Celleporella marionensis, Branch & Hayward, 2005
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930500124664 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03938784-FFE5-4401-FE2C-FCE4FC25FC62 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Celleporella marionensis |
status |
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Family HIPPOTHOIDAE Busk, 1859 View in CoL
Genus Celleporella Gray, 1848 Celleporella marionensis sp. nov.
( Figure 8 View Figure 8 A–E)
Material
Holotype: St. 55 Marion Island (46 ° 55 9 S, 37 ° 35 9 E), 42–47 m, SAM A27555 GoogleMaps . Paratype: St. 20 Marion Island (46 ° 49 9 S, 37 ° 41 9 E), 34–42 m, SAM A27473 View Materials GoogleMaps .
Other material. St. 31 Marion Island (46 ° 60 9 S, 37 ° 55 9 E), 42–85 m, SAM A27474 View Materials GoogleMaps .
Description
Colony forming thick, fan-shaped sheets, encrusting pebbles, coherent but with small spaces between the tubular communication structures linking adjacent zooids. Autozooids, ovicelled female zooids and presumed male zooids present. Autozooids elongate oval, convex; commonly 0.4–0.45X, 0.2 mm; primary orifice as long as wide, 0.09 mm; with a deep U-shaped sinus comprising approximately one-fifth total length and occupying half the total proximal width; condyles distinct, bifid; frontal shield with coarse, transverse corrugations and three to four prominent umbones in a longitudinal series down the midline. Female zooid slightly shorter than autozooid; primary orifice wider than long, more or less D-shaped, proximal edge almost straight, with a short, narrow, U-shaped sinus; frontal shield with three to four prominent umbones in a median longitudinal series, the distalmost umbo not completely obscuring the orifice; ovicell globular with about six large pores around its periphery, and up to nine blunt umbones on its frontal surface. Male zooids smaller than autozoids, up to 0.3 mm long, with smaller orifice, 0.04 mm wide. Ancestrula not present.
Etymology
Named with reference to the type locality.
Remarks
This species is most similar to C. bougainυillei (d’Orbigny, 1842), which is common in shallow coastal waters of magellanic South America and ranges southwards to South Georgia and the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula. It differs in the proportionately larger sinus of the autozooid orifice, and in the morphology of the female zooid, in which the sinus is proportionately much smaller than in the latter species, and distinctly parallel-sided rather than rounded. The ovicell of C. marionensis is similar to that seen in some populations of C. bougainυillei in having peripheral perforations ( Moyano 1986), but differs in bearing a conspicuous group of frontal umbones. Significantly, all specimens of C. marionensis sp. nov. encrusted pebbles from depths of 35–84 m, while C. bougainυillei seems to be invariably associated with algae.
Celleporella bougainυillei is also recorded here from Marion Island, considerably extending its known geographical range. However, in view of the facts that the type locality of C. bougainυillei is the Falkland Isles; that d’Orbigny’s original materials do not seem to have been described or figured again since the introduction of the taxon, and that Moyano (1986) has drawn attention to morphological differences between geographically remote populations of the species, it may prove to be that this extensive range encompasses several similar but distinct species.
Celleporella alia Hayward, 1993 , previously known only from the South Orkney Islands, South Georgia and the southern Patagonian Shelf, is also here recorded from Marion Island. It forms thin, translucent sheets on bryozoans and on hydrozoans such as Lafoea dumosa and Symplectoscyphus subdichotomous The autozooids of C. alia are closely conjoined and rather flat; the frontal shield bears fine longitudinal ridges and transverse wrinkles but umbones are small and sparsely developed. The female zooid has an ovicell with about 20 tubaeform pores, and its orifice has a V-shaped sinus.
SAM |
South African Museum |
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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