11 results on '"Kim J. Krahn"'
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2. Rain Forest Fragmentation and Environmental Dynamics on Nosy Be Island (NW Madagascar) at 1300 cal BP Is Attributable to Intensified Human Impact
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Antonia L. Reinhardt, Thomas Kasper, Maximilian Lochner, Marcel Bliedtner, Kim J. Krahn, Torsten Haberzettl, Lyudmila Shumilovskikh, Jean-Jacques Rahobisoa, Roland Zech, Charly Favier, Hermann Behling, Laurent Bremond, Gerhard Daut, and Vincent Montade
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maar lake ,soil erosion ,palynology ,charcoal ,diatom ,sedimentology ,Evolution ,QH359-425 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Madagascar houses one of the Earth’s biologically richest, but also one of most endangered, terrestrial ecoregions. Although it is obvious that humans substantially altered the natural ecosystems during the past decades, the timing of arrival of early inhabitants on Madagascar as well as their environmental impact is still intensively debated. This research aims to study the beginning of early human impact on Malagasy natural ecosystems, specifically on Nosy Be island (NW Madagascar) by targeting the sedimentary archive of Lake Amparihibe, an ancient volcanic crater. Based on pollen, fungal spore, other non-pollen palynomorph, charcoal particle and diatom analyses combined with high-resolution sediment-physical and (in)organic geochemical data, paleoenvironmental dynamics during the past three millennia were reconstructed. Results indicate a major environmental change at ca. 1300 cal BP characterized by an abrupt development of grass (C4) dominated and fire disturbed landscape showing the alteration of natural rain forest. Further, increased soil erodibility is suggested by distinct increase in sediment accumulation rates, a strong pulse of nutrient input, higher water turbidity and contemporaneous increase in spores of mycorrhizal fungi. These parameters are interpreted to show a strong early anthropogenic transformation of the landscape from rain forest to open grassland. After ca. 1000 cal BP, fires remain frequent and vegetation is dominated by forest/grassland mosaic. While natural vegetation should be dominated by rain forest on Nosy Be, these last results indicate that human continuously impacted the landscapes surrounding the lake. At a local scale, our data support the “subsistence shift hypothesis” which proposed that population expansion with development of herding/farming altered the natural ecosystems. However, a precise regional synthesis is challenging, since high-resolution multi-proxy records from continuous sedimentary archives as well as records located further north and in the hinterland are still scarce in Madagascar. The lack of such regional synthesis also prevents precise comparison between different regions in Madagascar to detect potential (dis)similarities in climate dynamics, ecosystem responses and anthropogenic influences at the island’s scale during the (late) Holocene.
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- 2022
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3. Vegetation dynamics in a disturbed lacustrine record: The Eocene maar lake of Groß-Zimmern (Hesse, SW Germany)
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Jürgen Mutzl, Olaf K. Lenz, Volker Wilde, Kim J. Krahn, Maryam Moshayedi, and Matthias Hinderer
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Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology ,Paleontology ,Geology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Palynological studies of lacustrine sediments in Eocene maar craters on the Sprendlinger Horst (Hesse, SW Germany) are complemented by 26 core samples from Groß-Zimmern. In addition, diatoms have been studied to assess palaeolimnological conditions. The palynomorph assemblage proves a middle Eocene age more or less coeval to the upper part of the nearby lacustrine succession at Messel. The core includes 33 m of massive to finely laminated bituminous shale abruptly following the underlying breccia of the diatreme filling. The lacustrine deposits are characterised by frequent mass movements and redeposition probably due to tectonic activity in combination with syn- and postsedimentary subsidence in the lake basin. Together with a diatom assemblage characteristic for shallow to moderately deep water, this indicates that the core was drilled in the area of a marginal syncline rather than in the centre of the basin. Freshwater conditions with low nutrient levels were inferred for Lake Groß-Zimmern from diatoms and coccal green algae. Despite the strong disturbance of the sedimentary record, results of cluster analysis and non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) of the palynomorph assemblages can be compared to the undisturbed succession from Messel. This includes successional stages of the azonal vegetation in the crater area during an initial and early recolonisation phase as well as in the zonal vegetation, which are related to the reoccupation of the crater area by a thermophilic forest. Furthermore, slight changes of the climate can be inferred.
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- 2022
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4. Imprints of the Little Ice Age and the severe earthquake of AD 2001 on the aquatic ecosystem of a tropical maar lake in El Salvador
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Marta Wojewódka-Przybył, Kim J Krahn, Ladislav Hamerlík, Laura Macario-González, Sergio Cohuo, Fernanda Charqueño-Celis, Anaís Cisneros, Philipp Hoelzmann, Handong Yang, Neil L Rose, Edyta Zawisza, Liseth Pérez, and Antje Schwalb
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Archeology ,Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology ,Paleontology ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Using a 530-year sediment record from the maar Lake Apastepeque, El Salvador, and based on diverse geochemical and biological (cladocerans, chironomids, diatoms, ostracods, testate amoebae) indicators, we estimated climatic and environmental alterations during the Little Ice Age (LIA) and reconstructed the recent history of the lake. Results demonstrate relatively humid conditions in the mid-elevations (500 m a.s.l.) of El Salvador during most parts of the LIA, resulting in high lake levels. Contrarily, the first part of the LIA was characterized by drier climates comparable to studies from Mexico and Belize, which correlated this phase with the Spörer minimum. Regional comparison with palaeorecords from the northern Neotropics reveals a high heterogeneity in local expressions of the LIA in Central America, likely connected to the high topographic heterogeneity of the region. Since the beginning of the 20th century, Lake Apastepeque has experienced enhanced human impact expressed as increased nutrient supply. The most recent period was characterized by significant environmental disturbance, which we relate to an upper-crustal earthquake, one of the strongest over the last 500 years, that affected the region on 13th February 2001 (Mw = 6.6, epicentre at 10 km depth, 30 km from the lake). The release of toxic bottom components such as hydrogen sulphide and high turbidity and turbulence of water caused major species turnover in the lake ecosystem, resulting in a massive fish kill and colonization by large cladocerans. Modern sediments still show slightly altered biota communities compared to pre-earthquake assemblages, indicating that the ecosystem has still not fully recovered.
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- 2022
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5. Aquatic and terrestrial proxy evidence for Middle Pleistocene palaeolake and lake‐shore development at two Lower Palaeolithic sites of Schöningen, Germany
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Julien Pilgrim, Kim J. Krahn, Antje Schwalb, Brigitte Urban, Mario Tucci, Peter Frenzel, Ingeborg Soulié-Märsche, Krahn, Kim J., 1Institute of Geosystems and Bioindication Technische Universität Braunschweig Langer Kamp 19c Braunschweig 38106 Germany, Tucci, Mario, 2Institute of Ecology Landscape Change Leuphana University Lüneburg Universitätsallee 1 Lüneburg 21335 Germany, Urban, Brigitte, Pilgrim, Julien, Frenzel, Peter, 3Institute of Geosciences Friedrich Schiller University Jena Burgweg 11 Jena 07749 Germany, Soulié‐Märsche, Ingeborg, 4Institut des Sciences de l’Évolution (ISE‐M) Université de Montpellier – CNRS Case 061, Place Eugène Bataillon Montpellier 34095 France, and Schwalb, Antje
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Shore ,551.79 ,Archeology ,geography ,Middle Pleistocene ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Pleistocene ,Geology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Schöningen ,Ecosystems Research ,Reinsdorf sequence ,pollen ,Pollen ,aquatic microfossils ,medicine ,Physical geography ,lake-shore development ,Proxy (statistics) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The archaeological sites in the open‐cast mine of Schöningen, Germany, represent outstanding archives for understanding Middle Pleistocene interglacial–glacial transitions and human adaption. Aquatic microfossil and pollen assemblages from the ‘Reinsdorf sequence’, likely correlated to Marine Isotope Stage 9, document environmental changes from a thermal maximum to succeeding glacial conditions recorded in two sequences of excavation sites 12 II and 13 II. Multi‐proxy analyses enable detailed reconstruction of lake‐shore and landscape developments despite variable microfossil preservation in changing carbonate‐ and organic‐rich deposits. Rich aquatic vegetation with abundant charophytes suggests repeated phases with water depths of 0.5–2 m at site 13 II, while even greater temporary depths are deduced for 12 II DB. Mesorheophilic and mesotitanophilic ostracod species indicate stream inflows with medium–low calcium contents of >18 mg Ca L–1 originating from nearby springs. Diatoms point to meso‐eutrophic conditions and an alkaline pH of the lake water. Interglacial conditions with thermophile forests but no aquatic microfossils preserved, suggesting a dry or only temporarily flooded site, mark the beginning of the sequence. Continuous presence of aquatic organisms and overall dominance of small tychoplanktonic diatoms during a subsequent cool steppe phase provide evidence for increased water depths and unstable habitats characterized by erosion and probably prolonged periods of lake ice cover. During the succeeding boreal forest‐steppe phase, surface runoff into the productive, shallow lake decreased due to a more extensive vegetation cover. Concurrently, intensified groundwater input in contact with the nearby salt wall caused elevated salinities. Following a lake level drop, stream inflows and lake levels increased again towards the end of the Reinsdorf sequence and promoted development of a diverse fauna and flora at the lake shore; thereby maintaining an attractive living and hunting environment for early humans during a phase of generally cooler temperatures and landscape instability at the transition into a glacial period., Niedersächsisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kultur http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100010570, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
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- 2021
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6. Three new needle-shaped Fragilaria species from Central America and the Tibetan Plateau
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Anja Schwarz, Liseth Pérez, Junbo Wang, Antje Schwalb, Laura Macario-González, Carlos E. Wetzel, Kim J. Krahn, Gerhard Daut, and Sergio Cohuo-Durán
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geography ,Plateau ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Fragilaria ,Taxon ,Algae ,Genus ,Crater lake ,Botany ,Sediment trap ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Three new needle-shaped Fragilaria species from freshwater lake Apastepeque in El Salvador (Fragilaria salvadoriana sp. nov., F. maarensis sp. nov.) and subsaline lake Nam Co on the Tibetan Plateau (F. huebeneri sp. nov.) are described and compared based on light and scanning electron microscopy observations and morphometric analyses. Fragilaria salvadoriana sp. nov. is characterized by narrowly linear-lanceolate, sometimes centrally constricted valves, subcapitate to rarely capitate apices, and a distinct, dented appearing central area. Striae are composed of 2−5 occluded areolae. It can be differentiated from similar needle-shaped species by the valve outline, relatively low striae density, and shark fin-shaped spines. Characteristic of F. maarensis sp. nov. are a very narrowly lanceolate valve outline and subcapitate apices. The apical pore field is composed of 2–3 rows of poroids and acute, irregularly oriented spines are present at the junction between valve face and mantle. This taxon is clearly different from other Fragilaria species, displaying a high length-to-width ratio and a low number of areolae per stria. The Tibetan species, F. huebeneri sp. nov., forms long ribbon-like colonies linked together by spatula-shaped spines. Valves have subcapitate apices, a spindle- to needle-shaped outline and an indistinct central area. Striae are alternate and composed of 3–5 areolae per stria. Teratological forms of F. huebeneri sp. nov. were commonly observed in the sediment trap samples. Fragilaria salvadoriana sp. nov. and F. maarensis sp. nov. were found in a warm, tropical crater lake characterized by low conductivity and dissolved oxygen content, medium alkaline pH, and magnesium-calcium-bicarbonate-rich waters. Fragilaria huebeneri sp. nov. was frequent in a large, high elevation lake with increased specific conductivity, alkaline pH and sodium-bicarbonate-rich waters. The new species are compared to morphologically similar species from the genus Fragilaria Lyngbye and ecological preferences are discussed.
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- 2021
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7. The unexpectedly short Holocene Humid Period in Northern Arabia
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Achim Brauer, Philipp Hoelzmann, Peter Frenzel, Birgit Plessen, Rik Tjallingii, Anja Schwarz, Gerd Gleixner, Anna Pint, Helmut Brückner, Kim J. Krahn, Max Engel, Valérie F. Schwab, Ina Neugebauer, Michèle Dinies, and Nadine Dräger
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FOS: Earth and related environmental sciences ,Sedimentology ,Monsoon ,Palaeoclimate ,Greening ,Geography ,Geochemistry ,Archaeology ,Limnology ,Period (geology) ,500 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik::550 Geowissenschaften, Geologie::550 Geowissenschaften ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Physical geography ,Holocene ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
The early to middle Holocene Humid Period led to a greening of today’s arid Saharo-Arabian desert belt. While this phase is well defined in North Africa and the Southern Arabian Peninsula, robust evidence from Northern Arabia is lacking. Here we fill this gap with unprecedented annually to sub-decadally resolved proxy data from Tayma, the only known varved lake sediments in Northern Arabia. Based on stable isotopes, micro-facies analyses and varve and radiocarbon dating, we distinguish five phases of lake development and show that the wet phase in Northern Arabia from 8800–7900 years BP is considerably shorter than the commonly defined Holocene Humid Period (~11,000–5500 years BP). Moreover, we find a two century-long peak humidity at times when a centennial-scale dry anomaly around 8200 years BP interrupted the Holocene Humid Period in adjacent regions. The short humid phase possibly favoured Neolithic migrations into Northern Arabia representing a strong human response to environmental changes.
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- 2022
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8. Impact of urban development on waterbodies during medieval and early modern ages in Bad Waldsee (Germany)
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Matthias Hinderer, Elena Marinova, Kristin Haas, Antje Schwalb, Rik Tjallingii, Kim J. Krahn, Sara Saeidi Ghavi Andam, and Manfred Rösch
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Geography ,Urban planning ,Socioeconomics - Abstract
Seasonally laminated lacustrine sediments of Lake Stadtsee, located in the city of Bad Waldsee (Southern Germany), offer a continuous archive that allows a unique and yearly correlation of sedimentary signals and historic documents since medieval times. Comparison of the economic and environmental history of an urban centre will provide detailed insight into how the history of a city and its periphery region affected lake development and water quality, and how fast water quality and aquatic ecosystem recovered from human impact and activities. An interdisciplinary research team consisting of geologists, biologists, and historians from various universities and institutions has been established and started its work recently. The common goal of the different working groups and disciplines is to investigate temporally highly resolved sediment records of diatom and pollen spectra, geochemical proxies, and sediment facies of profundal sediment cores from Lake Stadtsee and to compare and calibrate these results with historic documents, stock books, archive records, dendrochronology records, and maps. So far, continuous geochemical sediment records of Lake Stadtsee were acquired non-destructively using X-ray fluorescence (XRF) core scanning. These element intensity records of the major elements (e.g. Al, Si, K, Ca, Ti, Fe) were measured every 2 mm. Sampling and subsequent analyses (e.g. pollen, PAH, isotopes) are ongoing.Overall, the environmental impact of socio-economic development for the preindustrial development phase of a city from AD 1200 to 1800 will be assessed for the first time. The research will focus on the effects of population growth or decrease, farming intensity, economic production, trade activity in relation to environmental, and climate change, including catastrophic events such as fires and floods. The results will provide important insights about the response of urban surface waters to changing emissions of the city and the long-term behaviour of persistent pollutants on lakes. The project will thereby contribute to the knowledge of historic human impact on the environment in Germany, pre-medieval reference conditions, and the limits of resilience of aquatic systems. Thus, it will target the past environmental footprint of anthropogenic induced events on urbanized lake ecosystems and help to understand the mechanism behind such processes in the future.
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- 2021
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9. Mid- to late Holocene climate-driven regime shifts inferred from diatom, ostracod and stable isotope records from Lake Son Kol (Central Tian Shan, Kyrgyzstan)
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Antje Schwalb, Martina Stebich, Anja Schwarz, Roman Witt, Falko Turner, Steffen Mischke, Jens Mingram, Birgit Plessen, Stefan Lauterbach, Kim J. Krahn, and Sven Glodniok
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010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,Global and Planetary Change ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Geology ,Westerlies ,01 natural sciences ,Water level ,Siberian High ,Oceanography ,Paleoclimatology ,Regime shift ,Precipitation ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Teleconnection - Abstract
Arid Central Asia represents a key region for understanding climate variability and interactions in the Northern Hemisphere. Patterns and mechanisms of Holocene climate change in arid Central Asia are, however, only partially understood. Multi-proxy data combining diatom, ostracod, sedimentological, geochemical and stable isotope analyses from a ca. 6000-year-old lake sediment core from Son Kol (Central Kyrgyzstan) show distinct and repeated changes in species assemblages. Diatom- and ostracod-inferred conductivity shifts between meso-euhaline and freshwater conditions suggest water balance and regime shifts. Organism-derived data are corroborated by stable isotope, mineralogical and geochemical records, underlining that Son Kol was affected by strong lake level fluctuations of several meters. The δ13Ccarb/δ18Ocarb correlation shows repeated switchovers from a closed to an open lake system. From 6000 to 3800 and 3250 to 1950 cal. yr BP, Son Kol was a closed basin lake with higher conductivities, increased nutrient availability and a water level located below the modern outflow. Son Kol became again a hydrologically open lake at 3800 and 1950 cal. yr BP. Comparisons to other local and regional paleoclimate records indicate that these regime shifts were largely controlled by changing intensity and position of the Westerlies and the Siberian Anticyclone that triggered changes in the amount of winter precipitation. A strong influence of the Westerlies ca. 5000–4400, 3800–3250 and since 1950 cal. yr BP enhanced the amount of precipitation during spring, autumn and winter, whereas cold and dry winters prevailed during phases with a strong Siberian Anticyclone and southward shifted Westerlies at ca. 6000–5000, 4400–3800 and 3250–1950 cal. yr BP. Similarities between variations in winter precipitation at Son Kol and records of the predominant NAO-mode further suggest a teleconnection between wet (dry) winter climate in Central Asia and a positive (negative) NAO-mode. Thus, this study identifies climate fluctuations as the main driver for hydrological regime shifts in Son Kol controlling physicochemical conditions and consequently causing abrupt species assemblage changes. This emphasizes the importance of multi-proxy approaches to identify triggers, thresholds and cascades of aquatic ecosystem transformations.
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- 2017
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10. Evidence for the age and timing of environmental change associated with a Lower Palaeolithic site within the Middle Pleistocene Reinsdorf sequence of the Schöningen coal mine, Germany
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Detlev Degering, Antje Schwalb, Jordi Serangeli, Bárbara Rodríguez Álvarez, Thijs van Kolfschoten, Kim J. Krahn, Ivo Verheijen, Mario Tucci, Jens Lehmann, Daniel Richter, and Brigitte Urban
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Palynology ,Marine isotope stage ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Thermoluminescence dating ,Environmental change ,Pleistocene ,Luminescence dating ,Steppe ,Aquatic microfossils ,Paleontology ,Context (language use) ,Oceanography ,Ecosystems Research ,Interglacial ,Small mammals ,Marine isotope stage 9 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Geology ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
The discovery of a tusk and a rib of a straight-tusked elephant within layer 13 II-2c3 of the famous Lower Palaeolithic archaeological site Schoningen (district Helmstedt, Lower-Saxony, Germany) provided the reason for studying the climatic and ecological conditions of this part of the Middle Pleistocene Reinsdorf sequence in high resolution in relation to new chronometric data. Sediment, pollen, aquatic microfossil (diatoms, ostracods, gyrogonites of charophytes) and micro mammalian analyses provide evidence for a strong environmental change and landscape opening following the post-temperate boreal forest phase of the Reinsdorf Interglacial. Palynological and palaeontological evidence from this horizon suggest increasing dryness and seasonality. The high proportions of non-arboreal pollen including Poaceae as well as a major decrease of thermophile tree taxa indicate the development of zonal steppe environments. The assemblage of small mammal remains includes indicators of temperate as well as cold climatic conditions. A bone tool together with flint artefacts clearly show the presence of hominins in this context. Based on palaeoecological evidence and new luminescence dating, previous correlations of the Reinsdorf sequence to Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 9 and thus of the interglacial sediments to MIS 9e are confirmed and the onset of the first post-interglacial steppe phase represented by layer 13 II-2c3 to MIS 9d is proposed.
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- 2021
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11. Achnanthidium neotropicum sp. nov., a new freshwater diatom from Lake Apastepeque in El Salvador (Central America)
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Antje Schwalb, Carlos E. Wetzel, Kim J. Krahn, and Luc Ector
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0106 biological sciences ,Subfossil ,biology ,020209 energy ,02 engineering and technology ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Diatom ,Algae ,Genus ,Botany ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A new freshwater diatom recovered from modern and subfossil sediments of Lake Apastepeque in El Salvador, Achnanthidium neotropicum sp. nov., is described based on light and scanning electron microscopy observations. The species is characterized by valves with linear, sometimes centrally constricted (mainly in large cells), outlines, broadly rounded to subrostrate apices, and often rectangular fascia. Striae are composed of 3–4 rounded to slit-like areolae. It can be separated from similar species by valve outline, together with striae density, and number of areolae per stria. Based on the straight distal raphe endings this species can be assigned to the A. minutissimum complex. The new species is compared to morphologically resembling species from the genus Achnanthidium Kützing.
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- 2018
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