Desmacystis sandalia ( Robertson, 1900 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930701391773 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/877A7251-CC72-DE0A-FE59-2499D1831A90 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Desmacystis sandalia ( Robertson, 1900 ) |
status |
|
Desmacystis sandalia ( Robertson, 1900) View in CoL
( Figure 22 View Figure 22 )
Membranipora sandalia Robertson 1900, p 324 , Plate 20, Figures 9, 9a View Figure 9 , Plate 21, Figure 10 View Figure 10 ; 1908, p 264, Plate 15, Figures 11–14 View Figure 11 View Figure 12 View Figure 13 View Figure 14 .
Desmacystis sandalia: Osburn 1950, p 32 View in CoL , Plate 3, Figure 1 View Figure 1 ; Gontar 1981, p 102; Dick and Ross 1988, p 30, Plate 1A; Gordon and Grischenko 1994, p 62, Figures 1–6 View Figure 1 View Figure 2 View Figure 3 View Figure 4 View Figure 5 View Figure 6 ; Kubanin 1997, p 123; Grischenko 1997, p 173; 2004, p 40.
? Desmacystis sandalia concinna Gontar 1982, p 543 View in CoL , Figure 1,1 View Figure 1 .
Material examined
ACT, two colony fragments (NHM 2006.2.27.59); KAI, colony on rock (NHM 2006.2.27.60). Additional material: 147 specimens.
Description
Colony encrusting, unilaminar, coherent, loosely attaching to substrate, irregularly circular, up to 5 cm across, bright orange or reddish when alive. Zooids ( Figure 22B–D View Figure 22 ) irregularly hexagonal, or tapering proximally and clavate in shape, rounded distally, thinwalled, 0.60–0.80 mm long (0.71¡ 0.06 mm), 0.32–0.45 mm wide (0.38¡ 0.03 mm), separated by raised vertical walls. Frontal shield cryptocystal, ‘‘incomplete’’, occupying 40–60% of zooidal length; relatively smooth in newly formed zooids, sunken below narrow gymnocystal rim and covered by epitheca, with three to five areolar pores along each lateral margin; with age, reinforced by strong buttresses of calcification running between adjacent areolae toward centre of cryptocyst, meeting proximal and lateral margins of avicularian chamber, often confluent with a heavily calcified median buttress. A suboral avicularium with a raised chamber arises from one of distalmost areolae, asymmetrically placed and overhanging the opesia, rostrum facing obliquely laterally, mandible semicircular to subspatulate, cross-bar complete. Secondary orifice oval to nearly circular, 0.28–0.35 mm long (0.31¡ 0.02 mm), 0.27–0.33 mm wide (0.29¡ 0.02 mm), surrounded by thin, raised gymnocystal margin; with age, orifice can become partially concealed by calcification from adjacent zooids. Ovicell ( Figure 22C, D View Figure 22 ) a small, transversely elongate hood suspended in distal curvature of aperture, with uncalcified central area that is sometimes open at proximal margin. Four small circular multiporous septula in each lateral wall; transverse wall interconnects through numerous pores in basal half, organized into two distinct septular areas. Spines absent. Ancestrula not observed.
Remarks
Gontar (1982) described a new subspecies, D. sandalia concinna , on the basis of material from Kunahsir among the southern Kuril Islands. Characters distinguishing this subspecies from the nominal subspecies include strongly calcified ridges on the proximal part of the frontal shield; the occasional presence of a small additional avicularium in the same area; and smaller zooidal dimensions. Grischenko (1997) noted a similar condition of the frontal shield in specimens from the Commander Islands, but did not observe the additional frontal avicularia. Colonies of D. sandalia from Akkeshi Bay show considerable variation in the degree of calcification of the frontal shield and avicularian chamber, and in the development of buttresses. Whereas in some colonies zooids have an inflated, relatively smooth frontal shield and reduced, shortened buttresses, in others zooids have a highly mucronate frontal, reinforced by strong buttresses. A parallel variation in characters also occurs during individual zooidal development. Except for the sporadic presence of an additional frontal avicularium, the characters considered diagnostic for D. sandalia concinna appear to comprise astogenetic, ecophenotypic, or intra-population variation. It thus remains unclear whether D. sandalia concinna represents a valid subspecies.
Distribution
This is a Boreal Pacific species, originally described from Yakutat, Alaska ( Robertson 1900) and subsequently reported from the Queen Charlotte archipelago ( Osburn 1950), Kodiak Island ( Dick and Ross 1988), the Commander Islands ( Gordon and Grischenko 1994; Grischenko 1997, 2004; Kubanin 1997), and Kunashir and Shikotan among the southern Kuril Islands ( Gontar 1981). Our record from Akkeshi is the first report of D. sandalia from Japan and represents the southernmost limit of its known distribution in the western North Pacific.
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Desmacystis sandalia ( Robertson, 1900 )
Grischenko, Andrei V., Dick, Matthew H. & Mawatari, Shunsuke F. 2007 |
Desmacystis sandalia concinna
Gontar VI 1982: 543 |
Desmacystis sandalia:
Kubanin AA 1997: 123 |
Grischenko AV 1997: 173 |
Gordon DP & Grischenko AV 1994: 62 |
Dick MH & Ross JRP 1988: 30 |
Gontar VI 1981: 102 |
Osburn RC 1950: 32 |
Membranipora sandalia
Robertson A 1900: 324 |