Eucoelium orientalis (Kott, 1990)

KOTT, PATRICIA, 2003, New syntheses and new species in the Australian Ascidiacea, Journal of Natural History 37 (13), pp. 1611-1653 : 1622-1623

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930110104258

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5260179

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8B5387D0-2561-9A19-121A-E6DDFB81FD96

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Eucoelium orientalis (Kott, 1990)
status

 

Eucoelium orientalis (Kott, 1990) View in CoL

(figure 3A; plate 1B)

Polycitorella orientalis Kott, 1990a: 187 View in CoL and synonymy.

Distribution. New records: Western Australia (Rottnest I., SAM E2639 E2641; Houtman’s Abrolhos, WAM 768.88). The species was previously known from the Great Barrier Reef (Swain Reefs, QM GH9477: see Kott, 1990a) and Coral Sea.

Description. One colony (SAME2641) is a thick branched stalk, with expanded heads on each terminal branch that fuse with one another; another (SAM E2639) is a single unbranched stalk almost the same diameter as its rounded terminal head; and the third colony (WAM 768.88) is a soft white cushion. Two or three zooids are grouped in conspicuous circular systems and have globular spicules to 0.09 mm diameter with flat-tipped rays. The specimens lack any of the pigment that is characteristic of E. coronaria (see Kott, 1990a, 1992b).

Remarks. Previously (see Kott, 1990a) the species was characterized by its preponderance of globular spicules to 0.035 mm diameter with flat-tipped rays, as well as stellate ones. The newly recorded colonies (from Western Australia) have globular spicules similar to, but larger (to 0.09 mm diameter) than previously reported for this species. Its zooids, as in most specimens of this genus, are in small circular groups of two or three, with the atrial apertures in the centre. Although its range overlaps that of E. coronaria the species are distinct, the present one having spicules of variable size, albeit always predominantly globular, while E. coronaria has stellate spicules to 0.07 mm diameter, with conical rays, conspicuous dark pigment in the colony, and larger circular systems that involve six or more zooids.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Ascidiacea

Order

Aplousobranchia

Family

Polycitoridae

Genus

Eucoelium

Loc

Eucoelium orientalis (Kott, 1990)

KOTT, PATRICIA 2003
2003
Loc

Polycitorella orientalis

Kott 1990: 187
1990
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