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Articles

New diatom taxa for the Indian Sundarbans found in short sediment cores

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Pages 17-35 | Received 29 Mar 2019, Accepted 09 Sep 2019, Published online: 18 Feb 2020
 

Abstract

We describe, illustrate and give geographical information on 40 diatom species observed in two short sediment cores from a Holocene deposit in the Indian Sundarbans region. The Indian Sundarbans is an extremely vulnerable ecosystem that is sensitive to palaeoclimatic change. The cores were originally collected for palaeoecological reconstruction based on the analysis of diatom assemblages. The research presented here is the first step in the analysis of the subfossil diatom assemblages, which will rely heavily upon correct taxonomic identification, and is the first study of diatoms from sediment cores in this ecosystem. The present study documents 40 diatom species; 38 are new to this region. The descriptions include 11 centric species belonging to eight genera and 29 pennate species belonging to 17 genera in total. The centric diatom, Thalassiosira was the most abundant genera represented by three different species. Thalassiosira nanolineata was rarely found in the sediment from one core and not observed in the other. Tryblionella and Nitzschia were the most abundant pennate diatoms, represented by four different species each in one of the sediment cores. Diatoma moniliformis, Pseudostaurosira brevistriata, Geissleria decussis, Neidium affine, Cosmioneis pusilla, Trachyneis antillarum, Petroneis granulata and Tryblionella punctata were much less abundant species in the studied cores samples. Literature studies show that apart from two species, Actinoptychus annulatus and Thalssiosira eccentrica, 38 species have never been reported from the plankton and have also not been found previously in surface sediments of the Indian Sundarbans region. Annotated lists of the identified diatoms have been prepared along with high quality microphotographs as part of the preliminary work that will be necessary for ongoing palaeoecological reconstruction.

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to the University of Kalyani, West Bengal, India for giving permission and providing the necessary infrastructure to carry out this work. The authors are also grateful to the Department of Forests, Government of West Bengal, for granting necessary permission (vide letter No. 198(5)/SBR/C-182/11 (Part.-III), dated: 5th March 2013) to collect soil cores from the forest area of Sundarban mangrove region. Neera Sen Sarkar and Manjushree Mandal acknowledges the Inter University Accelerator Centre, New Delhi, India for sanctioning a project and giving financial support via their Beam Time Allotment for analysis of radio-carbon dating of soil sediment.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the grant received from University Grants Commission, New Delhi vide sanction No. F.No.41-1333/2012(SR), dated: 30th July 2012.

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