Chrysogorgia acanthella ( Wright & Studer, 1889 ) Versluys, 1902
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5321.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A1F2E418-67A3-4D1F-ABC9-6C2BA0F5190E |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8203456 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0388878C-FFBD-9C4C-099C-EB517626FC6A |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Chrysogorgia acanthella ( Wright & Studer, 1889 ) Versluys, 1902 |
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Chrysogorgia acanthella ( Wright & Studer, 1889) Versluys, 1902 View in CoL
Figs. 48–51 View FIGURE 48 View FIGURE 49 View FIGURE 50 View FIGURE 51 ; Tables 8 View TABLE 8 , 9 View TABLE 9
Dasygorgia acanthella Wright & Studer, 1889: 18–20 View in CoL , Pl. IV, fig. 6; Pl. V, fig. 8.
Chrysogorgia acanthella: Versluys, 1902: 71–73 View in CoL , fig. 113.
Chrysogorgia acanthella: Kükenthal, 1919: 526 View in CoL .
Chrysogorgia acanthella: Pasternak, 1981: 50–51 View in CoL .
Material examined. MBM286862 View Materials , station FX-Dive 211 (10°2′57″N, 140°10′29″E), a seamount (tentatively named as M5) on the Caroline Ridge, 1478m, 29 May 2019 GoogleMaps . MBM286357 View Materials , station FX-Dive 70 (11°16′14″N, 139°25′30″E), a seamount (tentatively named as M2) near the Mariana Trench, 1458 m, 27 March 2016 GoogleMaps .
Description. Colonies bushy bottlebrush-shaped in situ and attached to a rocky substrate ( Figs. 48A View FIGURE 48 , 50A View FIGURE 50 ). Specimen of MBM286862 about 23 cm long and 14 cm wide in maximum with the holdfast not recovered ( Fig. 48B View FIGURE 48 ). Stem about 2.5 mm in diameter at base with a little aeruginous metallic luster. Branching sequence 2/5L, 3/7L and irregular on the top. Branches subdivided dichotomously, up to 10 orders with branching angle 60°–80°. Distance between adjacent branch 3–19 mm, the first internode of branch 9–25 mm long and the terminal branchlets gracile and up to 22 mm long. Polyps usually with an oval body and became narrow at tentacle base, 1–2 mm tall and 1.0– 1.5 mm wide, occasionally up to 3 mm in terminal ( Fig. 48C–E View FIGURE 48 ). Polyps arranged two to four and often small on first internode, one to four in medial internode and up to five in terminal branchlets. Polyps in stem internodes very small and arranged two to eight in each internode. Eggs often observed in the bulbous base of polyps ( Figs. 48C View FIGURE 48 , 50C View FIGURE 50 ). Verrucae occasionally present on the polyp body ( Fig. 50C View FIGURE 50 ).
Scales in aboral face of tentacle rachis usually alternately arranged in two rows with irregular shape, nearly smooth and a little curved with one or two ends became broad, some of them with sparse fine warts, measuring 50– 387 × 11–147 μm ( Fig. 49A View FIGURE 49 ). Scales in pinnules longitudinally arranged, slender and a little curved, nearly smooth or with sparse fine warts, some of them with one end became broad and the other end narrow or sharp, measuring 61–253 × 7–107 μm ( Fig. 49C View FIGURE 49 ). Scales at the base of tentacular part obliquely or transversely arranged, elongate and nearly smooth with irregular shape, usually with an obvious medial contraction, some of them with finely toothed edge surface and one end truncated and the other rounded, measuring 87–333 × 27–153 μm ( Fig. 49E View FIGURE 49 ).
Scales in basal part of polyp body wall obliquely or transversely arranged, elongate and nearly smooth with an obvious medial contraction, relatively regular with biscuit-like shape, occasionally with lobed and finely toothed edges, measuring 84–513 × 23–229 μm ( Fig. 49B View FIGURE 49 ). Scales in coenenchyme arranged along to the branch, small, a little elongate and smooth with a slight medial contraction, occasionally lobed with irregular shape, measuring 67–297 × 20–83 μm ( Figs. 48F View FIGURE 48 , 49D View FIGURE 49 ). Rods and plates or scales in polyp mouth area small and thick, nearly smooth or coarse with deep cracks or sparse warts on surface, some of them with a medial contraction, measuring 24–83 × 4–28 μm ( Fig. 49F View FIGURE 49 ).
Specimen of MBM286357 bushy with possible 1/3L branching sequence on the basal part and became more irregular on the upper part. Polyps on branch internodes pitcher-shaped, usually with eight inconspicuous tentacles gathering on the top ( Fig. 50C–E View FIGURE 50 ). Polyps in stem internodes small and arranged average three in each internode. Spindles and scales in polyp mouth area near the tentacles thick with many coarse warts on surface, some of them curved and with irregular edges ( Fig. 51D View FIGURE 51 ). The morphological measurements of MBM286357 see the Table 3 View TABLE 3 .
Distribution and habitat. North of the Kermadec Islands, 1097 m ( Wright & Studer 1889); Marcus-Necker Ridge, 1700–2300 m ( Pasternak 1981); a seamount near the Mariana Trench, 1458 m; a seamount on the Caroline Ridge, 1478 m.
Remarks. Our specimens MBM286862 and MBM286357 differ from the holotype by more irregular branching sequence (2/5L, 3/7L and irregular in top vs. possible 1/3L and irregular in top vs. 2/5L), longer interbranch distance (3–19 mm vs. 12–15 mm vs. 1.5 mm). These differences may be caused by different growth stage or environment, and are not constant, we treat as the intraspecific variation. Therefore, the characters of C. acanthella can be summarized by having a bushy bottlebrush-shaped colony, usually pitcher-like polyps, irregular scales with one or two ends broad in tentacle rachis, biscuit-like scales in basal part of polyp body wall, elongate scales with a slight medial contraction in coenenchyme.
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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Chrysogorgia acanthella ( Wright & Studer, 1889 ) Versluys, 1902
Xu, Yu, Zhan, Zifeng & Xu, Kuidong 2023 |
Chrysogorgia acanthella:
Pasternak, F. A. 1981: 51 |
Chrysogorgia acanthella: Kükenthal, 1919: 526
Kukenthal, W. 1919: 526 |
Chrysogorgia acanthella: Versluys, 1902: 71–73
Versluys, J. 1902: 73 |
Dasygorgia acanthella
Wright, E. P. & Studer, T. 1889: 20 |