Leptogorgia punicea ( Milne Edwards & Haime, 1857 )
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https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2599.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A887A7-FFE0-7D60-2A81-F8ED6014FC48 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Leptogorgia punicea ( Milne Edwards & Haime, 1857 ) |
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Leptogorgia punicea ( Milne Edwards & Haime, 1857) View in CoL
( Figure 43 View FIGURE 43 )
Gorgonia punicea Valenciennes, 1855:12 View in CoL [Nomen nudum].
Gorgonia pumicea .— Milne Edwards and Haime 1857:160 [error of transcription].
Leptogorgia purpurea View in CoL (part) Wright and Studer, 1889:151; Plate 29 fig. 1; Plate 34 fig. 3.
Leptogorgia pumicea View in CoL .— Verrill 1912:399; Plate 33 fig. 10; Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 ; Plate 35 fig. 11.—Stiasny 1951:73.
? Leptogorgia studeri Verrill, 1912:400 .
Leptogorgia rathbunii Verrill, 1912:397 View in CoL ; Plate 29 figs. 4–4a; Plate 33 fig. 11; Plate 35, figs. 9–9a.
? Leptogorgia diffusa Stiasny, 1951:71 View in CoL ; Plate 20 fig. B; Plate 21 figs. 2–3.
not Leptogorgia diffusa View in CoL .— Verrill 1868:397.
Lophogorgia punicea View in CoL .— Bayer 1961:204; Figs. 61 a–h; 62 a–e; Plate VII fig. 6.
Leptogorgia punicea View in CoL .— Cairns et al, 2002:35.
Material examined. USNM 60196, 60 m, off North Carolina, March 4, 1981 . SERTC S 2743, 20 m, Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary, off Sapelo Island, Georgia, May , 28, 2006 .
Remarks. Colonies of L. punicea display irregularly open pinnate branching and prominent polyp mounds which are in double rows on two sides of the branches. The largest of the examined specimens has a height 8 cm and the branches are 1 mm wide exclusive of polyp mounds. The sclerites consist of acute spindles and blunt capstans in the coenenchyme and flat, scalloped anthocodial rods. The spindles and flattened rods reach 0.12 mm in length and are roughly four times longer than wide and the blunt capstans are slightly shorter. The spindles and capstans are reddish orange and the anthocodial rods are pink. The color of the colony is generally purple or reddish purple.
Smaller colonies of this species may resemble Leptogorgia cardinalis or Leptogorgia miniata . L. miniata is not reported in this region, but specimens are easily distinguished from L. punicea by examining the anthocodial rods, which are significantly larger than the largest spindles. L. cardinalis has less curvature to the branches, less prominent polyp mounds, and slender, more acute spindles than L. punicea .
Atlantic distribution: North Carolina , 62–105 m ; Georgia , 20 m ; Gulf of Mexico , 23 m ; southern Florida , 27–73 m ; Venezuela to Brazil, 1–69 m ( Bayer 1961; NMNH collection; SERTC collection).
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Leptogorgia punicea ( Milne Edwards & Haime, 1857 )
Devictor, Susan T. & Morton, Steve L. 2010 |
Leptogorgia punicea
Cairns, S. D. & Calder, D. R. & Brinckmann-Voss, A. & Castro, C. B. & Fautin, D. G. & Pugh, P. R. & Mills, C. E. & Jaap, W. C. & Arai, M. N. & Haddock, S. H. D. & Opresko, D. M. 2002: 35 |
Lophogorgia punicea
Bayer, F. M. 1961: 204 |
Leptogorgia pumicea
Verrill, A. E. 1912: 399 |
Leptogorgia studeri
Verrill, A. E. 1912: 400 |
Leptogorgia rathbunii
Verrill, A. E. 1912: 397 |
Leptogorgia purpurea
Wright, E. P. & Studer, T. 1889: 151 |
Leptogorgia diffusa
Verrill, A. E. 1868: 397 |
Gorgonia pumicea
Milne Edwards, H. & Haime, J. 1857: 160 |