Hincksella cornuta, Galea, 2015
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2015.135 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F5F578C8-4CA7-4ADA-9DAF-0DA5170E9F9F |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3794663 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5DC46422-9914-47FF-8CE3-49AB51B0014A |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:5DC46422-9914-47FF-8CE3-49AB51B0014A |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Hincksella cornuta |
status |
sp. nov. |
Hincksella cornuta View in CoL sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:5DC46422-9914-47FF-8CE3-49AB51B0014A
Fig. 5 View Fig A–D; Table 3 View Table 3
Diagnosis
Stems simple, monosiphonic, nodes indistinct; internodes relatively short, slightly geniculate, each carrying a hydrotheca; the latter alternate, tubular, bent in middle; rim often renovated; gonothecae arising from within the hydrothecae, broadly ovoid, lateral walls wrinkled; two prominent horns distally.
Etymology
From the Latin, cornūtus, meaning "horned", making reference to the prominent horns of the gonotheca.
Material examined
Holotype
NEW CALEDONIA: campaign Bathus 4, station DW923, 18°52’ S, 163°24’ E, 502– 470 m, 6 Aug. 1994; whole stem 3.6 cm high, bearing two fully-formed gonothecae (IK-2012-10297).
GoogleMapsParatypes
NEW CALEDONIA: data as for holotype, four specimens (3.1 cm high fragment with no basal part, bearing two gonothecae; 3.3 cm high fragment devoid of its basal part; entire, 4.0 cm high stem with one gonotheca; entire, sterile stem 3.8 cm high) (IK-2012-10298).
Description
Stems erect, up to 3.8 cm high, unbranched and monosiphonic, arising from tubular hydrorhizae; basal constriction at origin from stolon; lower parts ahydrothecate and quite long (1.0– 1.2 cm), occasionally with signs of breakage and subsequent regeneration; perisarc smooth. Division by nodes indistinct, but equivalents of internodes rather short, slightly geniculate, bearing single hydrothecae on distal halves. Hydrothecae alternate, although the two proximal-most ones may be given off on same side of stem; tubular, adnate for less than half of length; free part facing out- and upward; free adcauline wall slightly convex to almost straight; abcauline wall convex in middle and straight elsewhere; basal foramina with multiple renovations of perisarc ( Fig. 5C View Fig ); rim of hydrotheca often renovated; aperture circular, imperceptibly tilted adaxially. Hydranths enveloped by inner, thin, collapsible periderm, distinct from hydrothecal wall; tentacle number could not be counted. Gonothecae given off from within hydrothecae; broadly ovoid, with wrinkled perisarc, distally with two prominent horns; no signs of aperture; gonophore apparently single, large ovoid mass (oocyte?) occupying nearly entire lumen of gonotheca. Large macrobasic heteronemes (none seen discharged), with parallel walls and rounded ends, and with straight or slightly curved longitudinal axes, occur abundantly in coenosarc.
Remarks
The alternate, long, tubular, non-operculate hydrothecae, the gonothecae given off from within the hydrothecae, as well as the large macrobasic heteronemes (mastigophores?) scattered in the coenosarc place this species in the genus Hincksella Billard, 1918 . The two horns on the distal part of its gonothecae distinguish this species from its congeners with known gonosomes, viz. H. alternans ( Allman, 1888) (see original description), H. formosa (Fewkes, 1881) (see Galea 2013), H. pusilla Ritchie, 1910 (see Galea & Ferry 2015), and H. sibogae Billard, 1918 (see Vervoort & Watson 2003).
The remaining congeners with unknown gonothecae differ from H. cornuta sp. nov. in the following respects: 1) H. corrugata Millard, 1958 has comparatively shorter hydrothecae, adnate for as much as half their length, and their surface is transversely wrinkled ( Millard 1958); 2) H. indiana Millard, 1967 is a much larger species, with fascicled stems, shorter hydrothecae, conspicuously tilted adaxially ( Millard 1967); 3) the poorly described H. projecta ( Fraser, 1938) appears to be different due to the lower length/width ratio of its hydrothecae, as well as on biogeographical grounds ( Fraser 1938); 4) the hydrothecae of H. rigida ( Fraser, 1938) are nearly as broad as deep and, according to Fraser (1938), they are comparatively shorter.
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |