcamp, Harford County, 39.4697 ° N, 76.2569 ° W. Sample collected by R. H. Thompson, February 1944. Fig. 1. Typification of the new species is based on the illustrations hereby published, as it was impossible to preserve specimens showing the features attributed to the taxon (McNeill et al. 2011, ICN art. 40.5).	en	Wujek, Daniel E. (2013): A new freshwater chrysophyte, Chrysomorula cohaerens gen. et sp. nov. (Chrysophyceae, Chrysocapsaceae) from North America. Phytotaxa 93 (2): 61-64, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.93.2.2, URL: https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/0f5e23ea-3c03-38f5-985b-cf2ff22cb7dd/
A464225CFFA3FFD7C5CAFCD9FB5FF9B5.taxon	etymology	Etymology: — The species name cohaerens is from the Latin, meaning “ adhering together ”.	en	Wujek, Daniel E. (2013): A new freshwater chrysophyte, Chrysomorula cohaerens gen. et sp. nov. (Chrysophyceae, Chrysocapsaceae) from North America. Phytotaxa 93 (2): 61-64, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.93.2.2, URL: https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/0f5e23ea-3c03-38f5-985b-cf2ff22cb7dd/
A464225CFFA3FFD7C5CAFCD9FB5FF9B5.taxon	discussion	Remarks: — The genus is distinctive by the nature of its macroscopic colonial habit, with cells forming a hollow sphere embedded in a matrix, and with pseudocilia extending from each cell to the periphery of the matrix. New colonies are formed by the fragmentation of the parent colony, often producing plankton forms. Cell reproduction appears to occur by binary division. Although quite rare, I have observed it primarily epiphytic on Oedogonium, Microspora, Rhizoclonium, and occasionally Utricularia. Additional USA sites in which Chrysomorula was observed: An I- 70 turnpike marsh, west of Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, May 1966 and Green’s Lake, Beaver Island, Charlevoix County, Michigan, May 1999.	en	Wujek, Daniel E. (2013): A new freshwater chrysophyte, Chrysomorula cohaerens gen. et sp. nov. (Chrysophyceae, Chrysocapsaceae) from North America. Phytotaxa 93 (2): 61-64, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.93.2.2, URL: https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/0f5e23ea-3c03-38f5-985b-cf2ff22cb7dd/
