Cornucopina antlera, Branch & Hayward, 2005

Branch, M. L. & Hayward, P. J., 2005, New species of cheilostomatous Bryozoa from subantarctic Marion and Prince Edward Islands, Journal of Natural History 39 (29), pp. 2671-2704 : 2676-2678

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930500124664

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03938784-FFF2-441A-FE44-FA37FF7CFBD3

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Cornucopina antlera
status

sp. nov.

Cornucopina antlera View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figure 4A View Figure 4 )

Material

Holotype: St. 42 Marion Island (46 ° 32 9 S, 37 ° 51 9 E), 510 m, SAM A27531 GoogleMaps . Paratype: St. 38 Marion Island (46 ° 58 9 S, 37 ° 59 9 E), 200 m, SAM A27545 GoogleMaps .

Other material. St. 45 Marion Island (47 ° 00 9 S, 37 ° 55 9 E), 420–540 m, SAM A27532 View Materials GoogleMaps .

Description

Colony erect, branching, delicate; made up of two alternating rows of club-shaped zooids. Autozooids with broad distal portion, 0.4–0.55X 0.25 mm, projecting from the branch axis, and a slender, proximal (axial) portion 0.8–1.0 mm long; opesia elongate-oval, occupying two-thirds of frontal surface of distal portion. Four to five curved, cylindrical spines spaced along the disto-basal wall of the autozooid, up to 1 mm long, and two or more spines on the lateral, axial side of the autozooid; one shorter, proximo-lateral spine. A short, pedunculate avicularium present, fronto-lateral in position, close to the border of the opesia; up to 0.2 mm long and 0.12 mm across the top with hooked, triangular rostrum. Ovicell not observed.

Etymology

Named with reference to the disposition of the disto-basal spines of the autozooid.

Remarks

Cornucopina antlera sp. nov. is characterized by the combination of a short frontal avicularium, the lack of a disto-lateral process and the antler-like arrangement of the spines. Several other species of Cornucopina are known in which the spines arise directly from the disto-basal wall of the autozooid, rather than from an elongate dorso-lateral process. Cornucopina antlera may be distinguished from all of them by its short, oval opesia, which does not extend close to the colony axis, and in its small, fronto-laterally situated avicularia. The samples were obtained from depths of 200–540 m; that from St. 45 lacked avicularia.

SAM

South African Museum

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