Latrunculia
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.156901 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6276861 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FE87D7-6703-FF97-FEB5-FD8DBB00EA8F |
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Plazi |
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Latrunculia |
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Genus Latrunculia View in CoL du Bocage 1869
Type species. Latrunculia cratera du Bocage, 1869:161
Representative species. Latrunculia bocagei Ridley & Dendy, 1887: 238 (after Samaai & Kelly, 2002)
Diagnosis. Encrusting or semispherical with trumpetshaped or cylindrical oscules and mammiform or craterlike areolate porefields, surface velvety to the touch, texture in life soft, cakey, dense, slightly compressible in preservative. Colour in life deep brownish black, dark green, sometimes tinged with deep blue, in preservative specimens always retain their dark pigmentation. Choanosomal architecture consists of megascleres arranged in an irregular, largemeshed reticulation formed by wispy tracts of spicules, which lack spongin reinforcement. The ectosomal skeleton is a tangential layer of megascleres, being somewhat plumose at the base of the ectosome. Megascleres are styles, often centrally thickened and occasionally wavy, narrowing of the proximal (rounded) end variable, sometimes anisoxeate or terminally spined, occasionally polytylote. Microscleres are typically anisodiscorhabds, occasionally aciculodiscorhabds and rarely, large spined metasterlike oxydiscorhabds and acanthomicroxeas. Microscleres are disposed in a palisade with their basal whorls buried in the outer ectosome (modified from Samaai & Kelly, 2002).
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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