Adeonella flabellata, Rosso & Novosel, 2010

Rosso, Antonietta & Novosel, Maja, 2010, The genus Adeonella (Bryozoa, Ascophora) in the Mediterranean, with description of two new living species and rediscovery of a fossil one, Journal of Natural History 44 (25 - 28), pp. 1697-1727 : 1719-1721

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222931003760061

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FB2D9A7D-A455-EE3B-FD83-FCD778FCAC87

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Adeonella flabellata
status

sp. nov.

Adeonella flabellata sp. nov.

( Figures 1F,G View Figure 1 , 3C View Figure 3 , 10 View Figure 10 )

Etymology

Referring to the fan morphology of the colony and the colony branches.

Holotype

CNHM Inv. br. 33, a single colony from Kornati (Mana), 20–40 m. Novosel, 10 July 2003.

Description

Colony 18 mm high and 15 mm wide, formed by a 5 mm long subcylindrical stalk from which two angulated, fan-shaped irregularly outlined, bilaminar blades about 1 mm thick and nearly 8 mm wide, develop ( Figure 1F View Figure 1 ).

Autozooids decidedly diamond-shaped ( Figure 10C,G View Figure 10 ); elongate rhomboidal, with a rounded enlarged distal portion only in early ontogeny and along exposed marginal rows, where they form the blade edges in back-to-back couples ( Figure 10E View Figure 10 ). Margins marked by deep grooves and thin raised characteristically undulate sutures. Frontal shield finely granular and swollen, mostly in the distal half, pierced by a peripheral row of round marginal areolar pores plus a few others near the orifice and proximally to the spiramen ( Figure 10A View Figure 10 ). Primary orifice slightly longer than wide ( Figure 10B View Figure 10 ) with a bluntly V-shaped sinus occupying about half of the proximal border. Condyles small lateral and squared, hardly visible from frontal view. Secondary orifice developing suddenly ( Figure 10D View Figure 10 ), bean-shaped to transversely elliptical in early ontogeny with a convex proximal lip, becoming circular and slightly smaller in late ontogeny. Spiramen large, subcircular to longitudinally elliptical with increasing frontal calcification, leaving the oral sinus partly visible at least during the early ontogenetic stages; separated from the secondary orifice by a stout bridge of calcification, typically marked by a couple of large pores, one on each side ( Figure 10A,C,E View Figure 10 ). Peristomial avicularium absent ( Figure 10A,C,D View Figure 10 ), except for a few zooids from the marginal rows ( Figure 10E View Figure 10 ). When present, single and small, situated on the spiraminal bridge, distally or medially pointing; rostrum bluntly triangular. A very few zooids exhibit paired converging avicularia, pointing just slightly proximally ( Figure 10F View Figure 10 ). Frontal shield rapidly becoming swollen with ontogeny, developing two lateral and one proximal tubercles, later sinking in frontal calcification together with secondary orifices ( Figure 10G View Figure 10 ). In latest ontogenic stages, orifice and spiramen become completely occluded and frontal shield evolves in a flat polygonal surface outlined by undulating sutures and sculptured with a marginal row and a central cluster of small round pores ( Figure 10G View Figure 10 ). Frontal avicularia raised and variably oriented, similar in shape and size to the peristomial ones develop on some zooids from the marginal rows ( Figure 10G View Figure 10 ). Vicarious avicularia and gonozooids not observed and seemingly absent. Small swollen kenozooids with a dozen pores fill spaces between zooids at distal blade edges where growth stops ( Figure 10H View Figure 10 ) and occasionally along lateral margins. Encrusting base not observed.

Measurements of the holotype

ZL: 574 ± 35.55, 510–649 (1, 20); ZW: 470 ± 28.28, 419–529 (1, 20); sOL: 96 ± 7.67, 80–112, (1, 20); sOW: 115 ± 5.70, 104–122, (1, 20); pOL: 117 ± 5.59, 109–124, (1, 6); pOW: 107 ± 7.31, 100–118, (1, 6); sOL: 91± 5.05, 87–100, (1, 6); sOW: 112 ± 5.43, 105–118, (1, 6); mAL: 55 ± 4.43, 50–60 (1, 4); mAW: 43 ± 2.87, 40–47 (1, 4).

Remarks

Adeonella flabellata sp. nov. shows close affinities to A. pallasii View in CoL , as also indicated by the SI index ( Table 1). Nevertheless, it is easily distinguishable from that species and all other congeners from the Mediterranean for both colony and zooidal morphology. Zooids are mostly lacking in frontal and even in peristomial avicularia, and the primary orifice is high and has a conspicuous sinus. Furthermore, this species is unique within the Mediterranean area in forming bladed, instead of narrowly branched, colonies. Lobate growth morphology is shared with a group of species all originating from South Africa, namely A. lobata Hayward, 1988 View in CoL , A. spathulata Hayward, 1988 View in CoL and A. alia Hayward and Cook, 1983 View in CoL . Nevertheless, they exhibit completely different zooidal morphology, including the shape of the primary orifice, an evenly porous frontal wall, the presence of gonozooids and/or vicarious avicularia and a different position of the peristomial avicularia, not located on the peristomial bridge.

Variability and ecology

Zooidal variability is mostly related to ontogeny and the development of frontal calcification. The unique colony, originating from coralligenous bottoms, constitutes the substratum for spirorbids, which colonize non-functional zooids of the basal stalk.

Distribution

The species is presently known only from the type locality, Kornati, in the eastern Adriatic Sea and is unknown as a fossil.

CNHM

Cincinnati Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Bryozoa

Class

Gymnolaemata

Order

Cheilostomatida

Family

Adeonidae

Genus

Adeonella

Loc

Adeonella flabellata

Rosso, Antonietta & Novosel, Maja 2010
2010
Loc

Adeonella flabellata

Rosso & Novosel 2010
2010
Loc

A. lobata

Hayward 1988
1988
Loc

A. spathulata

Hayward 1988
1988
Loc

A. alia

Hayward and Cook 1983
1983
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