Pseudodistoma cereum Michaelsen, 1924
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2014.896487 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5ADC2C9D-28AC-4348-8B4D-F262A43DEA66 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6C5C87F5-FFF1-3B4A-FE00-52E1215AFEC1 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Pseudodistoma cereum Michaelsen, 1924 |
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Pseudodistoma cereum Michaelsen, 1924 View in CoL
( Figure 11B View Figure 11 )
Pseudodistoma cereum Michaelsen, 1924: p. 364 View in CoL –374, fig. 17. Brewin, 1958a: p. 444.
Material examined
New records: Caswell Sound , Paua Bay (45° 01.01’S, 167° 08.40’E, 15 m, 3 February 2009, NIWA 49987 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; Doubtful Sound , Hare’ s Ears (45° 16.218’S, 166° 50.532’E, 7 m, 2 February 2006, NIWA 49992 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; Tiwai Point (46° 35.5235’S, 168° 21.137’E, 10 m, 20 August 2007, MNP9170 ) GoogleMaps ; Spirit’ s Bay (34° 25.200’S, 172° 50.900’E, 10 m, 12 February 2002, MNP7218 ) GoogleMaps ; Tom Bowling Bay (34° 24.736’S, 172° 57.295’E, 20 m, 3 July 2003, MNP7353 ) GoogleMaps ; Three Kings Islands (34° 10.662’S, 172° 02.792’E, 15 m, 24 April 2002, MNP7042 ) GoogleMaps .
Previously recorded: New Zealand; Portobello Peninsula ( Millar 1982); Stewart Island ( Michaelsen 1924; Brewin 1958a); Otago Coast ( Brewin 1958a).
Description
Cream-coloured, club-shaped colonies with a thick basal mat are common in subtidal environments throughout New Zealand. The colony morphology can vary with wave exposure. For example, colonies collected from the exposed Fiordland outer coast (NIWA 49992, Figure 11B View Figure 11 ) are encrusting without the distinctive lobes common in deep subtidal environments. The test is opaque and cartilaginous with zooids opening separately on raised dimples. Test cells are common in the outer test and immediately around the zooids. The zooids are large, measuring 15 mm for the post-abdomen and 5 mm for the thorax and abdomen. The branchial sac has three rows of stigmata and there is a long oesophagus entering a stomach with four folds. Up to 10 embryos are incubated serially in the thoracic region of the oviduct. Larvae measure 1.5 mm trunk length and have five pairs of distinct bi-lobate lateral ampullae surrounding the adhesive papillae and posterior vesicles.
Remarks
All Pseudodistoma cereum specimens examined in this study, both from the North and South Island, have four distinct stomach folds. Of the other common species in northern New Zealand, Pseudodistoma novaezelandiae (Brewin, 1950) can be distinguished by bright orange stalked colonies ( Figure 11C View Figure 11 ), and zooids with a smooth-walled stomach.
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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Pseudodistoma cereum Michaelsen, 1924
Page, M. J., Willis, T. J. & Handley, S. J. 2014 |
Pseudodistoma cereum
Brewin, BI 1958: 444 |
Michaelsen, W 1924: 364 |