Thornelya fuscina Tilbrook, Hayward & Gordon, 2001
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.26107/RBZ-2022-0011 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A251050A-4FDA-41DD-A10F-891E92497D03 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7171217 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BB7A2B57-FFF0-F94E-3A5E-02C0B71BEACE |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Thornelya fuscina Tilbrook, Hayward & Gordon, 2001 |
status |
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Thornelya fuscina Tilbrook, Hayward & Gordon, 2001 View in CoL
( Fig. 7A View Fig )
Our material is not perfectly preserved, with many orifices and avicularia damaged, but enough characters are available to determine the species. Key features include the orifice (which is not parallel-sided as in Thornelya ceylonica ( Thornely, 1905) and has a narrower sinus), and the small avicularia, which are fewer than in T. ceylonica and can sometimes be arranged in a set of three, comprising a pair flanking an orifice and another, distal to the orifice, on the succeeding zooid. This arrangement is the origin of the name fuscina (three-pronged fork). There are three oral spines. The occasional large avicularia illustrated by Tilbrook (2006) in T. fuscina were not seen in our material. Autozooids measure 407‒586 μm long (mean 501 μm) and 294‒443 μm wide (mean 358 μm), compared to that of colonies from Efate, Vanuatu (type locality), with a mean zooid length of 560 μm and width of 460 μm ( Tilbrook et al., 2001); zooids from the Solomon Islands were cited as averaging 570 μm long and 480 μm wide ( Tilbrook, 2006). Zooids in the Singapore material overlap with published ranges for length but are non-overlapping for width. The only other validated Thornelya species from the tropical western Pacific is T. perarmata Harmer, 1957 ; it differs from T. fuscina in having narrow parallel-sided orifices, six oral spines, and numerous small adventitious avicularia distributed around the margins of the zooid as well as near the orifice. Hippomenella mila Scholz, 1991 from the Philippines may belong to Thornelya (see Tilbrook, 2006: 342; Bock, 2022), but it has orifices that are as wide as long and 5‒8 oral spines.
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