Cradoscrupocellaria galapagensis, VIEIRA & JONES & WINSTON, 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3707.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:62CD9F58-F0D8-476F-B025-18B32AFD40E7 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/294EB757-FFCE-E36D-EDAA-F88EFBE4FC0F |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Cradoscrupocellaria galapagensis |
status |
sp. nov. |
Cradoscrupocellaria galapagensis n. sp.
( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 , Table 3)
Scrupocellaria bertholletii (Audouin) View in CoL : Hastings 1930: 703 (in part), pl. 1, fig. 3 (non figs 1, 2, 4, 5). [Galapagos Islands]
Not Acamarchis Bertholletii Audouin, 1826: 241 . [ Egypt]
Material examined. Holotype. NHMUK 2010.12 About NHMUK .6.3 ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 ), Scrupocellaria bertholletii, A.B. Hastings det., 25 July1924, St George Collection , Galapagos 1, Specimen 42S, James Island , James Bay, Galapagos . Paratypes. NHMUK 1924.4 About NHMUK .26.243, Scrupocellaria bertholletii, A.B. Hastings det., St George Collection, Galapagos 8, Specimen 3H . NHMUK 1924.4 About NHMUK .26.17, same data as the holotype . NHMUK 1924.4 About NHMUK .26.286, same data as the holotype . NHMUK 1924.4 About NHMUK .26.20, Scrupocellaria bertholletii, A.B. Hastings det., St George Collection, Galapagos 11, Specimen 36D 1 (figured by Hastings 1930, pl. 1, fig. 3) and Specimen 36D 2, Tagus Cove, 12 fms (22 m) .
Type locality. Galapagos Islands .
Etymology. Alluding to the type locality.
1 NHMUK 2010.12 About NHMUK .6.3, Galapagos. 2 NHMUK 2010.12 About NHMUK .6.4, Gorgona , Colombia . 3 NHMUK 1929.4 About NHMUK .26.25, Galapagos. 4 NHMUK 2010.12 About NHMUK .6.16, Cape Verde . 5 AMNH (Unregistered specimens), same data as holotype, Jamaica .
Diagnosis. Chitinous joints passing across proximal end of opesia in both outer zooids at bifurcation (zooids C and D); zooids with 3 inner and 4 outer distal spines; scutum slender, branched 3 times and with 8–15 acute points; large distolateral avicularium on each zooid; dimorphic frontal avicularium with triangular mandible, obliquely directed along axis of internode; ooecium globular, with deep proximal border and several rounded pseudopores.
Description. Colony erect, highly branched, with branches of 7–11 zooids. Internodes robust with curved outlines, zooids alternating slightly back to back; acute bifurcating pattern with new branches directed slightly inwards; chitinous joints passing across proximal end of opesia and cryptocyst in outer zooids at bifurcation (zooids C and D), and across proximal gymnocyst of inner zooids (F and G). Autozooids elongate, subrectangular, slightly narrower proximally than distally. Oval opesia occupying almost entire zooid length; cryptocyst smooth, deep, forming a wide and conspicuous strip around opesia. Scutum slender, inserted at midline of inner opesial border, branched 3–4 times with 8–15 (often 8–10) acute points, covering almost entire frontal membrane. Distal spines straight and long, unbranched; 3 inner and 4 outer distal spines; axial zooid with 7 spines. One conspicuous distolateral avicularium present in each zooid, laterally directed, rostrum triangular, 0.060 –0.077 mm long, with serrated lateral edge and slightly hooked tip. Frontal avicularia dimorphic: a small frontal avicularium with triangular rostrum; a large frontal avicularium with triangular serrated rostrum, oblique to axis. A vibracular chamber present on basal surface of each zooid, inconspicuous in frontal view; vibraculum trapezoidal, occupying a third of basal surface, with rhizoidal foramen on its proximal outer corner; setal groove transverse to internode axis, with smooth seta twice autozooidal length. Single axial vibraculum, almost triangular, without rhizoidal foramen. Rhizoids tubular and smooth. Ovicells globular, deeper proximally than distally, with ectooecium perforated by several rounded pores; ovicelled zooids with 2 inner and 3 outer spines.
Remarks. Hastings (1930) reported Scrupocellaria bertholletii from the Pacific (Gorgona Island and Galapagos) and noted variable morphology among the specimens. Despite the differences noted by her—scuta, frontal avicularia and zooid shape—the Pacific specimens have shared characteristics, such as the shape and size of the basal vibraculum, lateral avicularium and ovicells. Among Hastings’s specimens deposited at NHMUK were three distinct species: specimens with highly branched scuta (specimen 36D, from Galapagos, see Hastings 1930, p. 703) are described as Cradoscrupocellaria galapagensis n. sp. ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 ), while specimens with slender zooids and less-branched scuta, from Gorgona and Galapagos, comprise two distinct species, Cradoscrupocellaria gorgonensis n. sp. (see below, Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ), with the scutum bifurcated twice, and Cradoscrupocellaria hastingsae n. sp. (see below, Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 ), with forked scutum (sometimes absent) and robust dimorphic avicularia.
Distribution. Pacific Ocean: James Island and Tagus Cove, Galapagos Islands.
AMNH |
American 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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Cradoscrupocellaria galapagensis
VIEIRA, LEANDRO M., JONES, MARY E. SPENCER & WINSTON, JUDITH E. 2013 |
Scrupocellaria bertholletii (Audouin)
Hastings, A. B. 1930: 703 |
Acamarchis Bertholletii Audouin, 1826: 241
Audouin, J. V. 1826: 241 |