Culicia stellata Dana, 1846
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1018.1.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:02411A3D-C81F-4E3D-A24F-8D07FF9A64C4 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0D5E87EC-A311-0A02-9376-0630C7B30813 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Culicia stellata Dana, 1846 |
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Culicia stellata Dana, 1846 View in CoL
Figs. 1D–E View FIGURE 1
Culicia stellata Dana, 1846: 377 View in CoL , pl. 28, figs. 5a–d. — Cairns & Zibrowius, 1997: 78–79, figs. 3a–b (synonymy).
Culicia truncata Dana, 1846: 378 View in CoL , pl. 28, figs. 7, 7a.
Culicia japonica Yabe & Eguchi, 1936: 167–168 View in CoL , figs. 1–3.
Culicia rubeola View in CoL . — Chevalier, 1971: 93–100, pl. 3, fig. 6.
Culicia sp. cf. C. rubeola View in CoL . — Cairns, 1991: 7, pl. 1i–j (Galápagos, Cocos Islands).
New Records. — Anton Bruun 1265235, 33°38'20"S, 78°48'50"W ( Róbinson Crusoe Island , Juan Fernández Islands), 3–12 m, 11 Dec 1965, 1 small cluster of about 20 corallites, USNM 1021964 About USNM GoogleMaps ; Anton Bruun 1265239 , 33°38'20"S, 78°49'00"W, 2–8 m, 11 Dec 1965, several dozen corallites on 3 small rocks, USNM 1021966 About USNM GoogleMaps ; Anton Bruun 1265243 , 33°37'00"S, 78°50'50"W, 0–10 m, 12 Dec 1965, several dozen corallites on 6 small rocks, USNM 1021978 About USNM GoogleMaps ; Eltanin 21200, east coast Roca Más Afuera, Isla San Ambrosio, intertidal, 26 Nov 1965, 4 corallites, USNM 1021979 About USNM .
Remarks. —These are the first records of C. stellata from off Chile, specifically from Juan Fernández and San Ambrosio Islands (0–12 m), although it is common in the western Pacific (see Cairns & Zibrowius 1997) and previously reported from the eastern Pacific (Galápagos, Cocos Islands) by Cairns (1991) as Culicia sp. cf. C. rubeola . The Chilean corallites are rarely over 3.5 mm in GCD and 3 mm in height (GCD:LCD = 1.14–1.18), having a strongly epithecate wall and white in colour. Corallites stand 1–5 mm apart, linked by ribbonlike stolons that are often encrusted with epiphytes. Distomodeal intratentacular budding occurs occasionally. Septa are hexamerally arranged in four incomplete cycles (S1>S2>S3>S4), the larger corallites commonly having 30, 32, or 34 septa, corresponding to the presence of 3, 4, or 5 pairs of S4. S1 consist of an upper lobe and 1–3 elongate, lower axial teeth. S2 and S3 are only slightly smaller and sometimes hard to distinguish from the S1, but have a smaller upper lobe and more lower axial teeth. S4 are rudimentary, consisting of a series of 5–7 slender, horizontal teeth. The septal teeth grade imperceptibly into the columellar elements.
The Chilean populations correspond to the ‘ truncata ’ form of the species ( Fig. 1F View FIGURE 1 ), the corallites of which are rarely over 3 mm in height and have stolons strongly encrusted between corallites.
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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Culicia stellata Dana, 1846
Cairns, Stephen D., Häussermann, Verena & Försterra, Günter 2005 |
Culicia sp.
Cairns, S. D. 1991: 7 |
Culicia rubeola
Chevalier, J. - P. 1971: 93 |
Culicia japonica
Yabe, H. & Eguchi, M. 1936: 168 |
Culicia stellata
Cairns, S. D. & Zibrowius, H. 1997: 78 |
Dana, J. D. 1846: 377 |
Culicia truncata
Dana, J. D. 1846: 378 |