Eleutherobia splendens ( Thomson & Dean, 1931 )

Bryce, Monika, Poliseno, Angelo, Alderslade, Philip & Vargas, Sergio, 2015, Digitate and capitate soft corals (Cnidaria: Octocorallia: Alcyoniidae) from Western Australia with reports on new species and new Australian geographical records, Zootaxa 3963 (2), pp. 160-200 : 180

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3963.2.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:86A305B7-2B9C-403E-8FC0-3420EFB13F52

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5680259

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B687F9-A44B-FFF2-17DB-541249CBF81A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Eleutherobia splendens ( Thomson & Dean, 1931 )
status

 

Eleutherobia splendens ( Thomson & Dean, 1931) View in CoL new record

( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A – C G; 13; Tabs. 1, 2)

Nidalia splendens Thomson & Dean, 1931: 38 , Pl. 1, Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A – C ; Pl. 6, Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 ; Pl. 25, Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 . Eleutherobia splendens Verseveldt & Bayer, 1988: 40 View in CoL –41, Figs. 18 View FIGURE 18 a, 33a, 35, 36c.

Material examined. WAM Z23988, two whole specimens, cylindrical, colony 1 unbranched, 45.3 mm tall, attached to a mollusc shell, colony 2 branched with three branches in one plane, 51.6 mm tall, Station SO1/84/055, Lacepede Archipelago, NW Australia, 19.9500°– 19.9833° S, 120.7338°– 120.7350° E, CSIRO FRV "Soela" cruise VI, trawl, depth 297 m, coll. S.M. Slack-Smith, 10 February 1984; WAM Z54996, one whole specimen, unbranched, 31.5 mm tall, Station SO1/84/056, Kimberley, Beagle Bay, NW Australia, 16.9297° S, 122.5411° E, CSIRO FRV "Soela" cruise VI, trawl, depth 301 m, coll. S.M. Slack-Smith, 11 February 1984. NTM C002899, one whole specimen, 19.3338° S, 115. 6836° E, FRV “Soela” cruise 0 184, trawl, depth, 306–308 m, coll. A.J. Bruce, 29 January 1984; NTM C 013059, one whole specimen, Station SS1005 130-015, off Red Bluff, 23.9908° S, 112. 3547° E, RV "Southern Surveyor", beam trawl, depth 411 m, K. Gowlett-Holmes, 8 December 2005.

Description. The colonies are erect, cylindrical, with large bodied anthocodiae up to 4 mm long ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A – C G). The colonies are unbranched or branched in one plane and are up to 51.6 mm tall. Some specimens are attached to a mollusc shell.

In the surface of the polyparium the majority of the sclerites are thorny clubs, up to 0.22 mm long but mainly between 0.08–0.15 mm, with the warts below the head arranged in girdles ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 A). There are also a few 8- radiates present. The majority of sclerites of the base are thorny 8-radiates up to about 0.10 mm long, but there are also a few larger sclerites are up to 0.16 mm that are club-shaped (13B). The sclerites of the interior of the polyparium are markedly narrow, needle-like forms, 0.34–0.47 mm long, with girdles of high spines ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 C). The sclerites in the interior of the base are spindles up to 0.35 mm long. They are similar to the sclerites in the interior of the polyparium, but are slightly shorter and wider ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 D).

The tentacles contain densely packed stout, flattened rods with a curved end up to 0.45 mm long ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 E). The polyp armature is strongly developed. It consists of collaret and point and is formed of slightly curved, spiny spindles around 0.05 mm long ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 F).

Colour. The preserved colonies are cream with the distal part of the coenenchymal mounds being sometimes of the same colour, but usually are a distinct pink to red ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A – C G). The tentacles are white. The introvert contains brick-red sclerites.

Habitat. The specimens were sampled from a depth range between 297–411 m along the continental slope utilising otter and beam trawls, but the exact habitat is unknown.

Remarks. Previously this species has only been described from Indonesia and the Philippines ( Table 1), making this the first record for Australia. Our specimens agree well with the holotype colony described and figured in the original report of Thomson and Dean, but it is impossible to make any worthwhile comparisons with the rest of their brief description. The notable difference between the characters of our material and the comparable features reported by those authors is the more prickly warting of the sclerites (as was the case with E. somaliensis above). Unfortunately, the redescription did not include illustrations of the polyp sclerites, so we asked Dr Leen van Ofwegen to make a comparison using Verseveldt & Bayer’s microscopic slides of the holotype sclerites of E. splendens held in the Naturalis Biodiversity Centre, Leiden, and he was able to confirm they are of the same form.

WAM

Western Australian Museum

CSIRO

Australian National Fish Collection

NTM

Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Cnidaria

Class

Anthozoa

Order

Alcyonacea

Family

Alcyoniidae

Genus

Eleutherobia

Loc

Eleutherobia splendens ( Thomson & Dean, 1931 )

Bryce, Monika, Poliseno, Angelo, Alderslade, Philip & Vargas, Sergio 2015
2015
Loc

Nidalia splendens

Verseveldt 1988: 40
Thomson 1931: 38
1931
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