Fredericella adrianoi, Wood & Okamura, 2022

Wood, Timothy S. & Okamura, Beth, 2022, Further species and range extensions of Amazonian bryozoans: chipping away at the iceberg, Zootaxa 5169 (4), pp. 381-391 : 383

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5169.4.7

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4B39AD1B-2643-4B84-B9A4-E83B07F33179

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6952461

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EC8783-7B61-FFBD-44D4-2C88FA9FFFD9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Fredericella adrianoi
status

sp. nov.

Fredericella adrianoi n. sp.

( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 )

Material examined. Holotype: ZUEC BRY 61 View Materials , from the Río Negro , municipality of Iranduba, 6 km SW of Manaus, Amazonas State, Brazil, 3˚ 9.792 S, 60˚ 3.821’ W (Site 9), collected 8 May 2018 by T. Wood and B. Okamura . Paratype: NHMUK 2021.11 About NHMUK .23.7 same details as holotype. Additional unregistered material from the Río Tapajos , 15 km N of Santarém, Pará State, Brazil, 2˚ 21.194’ S, 54˚ 44.879’ W (Site 13), collected 12 May 2020 by T. Wood and B. Okamura; also from Bongseon Reservoir, 7.3 km NE of Seocheon , Chungcheongnam-do, Republic of Korea, 36.125° N, 126.770° W, collected 12 October 2016 by Hyeon Sook Chae and Ho Jin Yang GoogleMaps .

Etymology. The specific name honors Edson Adriano, Professor of Parasitology at Universidade Federal de São Paulo, organizer and leader of the two Amazon expeditions.

Description. Colonies composed of slender, branching tubules with widely spaced zooids; mostly adherent to the substratum but capable of developing free branches; tentacles numbering 18–22; statoblasts produced only in portions of the colony attached to the substratum, seldom more than one statoblast per zooid, a sharply defined reticulum covering both valves of the statoblast with interstices measuring 4–12 µm in diameter ( Fig. 2a, b View FIGURE 2 ).

Remarks. This was the most frequently encountered phylactolaemate species during our survey. Colonies appeared to have developed from larvae. They were generally small, with fewer than 20 zooids, and they were most abundant on submerged tree bark in calm waters.

Fredericella adrianoi n. sp. is defined by the prominent statoblast reticulation with large interstices, which is qualitatively different from anything seen before. In other species with statoblast reticulation ( F. indica , F. borealis , F. crenulata ) the interstices are uniform in size, and so small that they often appear as a field of rounded depressions.

Other fredericellid species fall into two groups based on statoblast morphology. In one group the statoblast surface is smooth and shiny with no trace of ornamentation (e.g. F. sultana and F. australiensis ). In the other group the statoblasts are enveloped in a persistent, wrinkled membrane, a feature attributed only to F. browni ( Rogick, 1945) , but which may characterise other species not yet described.

Statoblasts matching those of F. adrianoi n. sp. have been found in the Republic of Korea, Chungcheongnam-do District, Bongseon Reservoir, 7.3 km northeast of Seocheon (collected by Hyeon Sook Chae and Ho Jin Yang, see Fig. 2c View FIGURE 2 ). It is assumed for now that this is a single species with a disjunct distribution, similar to Asajirella gelatinosa (Oka, 1891) occurring both in eastern Asia and Panama ( Wood & Okamura 1999). However, cryptic speciation would not be unexpected, particularly as fredericellid populations exhibit relatively high genetic divergence ( Hartikainen et al. 2013, Ruggeri et al. 2019). Future molecular characterization will be helpful to resolve this issue.

ZUEC

Museu de Zoologia da Universidade Estadual de Campinas

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

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