Penetrantia taeanata, Seo & Chae & Winston & Zágoršek & Gordon, 2018

Seo, Ji-Eun, Chae, Hyun Sook, Winston, Judith E., Zágoršek, Kamil & Gordon, Dennis P., 2018, Korean ctenostome bryozoans-observations on living colonies, new records, five new species, and an updated checklist, Zootaxa 4486 (3), pp. 251-283 : 269

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4486.3.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B87F5447-A747-4D96-8845-0B30B40412A3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5961773

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C15C87DB-7444-FFF4-FF0D-80E3BDA7E63E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Penetrantia taeanata
status

sp. nov.

Penetrantia taeanata n. sp.

( Figs 9C–F View FIGURE 9 , 12 View FIGURE 12 , 13 View FIGURE 13 )

Spathipora View in CoL [sp.]: Seo et al. 2016: 9.

Penetrantia View in CoL [sp.]: Seo et al. 2016: 9.

Etymology. The species is named for the Taean Coast area of the Yellow Sea where it was discovered.

Material examined. Holotype: MBRBKH8, Cheongpodae, Taean Coast National Park, Korean east coast, 36.6334° N, 126.2997° E, intertidal, 16 June 2017 GoogleMaps . Paratype: MBRBKP8, same data as holotype GoogleMaps .

Description. Colonies boring into mollusk shells, composed of linked kenozooidal stolons which penetrate upper layers of shell, sometimes reaching surface as series of tiny elevated pores (tubulets), and buried saclike zooids, with rounded orifices at shell surface usually on both sides of stolon branches ( Figs 9C–F View FIGURE 9 , 13B–C View FIGURE 13 ). Main stolon branches develop side branches at almost 90° angles to principal stolons. Side branches larger than stolonate processes of Immergentia , about 15–20 µm wide ( Fig. 13D, E View FIGURE 13 ). On shell surface, well-preserved colony borings look like narrow branching tracks with round to teardrop-shaped orifice holes on either side; densest colonies appear as jumble of closely spaced holes. Zooids tubular with roundly tapering proximal ends; c. 140–180 µm long, 50 µm wide, budding at distal ends from peduncles, perpendicular or diagonal to shell surface. Although orifices on both sides of stolon at shell surface may appear to be almost opposite each other, the resin cast shows they are offset, sometimes in a very neat herringbone fashion ( Figs 9C, D View FIGURE 9 , 12B, D View FIGURE 12 , 13A View FIGURE 13 ). Gonozooids not seen.

Remarks. Our specimens resemble those of Penetrantia densa Silén, 1946 in the presence of the round apertures of zooids outside the line of the main stolon or branches, but zooids are smaller and openings can be even closer together in Penetrantia taeanata n. sp., which is the commonest boring ctenostome species at the intertidal site at Cheongpodae. Immergentia cheongpodensis n. sp. is less abundant at the same locality, but overall about one-third of the dead shell material collected at this site had borings of one or both species. They were most commonly found in bivalves, particularly oyster shells, but also noted in a few gastropod shells.

Distribution. Korea: Cheongpodae, Yellow Sea.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Bryozoa

Class

Gymnolaemata

Order

Ctenostomatida

Family

Penetrantiidae

Genus

Penetrantia

Loc

Penetrantia taeanata

Seo, Ji-Eun, Chae, Hyun Sook, Winston, Judith E., Zágoršek, Kamil & Gordon, Dennis P. 2018
2018
Loc

Spathipora

Seo et al. 2016 : 9
Loc

Penetrantia

Seo et al. 2016 : 9
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