Rhabdopleura manubialis Jullien & Calvet, 1903

Gordon, Dennis P., Randolph Quek, Z. B. & Huang, Danwei, 2024, Four new species and a ribosomal phylogeny of Rhabdopleura (Hemichordata: Graptolithina) from New Zealand, with a review and key to all described extant taxa, Zootaxa 5424 (3), pp. 323-357 : 337

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5424.3.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:524CF65D-F877-42E1-B983-EDC7D3ED1623

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10821341

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0381104D-FFCB-B95B-EAF0-FDCEF462FA1E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Rhabdopleura manubialis Jullien & Calvet, 1903
status

 

Rhabdopleura manubialis Jullien & Calvet, 1903 View in CoL ( Figs 4G View FIGURE 4 , 6E View FIGURE 6 )

Type locality. Off the southeastern tip of Pico Island, Azores, 318 m [38.4000° N, 28.0239° W in Stebbing (1970a, p. 211), the original Paris meridian corrected to Greenwich], on dead bryozoans and a sertularian hydroid “en compagnie de Rhabdopleura Grimaldii. GoogleMaps

Key features. Inception of ringed erect tubes is indirect. The species occurred at the same station as R. grimaldii View in CoL , but the light-yellowish <3 cm-long colony lacked the ‘tubes très fins’ and had dormant buds (‘statoblasts’) in adherent parts of some blind-ending side branches. The dark pectocaulus is visibly continuous from the main creeping tube(s) into the side branches.

Comment. MNHN Paris sent two close-up images of this species based on the unique syntype (MNHN-IB-2014-387), which occurs on a fenestrate bryozoan, but the information content is very limited, again because creeping tubes are highly transparent and reflective; fusellar sutures were not clear enough in the images for zigzag angles to be measured. One erect ringed tube [ Fig. 6E View FIGURE 6 ] was well imaged, however [784 m long, diameter 118‒131 (126) μm], with fusellus height 11‒24 (18) μm]. Creeping-tube width is 98‒110 (104) μm (n = 2), adherent-tube convexity width 177‒178 μm and creeping-tube stolon width is 20‒32 (26) μm (n = 3). Fusellar-collar extensions are greater than in R. grimaldii and there is no trace of a narrowing pectocaulus in side-branches. It is clear that the species is not synonymous with R. grimaldii .

The Latin epithet manubialis means ‘manual’ or ‘captured,’ with no obvious application to the description or illustration. If we assume that the sole illustration of the species was accurately rendered (as per camera lucida), zigzag angles are 57°‒81°, mean 72°, mode 70° (n = 34); the range of angles (57‒81°) just overlaps with that for R. normani [54‒61°, mean 57°, mode 55°] based on Allman’s (1869, pl. 8, fig. 4) illustration. Rhabdopleura manubialis has been treated as a junior synonym of R. normani but more work needs to be carried out on the latter species. External tube diameter between fusellar collars is 143‒154 (148) μm (n = 10) and fusellus height is 24‒41 (33) μm (n = 20), i.e. less than and almost completely non-overlapping with equivalent metrics for R. normani .

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