AI Article Synopsis

  • The reproductive development of Ardissonea crystallina shows a unique process of growth, combining familiar and new structural elements.
  • Through light and electron microscopy, researchers identified distinct stages in the development of auxospores, revealing a delicate initial wall and a novel form of incunabular scales.
  • The study highlights the importance of scaly transverse perizonial bands in understanding the evolution of polar centric diatoms, suggesting the need for clearer distinctions between these and the bands found in pennate diatoms.

Article Abstract

Reproductive development in Ardissonea crystallina revealed a unique mode of enlargement involving a combination of novel and known structures. In light microscopy, auxospores of this elongated polar centric diatom were superficially similar to the auxospores of pennates. With SEM we found three different components in the auxospore wall. In the youngest, nearly spherical cell-stage, the wall consisted only of a delicate veil containing minute siliceous spherules. Incunabular elements developed underneath this layer. Second, a previously unknown form of specifically modified incunabular scales shaped the subsequent ellipsoidal-capsule auxospore stage. Third, there was a clear contribution of scales to the development of scaly transverse perizonial bands (or scaly bands, for brevity). Such bands, although noted by previous researchers, have not been fully appreciated for the evolutionary information they may convey: possibly common among polar centrics but not pennates. Finally, we propose maintaining the term transverse perizonium to refer to these bands in polar diatoms, but to introduce the differentiation of scaly bands described here from pinnate bands (currently known as typical of pennates). Further research into band types among polar centrics may provide new insights into the relationship between the groups within polar centrics that are currently unresolved by molecular methods.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.protis.2018.05.001DOI Listing

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