Andrzej Witkowski was right: Tryblionella compressa is not a Tryblionella
View/Open
Publication date
2025-01-29DOI
DOI: 10.1127/nova_hedwigia/2025/0984
ISSN
0029-5035
Abstract
Tryblionella punctata was described by W. Smith in 1853, transferred to Nitzschia by
Grunow in 1880, and returned to Tryblionella in 1990 by Round et al., when the genus was restored
and 41 species transferred into it from Nitzschia. Meanwhile, the species was claimed to be a synonym of Pyxidicula compressa by Boyer, who made the new combination Nitzschia compressa,
though most authors continued to use N. punctata. The 1990 restoration of Tryblionella was not
accepted by some, including Andrzej Witkowski et al. in their key work on coastal marine diatoms
[2000, Diatom Flora of Marine Coasts], but others did accept it and M. Poulin accordingly made
the new combination T. compressa. Although we demonstrate that T. compressa (as currently understood in the literature and exemplified by isolates from a coastal lagoon) has wide valves, an almost
marginal raphe system, a strongly undulate valve face and a marginal ridge, like most species assigned to Tryblionella, molecular evidence indicates that it is not related to the group containing the
type of Tryblionella, T. acuminata. Instead, it belongs to a clade (Bacillariaceae clade 8B) containing lanceolate Nitzschia species such as N. amphibia, N. inconspicua and N. reskoi, as well as Denticula kuetzingii. Some morphological characters support the same relationship, notably the structure of the girdle, which has alternating wide and narrow bands in the epitheca. Morphology suggests
further that T. lanceola is a close relative. Both species need to be removed from Tryblionella but
Bacillariaceae clade 8B does not correspond to any single accepted, named genus and there is no
named monophyletic group to which they can yet be transferred. Until a consensus is reached about
generic circumscriptions in the Bacillariaceae, we suggest that the classification of the two species
should revert to the pre-1990 state (i.e. assignment to Nitzschia), to maximize continuity with older
literature and maintain the current naming of isolate CCMP561, which is a strain widely used in
genomic and biochemical studies. This also solves the problem that, on the basis of Bailey’s description and illustrations, ‘compressa’ cannot be used for this species. In contrast, authentic Smith material and illustrations of T. punctata agree well morphologically, though not perfectly, with the three
genetically characterized isolates, allowing them all to be assigned for the moment to N. punctata
sensu lato. Witkowski et al.’s caution about the 1990 changes was abundantly justified.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Accepted version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
574 - General ecology and biodiversity
Pages
42
Publisher
Borntraeger Science Publishers
Is part of
Nova Hedwigia
Grant agreement number
EC/H2020/823827/EC/Synthesis of systematic resources/SYNTHESYS PLUS
Program
Aigües Marines i Continentals
Recommended citation
This citation was generated automatically.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [3488]
Rights
© J. Cramer in Gebrüder Borntraeger Verlagsbuchhandlung

