Bathycyclopora vibraculata ( Calvet, 1931 ) Berning & Harmelin & Bader & Cibio, 2017
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2017.347 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:41385EAB-F391-468D-89CA-F7A574F820AB |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3850659 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/546F87A1-FFA0-FFB7-0AA3-973B361AFBFE |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Bathycyclopora vibraculata ( Calvet, 1931 ) |
status |
gen. et comb. nov. |
Bathycyclopora vibraculata ( Calvet, 1931) View in CoL gen. et comb. nov.
Fig. 11 View Fig A–F, Table 11 View Table 11
? Phylactella vibraculata Calvet, 1931: 113 , pl. 2, figs 17–18.
Material examined
Lectotype (here designated)
AZORES: 2 ovicellate colonies on a coral fragment, the larger one with an ancestrula is the lectotype ( MOM INV-22480 a), the smaller one a paralectotype ( MOM INV-22480 b), dry, Stn 2.
Paralectotypes
AZORES: 1 colony on coral fragment, dry, Stn 2 ( MOM INV- 22679); 1 colony on coral fragment, dry, Stn 2 ( MOM INV- 22680); 1 colony fragment, dry, on slide, severely affected by Bynesian decay, Stn 2 ( MOM INV- 22479).
Description
Colony encrusting, unilaminar, multiserial, forming small patches ( Fig. 11A View Fig ). Zooids relatively large, hexagonal or polygonal, separated by grooves ( Fig. 11 View Fig B–C); lateral walls well developed, becoming more extensive distally, gently sloping, with a single basal pore chamber connecting each neighbouring zooid ( Fig. 11C View Fig ), round septular pore surrounded by a large area of cryptocyst with a surface similar to that of frontal shield, framed by a narrow and slightly raised ridge of gymnocystal calcification, separated from neighbouring pore chamber by a suture, pore in distal pore chamber slightly raised with respect to lateral ones. Frontal shield convex, imperforate except for a single row of numerous conspicuous marginal pores, gently rising distally towards a suboral crest with a blunt or occasionally triangular central umbo that is laterally sloping towards proximal pair of spines ( Fig. 11D View Fig ); surface rugose and with irregular wrinkles, superimposed by fine granules.
Orifice about as wide as long, distal half rounded and with a conspicuous immersed shelf along entire distal margin, lateral margins parallel, proximal edge slightly concave; condyles conspicuous, rectangular or roughly triangular, distinctly set off from orifice margins ( Fig. 11F View Fig ); distolateral orifice margin with seven or rarely six evenly spaced spines, six spines with a distinct distal gap in potentially maternal zooids.
Ovicell hyperstomial, ooecium resting on or slightly immersed in distal zooid’s frontal shield ( Fig. 11D View Fig ), globular, in general wider than long, with a very short tubular peristome wedged in between distalmost pair of spines and terminating at distal orifice margin; smooth ectooecium a narrow band around base of ooecium, broadening proximally to frame ooecial aperture ( Fig. 11E View Fig ); exposed endooecium imperforate, surface topography similar to that of frontal shield; ooecial aperture suborbicular, not closed by operculum.
Adventitious avicularia paired, small, oval, lateral to orifice near distolateral zooidal corners ( Fig. 11 View Fig D– E); rostrum short, semicircular to semielliptical, slightly raised distally, directing laterally or distolaterally, palate an immersed distolateral shelf framing a suborbicular opesia; crossbar incomplete, composed of two short inwardly curved triangular condyles, proximal uncalcified area reduced, semicircular. Interzooidal avicularia frequent in late astogenetic parts of colony, emplaced on a polygonal cystid with variably developed cryptocyst-type granular frontal shield and a row of marginal pores as in autozooids ( Fig. 11 View Fig C–D); rostrum slightly to distinctly spatulate, slightly raised distally, of variable size and pointing in various directions, most of palate occupied by a broad flat shelf with a V-shaped proximal edge caused by indentation of distal uncalcified area; crossbar broad laterally and much thinner towards centre when complete, or reduced to a pair of short triangular condyles; proximal uncalcified area reduced, semicircular.
Ancestrula tatiform, oval (ca 500 µm long, 350 µm wide), smooth gymnocyst presumably narrow all around, cryptocyst absent; opesia large (ca 380 µm long, 260 µm wide), oval, slightly constricted in distal fifth; 11 spines, with five proximal ones widely spaced and six distal ones situated closer together ( Fig. 11B View Fig ).
Remarks
As Calvet (1931) did not explicitly mention a holotype, we here designate as lectotype the specimen that was presumably depicted on pl. 2, figs 17–18. The species epithet stems from a misinterpretation of the small adventitious avicularia, which Calvet (1931: 114) thought were vibracula. The mandible is, however, confined to the rostrum, moves in one plane only, and is therefore a normal avicularium ( Fig. 11E View Fig ). Bathycyclopora vibraculata gen. et comb. nov. has never been reported again after its discovery.
Ecology
All available colonies encrust dead coral skeletons at ca 600 m depth, forming small patches.
Distribution
Bathycyclopora vibraculata gen. et comb. nov. was found at a single station off NW Terceira Island (Azores).
MOM |
Musee Oceanographique Monaco |
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.
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Genus |
Bathycyclopora vibraculata ( Calvet, 1931 )
Berning, Björn, Harmelin, Jean-Georges & Bader, Beate 2017 |
Phylactella vibraculata
Calvet L. 1931: 113 |