Astreopora cenderawasih, Wallace & Turak & DeVantier, 2011
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2011.573098 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E987CC-8162-FF95-FE00-A2E50555F97E |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Astreopora cenderawasih |
status |
sp. nov. |
Astreopora cenderawasih View in CoL sp. nov.
( Figures 2A View Figure 2 , 3 View Figure 3 )
Type locality
Cenderawasih Bay , West Papua .
Material examined
Holotype. MTQ G60697 Indonesia, West Papua, Cenderawasih Bay, Pulau Nurage TNTC 3 ◦ 1.8 ′ S, 134 ◦ 50.1 ′ E; depth 2 m, collected E. Turak 19 February 2006.
Paratypes. MTQ: G60695 Indonesia, West Papua, Cenderawasih Bay, Pulau Nurage TNTC 3 ◦ 1.8 ′ S, 134 ◦ 50.1 ′ E; depth 4 m, collected L. DeVantier 19 February 2006 ; G60696 Indonesia, West Papua, Cenderawasih Bay, Teluk Manu TNTC 2 ◦ 28.9 ′ S, 134 ◦ 33.8 ′ E, depth 4 m, collected L. DeVantier 22 February 2006 ; G60698 Indonesia, West Papua, Cenderawasih Bay, Pulau Nurage TNTC 3 ◦ 1.8 ′ S, 134 ◦ 50.1 ′ E, 2 m collected E. Turak 19 February 2006 .
Etymology
Named for the bay in which it was found, “bird of paradise” in Indonesian.
Diagnosis
Colony indeterminate in growth, mostly consisting of vertical branching units, but some small plates may occur at the base; branching units develop from a thick basal branch that divides into several branchlets, which may also divide; corallites occur up to the tip, which is formed of coenosteum. Corallites tubular, immersed, conical or appressed, with round to oval openings, irregularly scattered on branch surface and mostly not touching; outer diameter of opening 1.5–3.0 mm; inner diameter 0.8–2.0 mm; primary septa all present as laminae to 1 / 3R, forming a pseudocolumella deeper in corallite; secondary septa some to all present as laminae or points. Coenosteum evenly distributed spinules which are tall, irregular cone-shaped with blade-like ridges running lengthwise; tips of branches formed by irregular reticulate growth without spinules.
Skeletal characteristics
Holotype. Part of colony, 100 mm greatest width and 86 mm height. Corallum is an irregular arrangement of vertical palmate branching units, flattened in cross-section, without axial corallites, given off from an irregular basal region. In each palmate unit, a basal branch divides into two to several branches towards its tips. Corallites tubular, immersed, conical or appressed, with round to oval openings, irregularly scattered on branch surface and mostly not touching; outer diameter of opening 1.75–2.17 mm, inner diameter 0.88–1.98 mm; primary septa all present as irregular vertical laminae, with some to all extending to form a pseudo-columella; secondary septa present as points or narrow plates up to 1 / 4R. Coenosteum evenly distributed spinules which are tall, irregular cone-shaped with blade-like ridges running lengthwise; tips of branches formed by irregular reticulate growth without spinules.
Variations shown in paratypes. Branching diverges from the palmate mode in some colonies, with branches sometimes thickening towards their centre and sometimes extending at angles from each other; branches are sometimes in the form of chimneylike columns (similar to those occasionally seen in Astreopora moretonensis ).
Field characteristics
Colour pale to dark brown and purple-grey, colonies spreading to around 1 m diameter.
Habitat
Sandy reef flat and upper reef slope at 2–5 m.
Distribution
To date, recorded from Cenderawasih Bay only; see Figure 1 View Figure 1 .
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.