Paragorgia yutlinux, JUAN ARMANDO SÁNCHEZ, 2005
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.169657 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AC779A99-6987-4CF9-A8A6-4EB0FC89779C |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5668494 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/99047A3A-764E-41BC-8B67-989FE0065A45 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:99047A3A-764E-41BC-8B67-989FE0065A45 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Paragorgia yutlinux |
status |
sp. nov. |
Paragorgia yutlinux View in CoL sp. nov.
( Figs. 36–38 View FIGURE 36 View FIGURE 37 View FIGURE 38 )
Material examined. Holotype: USNM 1073480, BC24, 50 ° 13’54”N – 128 ° 35’00”W, off British Columbia and Vancouver island, 846–861 m, (E/W Ricker, col. J. Boutillier), 12 April 2003, Canada.
Paratype: USNM 57217, 47 ° 35’48”N – 125 ° 08’42”W, 503 m, ‘John Cobb seamount’, (John N. Cobb R/V, AEC Project), 16 March 1962, Washington, USA.
Diagnostic characters. Colonies with a white cortex and pink/purple autozooid apertures. Numerous conical, semiclosed, autozooid polyp apertures uniformly/randomly distributed throughout the branches. Surface sclerites are mostly 6radiates with long, lobulated, and smooth rays ( Fig. 37 View FIGURE 37 D–G, 3 8D –I).
Description. Robust colonies, with white cortex and pink to purple autozooid apertures. Numerous conical, low, semiclosed, autozooid polyp apertures uniformly/randomly distributed throughout the branches ( Fig. 36 View FIGURE 36 ). Tiny siphonozooid apertures tightly closed, not observable with the naked eye. Medulla in terminal branches, with 3–5 major canals.
Autozooid polyp tentacles with blunt ovals, similar to other Paragorgia spp., up to 0.13 mm long, regularly ornate with small conical tubercles ( Figs. 37–38 View FIGURE 37 View FIGURE 38 A–C). Surface sclerites mostly 6radiates with long lobulated and smooth rays ( Fig. 37 View FIGURE 37 D–G, 3 8 D –I), averaging 0.046–0.054 mm in length (0.008 SD, n=10, USNM 57217; 0.003 SD, n=10, USNM 1073480). Surface sclerites between 1.36–1.54 times longer than wide, averaging 0.03 mm in width (0.005 SD, n=10, USNM 57217; 0.002 SD, n=10, USNM 1073480). Subsurface with forms intermediate to longer spindlelike sclerites (e.g. Fig. 38 View FIGURE 38 I). Medulla with slim, straight, ornate, spindles usually less than 0.25 mm in length ( Figs. 37 View FIGURE 37 H, 38J).
Morphological variation. The sizes of the diagnostic sclerites, 6radiates, showed a small but significant difference between the two examined specimens (t =2.95, df=18, P <0.01), although no notable differences in form occur (e.g., Figs. 37–38 View FIGURE 37 View FIGURE 38 ). Because of the small number of samples is not possible to tell if the variation is due to a gradient or not.
Distribution. Eastern Pacific Ocean: off British Columbia ( Canada) and Washington ( USA), 503–1000 m.
Species comparisons. Interestingly, externally this species is similar to species of Sibogagorgia due to the absence of aggregations of autozooids, although it is clear that P. yutlinux sp. nov. is not from that genus. The other Paragorgia species with mostly 6radiates is P. arborea , but they are considerably smaller than P. yutlinux with different ornamentation as well. The radial ornamentation of P. yutlinux sp. nov. 6radiates can resemble the 7 and 8radiates from P. alisonae but their morphologies are definitely divergent and unique in each case.
Etymology. This species is named in honour of the vanished Kwakwaka'wakw tribe, Yutlinux , from Cox and Lanz Islands, British Columbia, Canada.
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
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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