Dipsastraea, de Blainville, 1830

Salimi, Parisa Alidoost, Mostafavi, Pargol Ghavam, Chen, Chaolun Allen, Fatemi, Seyed Mohammad Reza & Pichon, Michel, 2018, Microphysogobio bicolor, Zoological Studies 57 (56), pp. 1-34 : 18-20

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.6620/ZS.2018.57-56

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/725DAE4B-FF82-FFFD-2394-FE67FE70FE20

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Dipsastraea
status

 

Dipsastraea View in CoL pallida (Dana, 1846)

( Fig. 17 View Fig )

Synonym: Astraea (Fissicella) denticulata Dana, 1846; Astraea cellulosa Verrill, 1872; Astraea denticulata Dana, 1846; Astraea doreyensis ( Milne Edwards & Haime, 1857); Astraea ordinata Verrill, 1866; Favia amplior ( Milne Edwards & Haime, 1849); Favia denticulata ( Gardiner, 1904); Favia doreyensis Milne Edwards & Haime, 1850; Favia laccadivica Gardiner, 1904; Favia okeni Milne Edwards & Haime, 1857; Favia pallida (Dana, 1846); Favia tubulifera Klunzinger, 1879; Goniastraea serrata Ortmann, 1889; Heliastrea borradailei Gardiner, 1904; Parastrea amplior Milne Edwards & Haime, 1850; Parastrea verrilleana Milne Edwards & Haime, 1850.

Material examined: Abu-Musa Island ( ZUTC 6610), Sirri Island ( ZUTC 6611).

Other Material: Nay-Band Bay ( ZUTC 6612), Kish Island ( ZUTC 6613).

Description: Colony is massive and hemispherical. Corallites arrangement is plocoid to subplocoid, even sub ceroid in parts of the colony. Corallites formation by intratentacular budding. Corallite and calice diameter are 8-10 mm and 8-9 mm, respectively. 22-28 septa in two orders (sometimes indistinguishable). Septa are well separated and exert above the wall margin. Most septa descend abruptly down the endotheca and then reach the columella. Septal margins always ornamented with very short and irregular dentations. These dentations are themselves finely serrated, especially at their tips which frequently form minute horizontal fans. Palar structures absent (occasionally may be weakly present). Columella is spongy. Costae equal and sometimes adjacent costae join together.

Remarks: The specimens showed different colony forms and colors in the field; however, their skeletal features were similar ( Fig. 17a View Fig , c-d). D. pallida had a smaller corallite size than the other species and a slightly lower calic ( Kongjandtre et al. 2012). Pale discoloration is because of presence mucus sheathing ( Fig. 17 View Fig a-c) ( Alidoost Salimi et al. 2017).

Distribution: Widespread in the Persian Gulf, Red Sea and Indo-Pacific.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Cnidaria

Class

Anthozoa

Order

Scleractinia

Family

Merulinidae

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF