Microporella crustula, Hayward & Winston, 2011
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2011.574922 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F93214-9641-D206-FE47-FA689747FDC7 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Microporella crustula |
status |
sp. nov. |
Microporella crustula sp. nov.
( Figure 26 View Figure 26 )
Material
Holotype. NMNH 1154041 View Materials : Eltanin cruise 11, station 974, 53 ◦ 32’ to 53 ◦ 34’ S, 64 ◦ 57’ to 64 ◦ 55’ W, 119–124 m, 12 February 1964; a single colony encrusting a piece of gravel. GoogleMaps
Description
Colony encrusting, unilaminar. Autozooids oval to hexagonal, thickly calcified, convex, separated by distinct grooves. Primary orifice slightly wider than long, with a thickly calcified rim, and the proximal edge with a slight median convexity; six spines evenly spaced around lateral and distal borders of orifice, two persisting in ovicelled zooids. Frontal shield nodular, with a border of small, regularly spaced areolar pores, and 20 to 30 smaller pseudopores scattered frontally. Ascopore in distal half of zooid, forming a shallow crescent with a denticulate edge, recessed within a thick, oval rim; distance between proximal edge of orifice and distal edge of ascopore equivalent to orifice length. A single avicularium situated proximo-lateral to ascopore, on right or left; rostrum directed disto-laterally, short, its tip truncate and slightly flared, inferred to support a setiform mandible; crossbar stout, lacking a columella. Ovicell recumbent on distally succeeding autozooid, globular and prominent, its nodular surface with a conspicuous median umbo; aperture highly arched, with a broad lip of smooth calcification; imperforate frontally, but with a peripheral series of small pores.
Measurements
For all measurements n = 20, mean ± SD: autozooid length 0.74 ± 0.05 mm; autozooid width, 0.52 ± 0.05 mm; orifice length 0.16 ± 0.01 mm; orifice width 0.13 ± 0.01 mm.
Etymology
Latin, crusta: a hard outer surface, with reference to the thick, nodular frontal shield.
Remarks
Taylor and Mawatari (2005) noted that more than 150 species have been assigned to the genus Microporella , and that although perhaps one-third of these do not belong in the genus, its actual diversity is still obscured by incorrect attribution of material, from worldwide localities, to a few taxa formerly considered to be cosmopolitan in distribution. Kuklinski and Taylor (2008) usefully chose a neotype for the type species, M. ciliata (Pallas, 1766) . A single endemic Antarctic species is known, M. stenoporta Hayward and Taylor, 1984 , and two others have been described from the magellanic region, M. hyadesi (Jullien, 1888) and M. personata (Busk, 1854) . It is possible that M. crustula sp. nov. has been previously recorded from the southwest Atlantic as the “cosmopolitan” M. ciliata (Pallas, 1766) , but it differs from northeast Atlantic specimens attributed to that species in the proportions of its primary orifice, which is wider than long in M. ciliata , in its smaller ascopore and more delicate frontal pores. Further, the adventitious avicularium is much larger in M. ciliata , and the ovicell is shorter and less prominent, and lacks the conspicuous umbo seen in the new species.
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