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Montana Field Guide

Montana Field Guides

A Diatom - Stauroneis rex

Native Species

Global Rank: GNR
State Rank: SNR


Agency Status
USFWS:
USFS:
BLM:


 




 
General Description
Morphological Category – Symmetric biraphid

Valves lanceolate and very large with blunt, broadly rounded apices. Axial Area moderately broad and linear. Central Area a rectangular stauros, often narrowing somewhat towards valve margins. Shortened striae may be present in central area. External raphe fissures lateral. Proximal raphe ends straight and somewhat inflated. Striae radiate throughout. Areolae coarse, 11-14 in 10 µm.

Size Range
Length 215-386 µm. Width 38-60 µm. Striae in 10 µm 12-14.

Useful Link:
Diatom Glossary [Diatoms of North America website]

Diagnostic Characteristics
The largest Stauroneis species in Montana is Stauroneis rex, and striking for its size (Bahls personal communication).

Stauroneis phoenicenteron has smaller valves than S. rex (26-35 µm wide by 129-199 µm long) and a higher stria density (15-18 in 10 µm). It is likely that S. rex has been misidentified as S. phoenicenteron in U.S. surveys.

Range Comments
Type Locality
Handkerchief Lake, Flathead National Forest, Montana.
Specimen housed at the University of Montana Herbarium (MONTU).

Global distribution
North America (Montana, Nevada and South Dakota)

Western North America
Number of Observations in Montana Diatom Collection Database (1968-present): 18;
Montana: 16


Habitat
Lakes and ponds, mainly in the mountains (Bahls 2021).

Ecology
Warm, alkaline waters with moderate nutrients and conductivity (Bahls 2021).

Reproductive Characteristics
Diatoms typically reproduce by cell division (mitosis) and occasionally by meiosis—sexual reproduction in which female and male gametes combine to form a specialized zygote called an auxospore. Repeated divisions result in cells of a population becoming progressively smaller and smaller. When cells reach a critically small size, sexual reproduction is initiated, resulting in an auxospore and initial cells that are the largest attainable for the species, after which cell division and size reduction resume (Amato 2010).


Threats or Limiting Factors
Climate change and regional warming.

References
  • Literature Cited AboveLegend:   View Online Publication
    • Amato, A. 2010. Diatom reproductive biology: living in a crystal cage. The International Journal of Plant Reproductive Biology 2(1): 1-10.
    • Bahls, Loren. 2021. Diatoms of Montana and Western North America: Catalog and Atlas of Species in the Montana Diatom Collection Volume 1. The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Special Publication 24. 508pp.
    • Montana Diatom Collection. 1968-Present. The Montana Diatom Collection at The University of Montana Herbarium (MONTU). Giovanna Bishop, Curator and Collections Manager, MONTU, University of Montana, Missoula, Montana.
  • Additional ReferencesLegend:   View Online Publication
    Do you know of a citation we're missing?
    • Bahls, Loren. 2023. Diatoms of Montana and western North America: Catalog and atlas of species in the Montana diatom collection Volume 2. The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Special Publication 27. 600pp.
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Citation for data on this website:
A Diatom — Stauroneis rex.  Montana Field Guide.  .  Retrieved on , from