The Japanese endemic charalean species Nitella gracilens
Morioka (=N. furcata subsp. furcata var. sieberi f. gracilens)
was thought to be
extinct until it was rediscovered at the type locality, Lake Ashinoko,
Kanagawa Prefecture. Uni-charalean cultures of N. gracilens were
established and sexual organs developed and matured. The morphology of
this alga, examined by light microscopy, corresponds closely
with the original description by Morioka, particularly with regard to the
oospores. The mature oospore walls of N. gracilens are orange
or
yellowish-brown and the fossa wall of the oospore is smooth or has a finely
granulate ornamentation. In addition, scanning electronic
microscopic examination demonstrated that the fossa walls have minute granulate
structures that are compactly arranged. These
observations contrast with a previous report that the oospore wall ornamentation
of this taxon is reticulate. Since oospore wall
ornamentation and the form of the dactyls in N. gracilens are
essentially different from those of other infraspecific taxa of N.
furcata sensu
Wood (1965), N. gracilens should be maintained as a distinct morphological
species within the genus Nitella.