Metacleidochasma verrucosa, Dick & Tilbrook & Mawatari, 2006
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930601062771 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3C0487C6-FF9C-9417-BA7B-C264FB833DE9 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Metacleidochasma verrucosa |
status |
sp. nov. |
Genus Metacleidochasma Soule, Soule, and Chaney, 1991 View in CoL Metacleidochasma verrucosa new species
( Figure 14A–C View Figure 14 )
? Metacleidochasma ovale Soule et al. 1991, p 480 , Plate 1, Figure 7 View Figure 7 , Plate 4, Figures 1 View Figure 1 , 2 View Figure 2 .
Type material
Holotype: NHM 2006.7.21.21, specimen HI-46, bleached, coated for SEM; Kapa’a Beach Park, Island of Hawaii; 1 March 2005; M. H. Dick, collector; intertidal, 0.15 m low tide.
Etymology
The species name derives from the Latin verrucosus (warty), referring to the finely tuberculate frontal wall.
Measurements ZL, 0.29–0.53 (0.370¡0.068). ZW, 0.21–0.33 (0.272¡0.032). OrL, 0.09–0.11
(0.104¡0.008). OrW, 0.08–0.09 (0.084¡0.006).
Description A single small colony was found, 4 mm × 2.5 mm. Colony unilaminar, encrusting, sheet-
like, white; zooids irregularly hexagonal, rounded distally. Frontal wall ( Figure 14A View Figure 14 ) flat, finely tuberculate, with a single rimmed pore near each lateral margin near middle of zooid; many zooids have a low umbo on each side lateral to orifice. Orifice ( Figure 14B View Figure 14 ) terminal, keyhole-shaped, the anter an interrupted circle in outline and separated from broad, curved poster by prominent, sharp condyles directed posteromedially. Marginal zooids usually with three distal spines (range two to four). Our specimen lacks avicularia and ovicells, though other species of this genus typically have frontal avicularia and a globose ovicell that is immersed to a greater or lesser extent, with a slit near proximal margin ( Soule et al. 1991). Ancestrula ( Figure 14C View Figure 14 ) like subsequent zooids and with a similar orifice, but smaller, without frontal pores, and with five distal spines; surrounded by six periancestrular zooids: one distal, two distolateral, two proximolateral, one proximal.
Remarks
Soule et al. (1991) originally described a similar species, M. ovale , from Lahaina, Maui, Hawaiian Islands, and reported this species to occur broadly in the Indo-West Pacific. Tilbrook et al. (2001) later synonymized M. ovale with M. planulata ( Canu and Bassler, 1929) , originally described from the Philippine region. Although Soule et al. (1991) did not describe the ancestrula of M. ovale, Tilbrook et al. (2001) illustrated a tatiform ancestrula for M. planulata . The ancestrula ( Figure 14C View Figure 14 ) in our single specimen is clearly not tatiform, and our specimen further differs from descriptions of M. planulata and M. ovale in having a coarsely tuberculate frontal wall, even in periancestrular zooids, and marginal zooids usually with three rather than four distal spines.
Distribution
Kapa’a Beach on the northwest coast of Hawaii Island is the only known locality.
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 |
Metacleidochasma verrucosa
Dick, Matthew H., Tilbrook, Kevin J. & Mawatari, Shunsuke F. 2006 |
Metacleidochasma ovale
Soule JD & Soule DF & Chaney HW 1991: 480 |