Cauloramphus spinifer ( Johnston, 1832 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930701391773 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/877A7251-CC6F-DE1E-FE45-21A7D33D1995 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Cauloramphus spinifer ( Johnston, 1832 ) |
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Cauloramphus spinifer ( Johnston, 1832) View in CoL
( Figure 13 View Figure 13 ) Flustra spinifera Johnston 1832, p 266 , Plate 9, Figure 6 View Figure 6 . Cauloramphus spinifer: Osburn 1950, p 55 , Plate 5, Figure 9 View Figure 9 ; Mawatari 1956, p 118,
Figure 4a View Figure 4 ; Androsova 1958, p 106, Figure 15 View Figure 15 ; Kluge 1962, p 295, Figure 179; 1975, p 353, Figure 179; Gontar 1980, p 6; Mawatari and Mawatari 1981a, p 43, Figure 10 View Figure 10 ; 1981b, p 44; Dick and Ross 1986, p 89; Grischenko 1997, p 162; 2004, p 40; Hayward and Ryland 1998, p 172, Figure 48.
Cauloramphus spinifera: Kubanin 1997, p 121 View in CoL .
Cauloramphus spinifer: Dick and Ross 1988, p 39 View in CoL , Plates 2D, E, 13D.
Not Cauloramphus spinifer: Kubota and Mawatari 1985a, p 80 View in CoL , Figure 5 View Figure 5 .
Material examined
ANC, colony on rock (NHM 2006.2.27.13); KAI, ancestrular colony on rock (NHM 2006.2.27.17), colony on rock (NHM 2006.2.27.38), colony on rock (NHM 2006.2.27.41); BAC, two colony fragments (NHM 2006.2.27.18). Additional material: 855 specimens .
Description
Colony unilaminar, encrusting, coherent, more or less circular, up to 2.5 cm across, light tan in colour when alive. Zooids ( Figure 13A–D View Figure 13 ) elongate-oval to irregularly hexagonal, 0.47–0.68 mm long (0.56¡ 0.05 mm), 0.30–0.40 mm wide (0.33¡ 0.03 mm), closely set, separated by a fine groove. Mural rim ( Figure 13C View Figure 13 ) slightly raised; cryptocyst relatively narrow, sloping, granulated; distal and lateral gymnocyst reduced or lacking; proximal gymnocyst narrow or tapering back between adjacent zooids, smooth, distinct from granulated mural rim. Opesia ( Figure 13C View Figure 13 ) oval, commonly widest in middle, sometimes proximally, 0.35–0.43 mm long (0.40¡ 0.03 mm), 0.18–0.25 mm wide (0.22¡ 0.02 mm), with crenulate outline, occupying 80–90% of zooidal length. Around mural rim, 8–13 spines; three (rarely two or four) orificial spines orientated vertically, one in midline and one to each side of orifice, slightly blunter, thicker but not longer than opesial spines; 5–10 opesial spines slightly thinner, more acuminate, angling over opesia; sometimes most proximal spine vertically orientated, thicker, longer, blunter even than distal spines. Avicularia ( Figure 13A, B View Figure 13 ) usually paired, sometimes single or lacking on a zooid, arising from distolateral gymnocyst between orificial and opesial spines, in line with proximal edge of orifice; peduncle short, with expanded portion comprising most of the avicularium; about as long as proximal spines, typically turned inward and angled over opesia, with rostral plane facing proximomedially; mandible elongate-triangular, with hooked tip. Embryos brooded endozooidally; fertile zooids have a smooth, moderately well-developed kenozooidal ooecium ( Figure 13C View Figure 13 ) comprising the sharp mural rim distal to the orifice. Six pore chambers in each lateral wall and two in distal wall. Ancestrula ( Figure 13D View Figure 13 ) tatiform, oval, with fully calcified basal wall, 0.34 mm long by 0.26 mm wide; oval opesia 0.25 mm long by 0.18 mm wide; 12 spines around opesial margin, three distal pairs straight and vertical, six proximal spines thin, curved over opesia; ancestrula buds triplet of small zooids distally and distolaterally, each with 10 or 11 spines.
Remarks
Dick and Ross (1988) discussed diagnostic characters and geographic variation in spine number for C. spinifer .
Distribution
This is a circumboreal species extending into the Arctic. In the eastern Atlantic, it is widely distributed in cool-temperate waters, from the White Sea ( Gostilovskaya 1978) and Barents Sea ( Kluge 1962) southward to the Shetland Isles and northern coast of France. In the eastern Pacific, C. spinifer is known from Kodiak Island, Gulf of Alaska; previous records from farther south need to be re-examined ( Dick and Ross 1988). In the western Pacific it has been reported from the Gulf of Anadyr and the vicinity of St Lawrence Island in the Bering Sea; Commander Islands; Sea of Okhotsk; Kuril Islands; Sakhalin Island; and Primorye and Gulf of Peter the Great in the northern Sea of Japan ( Gontar 1980; Kubanin 1997; Grischenko 1997, 2004). From Japan, C. spinifer is known from the Pacific coast of Hokkaido, including Akkeshi, Kushiro, Mori, Muroran, and Shirikishinai, southward to middle Honshu ( Mawatari and Mawatari 1981a, 1981b). We have determined material from Oshoro Bay, western coast of Hokkaido, Sea of Japan, identified by Kubota and Mawatari (1985a) as C. spinifer , actually to be C. magnus .
BAC |
Beijing Agricultural College |
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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Cauloramphus spinifer ( Johnston, 1832 )
Grischenko, Andrei V., Dick, Matthew H. & Mawatari, Shunsuke F. 2007 |
Cauloramphus spinifera:
Kubanin AA 1997: 121 |
Cauloramphus spinifer:
Dick MH & Ross JRP 1988: 39 |
Cauloramphus spinifer: Kubota and Mawatari 1985a , p 80
Kubota K & Mawatari SF 1985: 80 |