Protankyra sp.
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1414.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DC93A9BC-D24E-44AD-99AF-79CACCCFB984 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038E87BB-FFB9-FFAC-D0A1-8F02C358B972 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Protankyra sp. |
status |
|
Protankyra sp. indet.
Figure 25 View FIGURE 25 (G–M)
Material examined
SAM-A27951 , off Matigulu Bluff , KZN, north coast, 29° 22.8' S, 31° 58.7' E GoogleMaps , NMDP, St. ZR 13, 16 vi 1989, 520 m, posterior fragment only .
Description
Specimen 162 x 10.5 mm, cylindrical, lacking anterior end. Colour dull yellowish-white with dark specks due to adhering debris. Body wall translucent; intestine looped, posterior filled with globigerina. Ciliary urns solitary ( Figure 25J View FIGURE 25 ).
Body wall spicules as anchors, anchor plates and bifurcate rods; radial muscles with miliary granules. Anchors ( Figure 25G View FIGURE 25 ) slender, arms with 7–18 serrations each, not reaching tip of arm ( Figure 25M View FIGURE 25 ), vertex smooth, convex, stock bilobed, each lobe finely branched, denticles absent ( Figure 25L View FIGURE 25 ); anterior anchors 760–900 µm (mean 840 µm), distance between arms 460–550 µm (mean 490 µm); posterior anchors longer, 930–945 µm (mean 935 µm). Anchor plates oval ( Figure 25I View FIGURE 25 ), narrower anteriorly, margins irregular, number of holes in front of bridge usually less than 60, increasing in size anteriorly, larger holes dentate, teeth 1–6, bridge well formed, reticulate, with reticulum obscuring the smaller posterior holes; anterior plates 515–630 µm (mean 575 µm) long, 400–480 µm (mean 443 µm) wide; posterior plates larger 600–730 µm (mean 653 µm) long, 395–515 µm (mean 477 µm) wide. Accessory deposits as anteriorly located curved, bifurcate rods, 58–75 µm (mean 65 µm), with 1–2 short projections ( Figure 25K View FIGURE 25 ). Miliary granules of radial muscles ( Figure 25H View FIGURE 25 ) as smooth, 20–40 µm (mean 30 µm) lenticular bodies..
Distribution Northern KZN, South Africa, 520 m.
Habitat Mud and clay lumps.
Remarks
The specimen, although incomplete, possesses several characters in combination, making it distinct from any other nominal species of the genus. Once complete specimens become available a new species may need to be erected. Of the approximately 45 nominal species of the genus known to date, the present material comes closest to P. errata Koehler & Vaney, 1905 , P. buitendijki Rowe, 1983 , P. dubia Cherbonnier, 1965a and P.similis ( Semper, 1868) . It differs from P. errata in the absence of spines on the vertex and the complexity of the bridge; from P. buitendijki in the absence of denticles on the stock, the shape of the anchor plates and the presence of many more dentate holes; from P. dubia in the shape of the arm serrations, absence of denti- cles on the stock and the presence of bifurcating rods as accessory deposits; and from the brackish water P. similis by its habitat, the bilobed and branched nature of the stock, absence of denticles on the stock, presence of toothed holes in the anchor plates and miliary granules in the radial muscles. Table 1 summarises the differences in distribution, depth, size and spicules of the five species here considered.
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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