Abstract

Numerous species of Eunotia Ehrenb., widely distributed in the world flora, prefer acidic, dystrophic or oligotrophic freshwater habitats with low conductivity and usually occur in epiphytic or epilithic hydrotopes. In Ukraine, only 32 species and eight varieties of Eunotia were known until this study. For the first time, 9 more species have been recorded mainly from the Cheremsky Nature Reserve, located in Ukrainian Polissya. New findings include 2 species widely distributed in the world flora on most continents and 7 rare species known from several locations, among them E.genuflexa, E.jarensis and E.ruzickae, which are probably European endemics as they have not been reported from other continents. For the present time in the Cheremsky Nature Reserve, the 20 species recorded here, the highest species richness of Eunotia in Ukraine, bring the total number of Eunotia in Ukraine to 41 species, which comprises only 7% of Eunotia species in the world flora. This is indirect evidence of insufficient investigation of the wetlands in Ukraine where Eunotia usually is represented with high species richness. Several definitions are suggested to describe morphological features that are peculiar to the diatom frustule particular to the Eunotia species. The genus Eunotia possesses a mirror-symmetric, mantle-offset, brevisslit raphe system, which may or may not have terminal raphe fissures. Morphological analysis provided in this study revealed the absence of terminal raphe fissures for many species of Eunotia. Instead, the distal ends of the raphe slits finish on the outer valve surface by funnel holes, sometimes pore-like ones, connected with the helictoglossae. However, in the literature those distal ends of the raphe slits were described erroneously as terminal raphe fissures. For the first time different types of raphe system are grounded. Two species Eunotiaimplicata Nörpel-Schempp et al. in Alles et al. and Eunotiaincisa W. Smith ex Gregory were lectotypified.

Highlights

  • The Cheremsky Nature Reserve, located in Ukrainian Polissya, Volyn region, in the interfluve of Stokhid and Veselukha rivers, occupies about 3 thousand ha

  • New findings include 2 species widely distributed in the world flora on most continents and 7 rare species known from several locations, among them E. genuflexa, E. jarensis and E. ruzickae, which are probably European endemics as they have not been reported from other continents

  • The revised definitions suggested here for some widely used terms and new ones are grounded on the concept of functional morphology of the diatom frustule (Bukhtiyarova 2009a, 2019) which includes a number of theses, in particular the division of all diatom frustule structures on the basic elements and functional units

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Summary

Introduction

The Cheremsky Nature Reserve, located in Ukrainian Polissya, Volyn region, in the interfluve of Stokhid and Veselukha rivers, occupies about 3 thousand ha. Two lakes within the Cheremsky Nature Reserve Cheremske Many of the diatom taxa recorded for the first time in Ukraine were from the Cheremsky Nature Reserve and included: Eunotia silvahercynia Nörpel et al in Alles et al (1991), Pinnularia complexa Krammer (2000), P. lokana Krammer (2000), P. nobilis var. In the Cheremsky Nature Reserve only 9 species of Eunotia were known from the Cheremske and Redychi lakes prior to this study

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