Tanacetipathes

Loiola, Livia L. & Castro, Clovis B., 2005, Tanacetipathes Opresko, 2001 (Cnidaria: Antipatharia: Myriopathidae) from Brazil, including two new species, Zootaxa 1081, pp. 1-31 : 29-30

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.170393

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5615471

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EB87B1-2827-1251-FE89-6123FAD8FC65

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tanacetipathes
status

 

Key to the species of the genus Tanacetipathes View in CoL

1. Colonies with many secondary pinnules on the posterior primaries (usually more than 8 per pinnule); secondary pinnules frequently on the polypar side of primaries .......... 2

­ Colonies with few secondary pinnules on the posterior primaries (usually less than 7 per pinnule); secondary pinnules rarely on the polypar side of primaries .................... 3

2. Colonies unbranched or with branches arising from near the colony basis [See Warner, fig. 2, branches on upper part of corallum]; posterior primary pinnules with up to 18 (more frequently 8–10) secondaries; 1–2 small tertiary pinnules, only on proximal secondary pinnules; polypar spines 0.09–0.30 mm tall, abpolypar spines 0.02–0.21mm .... ...................................................................................................................... T. thamnea View in CoL

­ Colonies with branches arising far from the colony basis, resulting in a fan shape; posterior primary pinnules with up to 42 (more frequently 11–15) secondaries; 2–5 tertiary pinnules, irregularly distributed on both proximal and distal secondary pinnules; polypar spines 0.06–0.14 mm tall, abpolypar spines 0.03–0.06 mm .............................. ........................................................................................................ T. thallassoros n. sp.

3. Three­seven elongated abpolypar secondary pinnules per primary, distributed along the whole pinnule .......................................................................................................... 4

­ Less than three elongated abpolypar secondary pinnules per primary, more frequently set near the pinnule origin ............................................................................................. 7

4. Secondary and tertiary pinnules long: secondaries maximum length 19–47 mm; tertiaries maximum length 19–26 mm ................................................... T. longipinnula View in CoL n. sp.

­ Secondary and tertiary pinnules short: secondaries maximum length 7–22 mm; tertiaries maximum length 5–10 mm ..................................................................................... 5

5. Monopodial colonies or colonies with branches up to the 2nd [mostly 1st] order mainly arising from near the base ........................................................................... T. tanacetum View in CoL

­ Colonies densely branched........................................................................................... 6

6. Branches arranged irregularly; occasionally branches arranged in groups of three or four, arising on the same region of the axis; colonies tending to arborescent; primary pinnules maximum length 15 mm ............................................................. T. spinescens View in CoL

­ Branches arranged laterally, maximum of two arising on the same region of the axis; colonies fan shaped; primary pinnules maximum length 25–30 mm ................. T. hirta View in CoL

7. Colonies branched up to the 2nd order; tertiaries absent.................................... T. wirtzi View in CoL

­ Colonies branched up to the 5th order; tertiaries present (may be missing oin some secondaries) ....................................................................................................................... 8

8. Primary pinnules up to 45 mm long ......................................................... T. barbadensis View in CoL

­ Primary pinnules less than 20 mm long ................................................... T. cavernicola View in CoL

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