Xenia crassa Schenk, 1896
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4652.2.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:04D7DC4C-5EBC-4C5A-9E68-7795E8E60ECA |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5944958 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/967E5C11-AC26-900A-FF5A-F9D516AFFED7 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Xenia crassa Schenk, 1896 |
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Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5
Xenia crassa ; Ashworth 1900: 510; Kükenthal 1902: 652; Hickson 1931a: 160; Thomson & Dean 1931: 28; Roxas 1933: 84; Tixier-Durivault 1966: 367; Utinomi 1977: 2–3; non Xenia crassa ; Benayahu 1990: 18, listed only (identified by Reinicke, 1997 as X. novaebritanniae Ashworth, 1900 ); Benayahu 1990: 18 listed only.
Material. Holotype: SMF 39 About SMF , Indonesia, Ternate Island, 1894, coll. W. Kükenthal.
Description. The holotype is 18 mm high; its stalk is 13 mm long, 11 mm wide at its base, and 14 mm wide at its uppermost part. The polyp body is 1.5–3 mm long, and the tentacles are up to 3–4 mm long, featuring three and sometimes four rows of pinnules on each side. The pinnules are up to 0.60 mm long and 0.20 mm wide, 13–18 in the outermost row with no gap between adjacent pinnules to a space of up to half a pinnule-width between adjacent pinnules.
Sclerites are present in all parts of the colony. They are ellipsoid platelets, and occasionally a crest is present on their surface ( Fig. 5a, b View FIGURE 5 ). They occasionally feature a furrow on their apical narrow side. The sclerites measure 0.007 –0.014 X 0.012 –0.022 mm in diameter (n=26) and are composed of calcite rods which appear uniform in width ( Fig. 5c View FIGURE 5 ). The sclerite surface is granular, including the crest, and often fractured. The ethanol-preserved holotype is gray and the tentacles are dark-gray in color.
Remarks. Schenk (1896) described Xenia crassa with three irregular rows of pinnules, 15–18 in the outermost one, thus corresponding to the current findings. The dimensions of the sclerites in that study differ from those in the current ones (0.02–0.030 mm vs. 0.007 –0.014 X 0.012 –0.022, respectively). Utinomi (1977: 3) described this species from Japan as featuring three rows of pinnules, 16–19 in the outermost row, and abundant “typical spicules”. That study reported the known distribution of Xenia crassa to include New Caledonia ( Ashworth, 1900), Great Barrier Reef, Australia (Hickson 1931), Malay Archipelago ( Schenk 1896; Thomson & Dean 1931), Philippines ( Roxas 1933) and Madagascar ( Tixier-Durivault 1966). Later, Reinicke (1997: 20) examined the type of X. crassa , compared it to Red Sea material identified by Benayahu (1990: 118), and concluded that the material identified as X. crassa by Benayahu belongs to X. novaebritanniae Ashworth, 1900 .
Similar species and conclusion. Xenia membranacea Schenk, 1896 and X. crassa feature mostly three rows of pinnules and occasionally four. They differ in the number of pinnules in the outermost row (20–25 vs. 13–18, respectively) and in sclerite microstructure, and therefore they should be considered as separate species.
Distribution. Indonesia: Ternate Island, New Caledonia, Great Barrier Reef ( Australia), Malay Archipelago, Philippines, Madagascar.
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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Xenia crassa Schenk, 1896
Halász, Anna, Mcfadden, Catherine S., Toonen, Robert & Benayahu, Yehuda 2019 |
Xenia crassa
Benayahu, Y. 1990: 18 |
Benayahu, Y. 1990: 18 |
Tixier-Durivault, A. 1966: 367 |
Roxas, H. A. 1933: 84 |
Hickson, S. J. 1931: 160 |
Thomson, J. A. & Dean, L. M. I. 1931: 28 |
Kukenthal, W. 1902: 652 |
Ashworth, J. H. 1900: 510 |
Xenia crassa
Schenk, A. 1896: 58 |