Schizoporella, Hincks, 1877

Ryland, John S., Holt, Rohan, Loxton, Jennifer, Spencer Jones, Mary E. & Porter, Joanne S., 2014, First occurrence of the non-native bryozoan Schizoporella japonica Ortmann (1890) in Western Europe, Zootaxa 3780 (3), pp. 481-502 : 495-496

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3780.3.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E8B88941-65A4-44F8-8D93-D2F7B541152D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5062297

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FBC909-687A-FFE2-50F9-F8F3FEAFA8B1

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Schizoporella
status

 

Schizoporella View in CoL on the Pacific coast of North America

Schizoporella unicornis View in CoL , a Recent bryozoan originally described in a work on the Coralline Crag by Johnston (in Wood 1844; see Tompsett et al. 2009 for details) is a well-known European species ( Johnston 1847; Hincks 1880; Ryland 1965; Hayward & Ryland 1995, 1999; but not Marcus 1940 (= S. errata View in CoL , absent from northern Europe)) that is unknown on the Pacific coast of North America. Because of undue reliance on European literature, generally inappropriate for the Pacific coast (e.g. Ryland & Porter 2012), the characteristics of this species ( Hayward & Ryland 1995, 1999; Tompsett et al. 2009), especially the marginally fluted but virtually non-porous ovicell, were missed by authors or deliberately ignored (e.g. Ross & McCain 1976) and the name unicornis has been incorrectly applied to at least two quite different species. Osburn (1952) —before S. japonica View in CoL had been recognized in the northwest—included only one nominate species that would now be included in the genus Schizoporella View in CoL , using the name S. unicornis View in CoL , from various localities in California. Osburn’s account is now known to have been based on a mixture of S. japonica View in CoL and S. errata (Powell 1970) View in CoL and S. pseudoerrata View in CoL (described by Soule et al. 1995). The current distribution of S. errata View in CoL is unclear since the species is not discussed by Soule et al. (1995, 2007), though it is certainly common in San Francisco Bay ( Zabin et al. 2010). The differences between S. unicornis View in CoL and S. errata View in CoL are in fact numerous and considerable (this paper and Ryland 1965; Hastings 1968; Hayward & Ryland 1999; Hayward & McKinney 2002; Tompsett et al. 2009). Whether S. errata View in CoL should be regarded as a single species, a complex, or several species is another issue ( Winston & Hayward 2012), which cannot be resolved here.

While Schizoporella errata View in CoL , being a well-known fouling species, seems likely to have been introduced to the Pacific coast well before its first recorded occurrences (as S. unicornis View in CoL , by Osburn 1952), S. japonica View in CoL is most certainly a recent alien. However, Powell (1970) established that it (as S. unicornis View in CoL ), as opposed to S. errata View in CoL , was present in Newport Bay, Los Angeles, as long ago as 1938 (material collected by G. E. MacGinitie); he assumed that it had arrived with Pacific oysters, Crassostrea gigas , which had been imported from Japan (first to Morro Bay) since 1932. This is the earliest record for this species on the west coast of North America. Powell (1970) referred to additional material in USNM from Newport, collected 1943, and Morro Bay, collected 1968. Powell (1970) himself found it (still using the name S. unicornis View in CoL ) from the Strait of Georgia, Canada. It had not been found earlier by O’Donoghue & O’Donoghue (1923, 1925, 1926) but was found by Powell during 1966–69 from several stations in the San Juan Islands, on Vancouver Island, and from as far north as Pendrell Sound (50° N). As for California, he attributed its arrival to the extensive importation of Pacific oysters from Japan in the period 1926– 1935. Its recorded range was extended to further localities in Washington State by Ross & McCain (1976), who conducted a thorough study of zooidal shape [the variability noted earlier that arises from the growth pattern of circular colonies, a topic also investigated in this species by Thorpe & Ryland (1987)]. It was also collected in San Francisco Bay during 1977 (NHMUK 1978.1.4.2). Whereas S. errata View in CoL , as a warm-water species, is likely to be commonest south of San Francisco, the converse is true for S. japonica View in CoL . It has spread northwards through Canada to southern Alaska ( Dick et al. 2005) but, as already noted, it extends southwards beyond San Francisco to Morro Bay (#14) and (historically at least) to the Los Angeles area.

Thus it now appears that three distinct species of Schizoporella View in CoL occur in central California (i.e. the Monterey Bay area), S. errata View in CoL , S. japonica View in CoL , and S. pseudoerrata View in CoL , the first two, at least, being introductions. Sorte et al. (2010) listed an unidentified Schizoporella View in CoL from Bodega Harbor, most likely S. japonica View in CoL (see #21) but possibly S. errata View in CoL , and Zabin et al. (2012) recorded unidentified Schizoporella View in CoL from two sites at Santa Cruz. Schizoporella pseudoerrata View in CoL at present has a very localized confirmed distribution ( Soule et al. 1995) although it has been listed as present at two sites in the northern part of San Francisco Bay—Richmond Marina ( Blum et al. 2007) and Tiburon ( Crooks et al. 2011). It is possible that these records are based on misidentifications and might be either of the other two species. With all three species now recognized and described, it should be possible to correctly identify Schizoporella View in CoL specimens from the Pacific coast. The characteristics of the three Californian species are summarised in Table 7 View TABLE 7 (particularly note the distinctive condyles, observation of which requires the preparation of specimens with a hypochlorite bleach such as Clorox: see Material and Methods above), which should be used in conjunction with Figures 2–4 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 and 10 View FIGURE 10 .

In addition to morphometric methods, genetic techniques have recently been applied in two non-native fouling bryozoan species-groups. In Bugula neritina (Linnaeus) , three biological species were identified. One of these, haplotype S, was globally distributed ( Fehlauer-Ale et al. 2013). In Watersipora subtorquata , three clades were identified by Mackie et al. (2012). These studies provide evidence for cryptic speciation in the fouling community. Genetic studies on Schizoporella japonica are currently underway to investigate the potential for cryptic species in this taxon.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Bryozoa

Class

Gymnolaemata

Order

Cheilostomatida

Family

Schizoporellidae

Loc

Schizoporella

Ryland, John S., Holt, Rohan, Loxton, Jennifer, Spencer Jones, Mary E. & Porter, Joanne S. 2014
2014
Loc

Schizoporella

Hincks 1877
1877
Loc

Schizoporella

Hincks 1877
1877
Loc

Schizoporella

Hincks 1877
1877
Loc

Schizoporella

Hincks 1877
1877
Loc

Schizoporella

Hincks 1877
1877
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