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Valve morphogenesis in Diploneis smithii (Bacillariophyta).

Diploneis species have perhaps the most complex valve structure among pennate diatoms. The development of this structure was studied in Diploneis smithii and begins with the formation of a primary band, which then develops secondary arms at both poles and the center, as in the classic Chiappino-Volcani model of raphid diatom ontogeny. Spine-like projections grow out from the primary band and secondary arms to establish the transapical ribs (virgae) of the mature valve and themselves develop spines, which are spaced first oppositely and then alternately and fuse with each other to delimit the stria pores. Subsequently, new pattern and structures develop both externally (formation of bifurcating projections that fuse to delimit the outer, sieve-like layer of the valve) and internally (growth and fusion of flanges from the first-formed ribs to create the longitudinal canals and deposition of a hymenate strip over the internal face of each stria). Comparisons are made with morphogenesis in other diatoms. Diploneis smithii ontogeny suggests how very slight developmental changes might have created the very variable external morphology of Diploneis species. It also indicates that the longitudinal canals of Diploneis and Fallacia have different origins, since the porous external wall is not formed as a unilaterally attached flap in Diploneis and the canal is internal to the first-formed rib-stria system in Diploneis, but external to it in Fallacia.

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