Orbicella, DANA, 1846: 205
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1111/zoj.12140 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10541964 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6A35B423-184B-FFC3-863B-89F0FDC1F9F5 |
treatment provided by |
Marcus |
scientific name |
Orbicella |
status |
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GENUS ORBICELLA DANA, 1846: 205 View in CoL ( FIG. 18 View Figure 18 )
Type species
Madrepora annularis Ellis & Solander, 1786: 169 , pl. 53: figs 1, 2; subsequent designation, Vaughan, 1918: 85.
Original description
‘Cells nearly circular, more or less prominent, not subdividing by growth, or rarely so; stars with distinct limits formed by the coalescence laterally of the lamellae, and therefore cells appearing tubular, and separated by interstices’ ( Dana, 1846: 205).
Subsequent descriptions
Dana, 1859: 23; Klunzinger, 1879: 47, 48; Quelch, 1886: 106; Gardiner, 1899: 751, 752; Delage & Hérouard, 1901: 629; Vaughan, 1901b: 300; Verrill, 1901: 93; Verrill, 1902: 77; Gardiner, 1904: 774; Vaughan, 1918: 85; Vaughan, 1919: 362; Hoffmeister, 1925: 19; Coryell & Ohlsen, 1929: 193, 194; Yabe et al., 1936: 22; Crossland, 1952: 123, 124.
Diagnosis (apomorphies in italics)
Colonial, with extracalicular budding only. Corallites monomorphic and discrete (one to three centres); monticules absent. Coenosteum costate, moderate amount (<corallite diameter). Calice width small (<4 mm), with low relief (<3 mm). Costosepta not confluent. Septa in three cycles (24–36 septa). Free septa regular. Septa spaced> 11 septa per 5 mm. Costosepta equal in relative thickness. Columellae trabecular but compact (one to three threads), ≥ 1/4 of calice width, and discontinuous amongst adjacent corallites. Paliform (uniaxial) lobes absent. Epitheca well developed and endotheca low−moderate (tabular) ( Fig. 18A, D, G View Figure 18 ).
Tooth base at midcalice circular. Tooth tip at midcalice irregular; tip orientation multiaxial. Tooth height low (<0.3 mm) and tooth spacing narrow (<0.3 mm), with> six teeth per septum. Granules scattered on septal face; irregular in shape. Interarea smooth ( Fig. 18B, E, H View Figure 18 ).
Walls formed by dominant septotheca and partial paratheca; abortive septa absent. Thickening deposits fibrous. Costa centre clusters weak; 0.3–0.6 mm between clusters; medial lines weak. Septum centre clusters weak; <0.3 mm between clusters; medial lines weak. Transverse crosses absent. Columella centres clustered ( Fig. 18C, F, I View Figure 18 ).
Species included
1. Orbicella annularis ( Ellis & Solander, 1786: 169, pl. 53: figs 1, 2); holotype: GLAHM 104008 (dry specimen; Fig. 18A View Figure 18 ); type locality: ‘Antilles’ ( Weil & Knowlton, 1994: 155); phylogenetic data: molecular and morphology.
2. Orbicella faveolata ( Ellis & Solander, 1786: 166, pl. 53: figs 5, 6); holotype: GLAHM 104009 (dry specimen; Fig. 18D View Figure 18 ); type locality: ‘perhaps of Late Pleistocene age, collected in the Antilles’ ( Weil & Knowlton, 1994: 160); phylogenetic data: molecular ( Fukami et al., 2004 a, 2008) and morphology.
3. Orbicella franksi ( Gregory, 1895: 274, pl. 11: figs 2a–c, 3); holotype: NHMUK R2514 (dry specimen; Fig. 18G View Figure 18 ); type locality: ‘Pleistocene of Barbados’ ( Weil & Knowlton, 1994: 162); phylogenetic data: molecular ( Fukami et al., 2004 a, 2008) and morphology. Taxonomic remarks
The three Caribbean members of this genus used to be known as the Montastraea annularis complex ( Knowlton et al., 1992; Weil & Knowlton, 1994), and were the focus of extensive research aimed at describing morphological, genetic, reproductive, and physiological variation amongst them ( Knowlton et al., 1992, 1997; van Veghel & Bak, 1993, 1994; van Veghel, 1994; van Veghel & Kahmann, 1994; Weil & Knowlton, 1994; van Veghel & Bosscher, 1995; van Veghel, Cleary & Bak, 1996; Lopez & Knowlton, 1997; Szmant et al., 1997; Lopez et al., 1999; Medina, Weil & Szmant, 1999; Manica & Carter, 2000; Knowlton & Budd, 2001 ; Levitan et al., 2004, 2011; Fukami et al., 2004b; Fukami & Knowlton, 2005).
Although currently restricted to the Caribbean showing no geographical overlap with any other living Merulinidae genus, the subgenus Orbicella described by Dana (1846: 205) within Astrea also included numerous Indo-Pacific species such as Cyphastrea microphthalma , Astrea curta , and Oulastrea crispata (incertae sedis). The subsequent designation of Madrepora annularis Ellis & Solander, 1786: 169 , as type species by Vaughan (1918: 85) also did not constrain its geographical range, as Plesiastrea versipora , Orbicella gravieri (synonym of Plesiastrea versipora ; Veron et al., 1977: 150), and Astrea curta were retained. Orbicella was finally synonymized by Vaughan & Wells (1943: 173) as Montastraea de Blainville.
Molecular data have generally placed the Orbicella clade as sister to Cyphastrea with good support ( Fukami et al., 2004a; Huang et al., 2011; Huang, 2012; Arrigoni et al., 2012; but see Fukami et al., 2008).
Morphological remarks
Our morphological analysis reveals that the present Orbicella members form a very well-supported clade (bootstrap support of 96 and decay index of 3), and a sister-clade relationship with Cyphastrea is recovered but not supported.
It is remarkable that these two genera are recovered as sister taxa on the morphology tree, particularly because they differ in up to four macromorphological characters, two of which are the only synapomorphies inferred for Orbicella – equal costosepta thickness (likelihood of 1.0 based on the Mk1 model) and large columellae (likelihood 1.0). Costate coenosteum and the lack of paliform lobes also distinguish Orbicella from Cyphastrea , which has spinose coenosteum and weak or moderate development of paliform lobes. However, their affinity to each other may be expected in the context of subcorallite characters, which show that they share all but two features of irregular granule shape and partial paratheca in Orbicella , rather than strong, pointed granules and no paratheca at all in Cyphastrea .
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Orbicella
Huang, Danwei, Benzoni, Francesca, Fukami, Hironobu, Knowlton, Nancy, Smith, Nathan D. & Budd, Ann F. 2014 |
ORBICELLA DANA, 1846: 205
Dana JD 1846: 205 |
Madrepora annularis
Vaughan TW 1918: 85 |
Ellis J & Solander DC 1786: 169 |