Cellaria riograndensis, Ramalho, Laís V. & Calliari, Lauro, 2015

Ramalho, Laís V. & Calliari, Lauro, 2015, Bryozoans from Rio Grande do Sul Continental Shelf, Southern Brazil, Zootaxa 3955 (4), pp. 569-587 : 574-576

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3955.4.8

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7166565D-A4F0-4E6A-8DA5-17C2CE171D08

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6113624

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CD611139-421A-FFF4-FF3C-F94B542AF0FB

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cellaria riograndensis
status

sp. nov.

Cellaria riograndensis sp. nov.

( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A–D)

Material examined. Parcel do Carpinteiro, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil: Holotype: MNRJ-1192, am25 station 2, 32°09.173’S, 51°28.099’W, 0 7 Aug 2009; Paratype: MNRJ-1170, am25 station 2, 32°09.173’S, 51°28.099’W, 0 7 Aug 2009; MNRJ-1171, am09 lance 6, 32°17.032’S, 51°48.754’W, 40 m depth, 28 September 2009; MNRJ- 1172, am22 pc 1, 32°13.716’S, 51°46.101’W, 21 meters depth, 0 2 February 2009; MNRJ-1169, am21 P1 Bento, 32°16.674’S, 51°47.330’W, 25 meters depth; MNRJ-1191, am24 station 2, 32°09.406’S, 51°28.318’W, 31 July 2009; MNRJ-1193, am26 point 1, 32°08.348’S, 51°27.589’W, 14 August 2009; MNRJ-1194, am28 point 2, 32°08.402’S, 51°28.045’W, 28 August 2009; MNRJ-1228, am30 station 1, 32°14.300’S, 51°46.630’W, 25 meters depth; MNRJ-1227, station 113 (Geo Costa I), 32°15.900’S, 51°46.970’W. Hermenegildo, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil: MNRJ-1195, HT#15, 33°3.321'S, 53°13.824'W, 13 meters depth, June 2011, Coll. FURG; MNRJ-1196, HT#48, 33°48.453'S, 53°12.857'W, 21 meters depth, June 2011, Coll. FURG; MNRJ-1197, HT#48b, 33°48.453’S, 53°12.857’W, 21 meters depth, June 2011, Coll. FURG; MNRJ-1198, HT#22, 33°44.213’S, 53°14.414’W, 15.4 meters depth, June 2011, Coll. FURG; MNRJ-1199, HT#22b, 33°44.213’S, 53°14.414’W, 15.4 meters depth, June 2011, Coll. FURG; MNRJ-1200, HT#27, 33°44.080’S, 53°12.274’W, 19 meters depth, June 2011, Coll. FURG; MNRJ-1258, H#20, 33°41.254’S, 53°10.116’W, 17 meters depth, June 2011, Coll. FURG; MNRJ-1264, H#18, 33°39.471’S, 53°09.765’W, 14.7 meters depth, June 2011, Coll. FURG.

Diagnosis. Colony cylindrical, jointed and branching dichotomously; autozooids rhomboidal to hexagonal, orifice crescent-shaped with distal rim beaded and two prominent condyles rod-shaped, curved to the front. Avicularia replacing the autozooid with triangular mandible; oecium with circular aperture located above the zooidal orifice.

Description. Colony erect, cylindrical, branching dichotomously, jointed ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A). Only loose branches were collected. Autozooids rhomboidal to hexagonal (infertile: 337–425 (373) µm long x 200–250 (229) µm wide; fertile: 365–470 (403) µm long x 200–271 (231) µm wide), disposed in series (8-10) around the whole branch ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A–C). Orifice crescent-shaped without size difference between fertile and infertile zooids (59–80 (70) µm long x 100–137 (118) µm wide), proximal rim slightly convex with two prominent condyles rod-shaped, curved and directed to the front; distal rim with small bead. Cryptocyst granular, depressed. Gymnocyst thick, raised, granular like the cryptocyst ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 B–D).

Avicularia almost the same length of the autozooids, narrower (317–388 (351) µm long x 147–188 (174) µm wide), may replace an autozooid; mandible triangular, palate with a large and shared pore at the proximal region, condiles not observed ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 B–D).

Oecium immersed, aperture circular (30–71 (49) µm diameter), above the zooidal orifice ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 C).

Etymology. The name riograndensis refers to the Rio Grande do Sul state, locality of the samples.

Geographic distribution. Rio Grande do Sul state (Parcel do Carpinteiro e Hermenegildo–present study).

Remarks. Almost 110 fossil and recent Cellaria species are described around the world. For the South Atlantic almost 20 species are recorded, being 17 recent and four fossils, coming mainly from Antarctic waters. Cellaria subtropicalis Vieira et al., 2010 and C. brasiliensis Winston et al., 2014 were the only species described from the Brazilian coast. Cellaria subtropicalis has hexagonal zooids, transversal oecium aperture and a rounded avicularium mandible. Cellaria brasiliensis is very similar to C. riograndensis n. sp. but it has shorter autozooids (324–414 (377) µm long), with different shape and a rounded distal end, slightly shorter orifice (90–126 (106) µm long) with proximal rim more developed and smooth frontal surface, avicularia with the same autozooid size, and rostrum with equilateral triangle-shaped.

Another similar species is C. louisorum Winston & Woollacott, 2009 described from West Atlantic ( Barbados), but it differs from this species as it has a distinct orifice difference between infertile and fertile zooids (a wider orifice and a concave proximal rim in fertile zooids and a convex proximal rim in infertile ones), condyles of avicularia mandible well demarked, larger avicularia (382–455 (411) µm length), and a small rounded oecium foramen. Other species from South Atlantic have greater differences (larger zooids, series with different quantities of zooids, avicularia with semicircular mandibles, oecium with crescent orifice). Thus, we believe that this Cellaria is a new species.

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