Calcigorgia beringi ( Nutting, 1912 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4571.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D1268894-FADE-482B-83F8-FD6B1C2619C1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5698523 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038CDB21-FF95-A22B-FF65-FEDB6365FD67 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Calcigorgia beringi ( Nutting, 1912 ) |
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Calcigorgia beringi ( Nutting, 1912) View in CoL
Figures 1a View FIGURE 1 , 2a View FIGURE 2 , 3 View FIGURE 3
Leptogorgia beringi Nutting, 1912: 95 (Alaska, USA).
? Leptogrgia beringi ; Bielschowsky 1918: 29 (Sagami Bay, Japan).
? Stenogorgia beringi ; Kükenthal 1919: 918, 1924: 348 ( Japan).
Material examined. Holotype USNM 30044 About USNM , SE of Agattu Island , Aleutian Islands , East Bering Sea , 52°01'N, 174°39'E, 1046 fathoms (1914 m), USFC Albatross Northwestern Pacific Expedition sta. 4780, Trawl—Agassiz beam, 8 ft, 7 June 1906, one nearly complete colony; other material examined by Dr. Bayer: USNM 1006240 About USNM , Great Sitkin Island , Andreanof Islands , Aleutian Islands , East Bering Sea , 52.00°N, 176.642°E, AB01-43 , depth 298 m, coll. Slear, J., 13 November 2000, dry; other material: USNM8848 About USNM , Chica Island , Akutan Pass, Fox Islands , Aleutian Islands , East Bering Sea , U.S. Coast Survey, coll. Dall, William Healey, dry; USNM 100806 About USNM , Amatignak Island , Delarof Islands , Aleutian Islands , East Bering Sea , 51°N, 179°W (cf. 51°15’26.40”N, 179°06’18.60”W), R/ V Pacific Knight, cruise 941, haul 161, 18 July 1994; USNM 1004602 About USNM , Bering Sea, 52°N, 177°W, AB01-45 , 26 February 2001, dry; USNM 1006249 About USNM , Bering Sea, AB01-4 , sample #AE114, coll. Slear, J., 4 December 2000, dry; USNM 1006324 About USNM , SE of Rat Islands , Aleutian Islands, East Bering Sea, 52.231°N, 175.159°E, depth to 182 m, R/ V Alaska Sea, AB 00-38, coll. Palmer, D., 26 January 2000, dry. GoogleMaps
Description (after Nutting and the manuscript of Bayer). The holotype is 7.9 cm long and 7 cm wide ( Figure 2a View FIGURE 2 ), a holdfast is lacking. The cylindrical polyps are situated all around the branches and are up to 1.75 mm long and 1 mm wide. The infolded tentacles contain small, flattened scales, up to 0.10 mm long, sparsely ornamented with simple, rounded projections ( Figure 3a View FIGURE 3 ). These extend along the tentacle bases and intergrade with longer, more closely sculptured capstans, belted spindles and cylinders densely filling the polyps and coenenchyme, 0.05–0.15 mm long ( Figure 3b View FIGURE 3 ). A few poorly developed clubs ( Figure 3b View FIGURE 3 top) and crosses ( Figure 3c View FIGURE 3 ) are also present, with similar size as the spindles and cylinders.
Distribution. Western Aleutian Islands, West Bering Sea. The type locality is actually SE of Agattu Island in the Near Island group of the western Aleutians, in the south edge of West Bering Sea, in 1914 m, rather than in the Bering Sea as stated by Nutting ( Figure 1a View FIGURE 1 ). The only locality with western longitude, Amatignak Island is the southernmost point of Alaska, as well as the westernmost longitude of Alaska, located in the West Bering Sea.
Remarks (partly after the manuscript of Bayer). Nutting’s original description and photograph of the colony adequately show the appearance of the preserved colony, but a new photograph is presented ( Figure 2a View FIGURE 2 ) for comparison with the other species considered here. Nutting’s description and illustration of the sclerites do not adequately characterize the species, and apparently misled Kükenthal (1924: 348), who wrote that the tubercles of the sclerites “in unregelmässigen Gürteln stehen” (placed in irregular whorls). Nutting was misled by the resemblance of its regularly belted spindles, which resemble the sclerites of many gorgonians. He observed (1912: 96) that it “has longer and more prominent calyces than any other species of the genus” but did not notice that the polyps are not retractile as always is the case in gorgoniids. It is not clear whether the material from Japan identified by Bielschowsky (1918) and Kükenthal (1919) really is this species; it was not examined by us. Although Kükenthal (1919, 1924) was correct in removing Leptogorgia beringi from the genus Leptogorgia , his assignment of the species to Stenogorgia (= Swiftia ) is untenable because the polyps of that genus are more or less completely retractile within distinct calyces owing to the presence of a neck-zone nearly or completely devoid of sclerites.
The original description of Nutting (1912) and later re-description of Bayer did not mention the presence of clubs in the polyps, which are however present in the type material, though poorly developed and in low numbers ( Figure 4d View FIGURE 4 ).
USFC |
U. S. Fish Commission |
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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Genus |
Calcigorgia beringi ( Nutting, 1912 )
Matsumoto, Asako K., Van Ofwegen, Leen P. & Bayer, Frederick M. 2019 |
Stenogorgia beringi
Kukenthal, W. 1919: 918 |
Leptogorgia beringi
Nutting, C. C. 1912: 95 |