Culicia rubeola ( Quoy & Gaimard, 1833 )

Lam, Katherine, Morton, Brian & Hodgson, Paul, 2008, Ahermatypic corals (Scleractinia: Dendrophylliidae, Oculinidae and Rhizangiidae) recorded from submarine caves in Hong Kong, Journal of Natural History 42 (9 - 12), pp. 729-747 : 741

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1080/00222930701862724

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B3E77A-FF81-FF9B-2FBC-FBC27375F96D

treatment provided by

Felipe (2021-08-19 21:08:33, last updated by Plazi 2023-11-04 04:30:21)

scientific name

Culicia rubeola ( Quoy & Gaimard, 1833 )
status

 

Culicia rubeola ( Quoy & Gaimard, 1833) View in CoL

( Figure 4D View Figure 4 )

Dendrophyllia rubeola Quoy & Gaimard, 1833:97 , Plate 15, Figs 12–15

Culicia rubeola Ogawa et al. 1996:40 View in CoL , Plate 2. Fig. 3 View Figure 3 , Plate 4, Figs 2–3 View Figure 2 View Figure 3

Description

Reptoid colonies. Extra-tentacular budding on a basal expansion. The whole corallite is thin and fragile compared to C. culicia . Corallites cylindrical and small, 3– 3.3 mm in diameter and 1–2 mm in height. Epithecal wall higher than septal margin. Septal order is hexameral and in four cycles which may be incomplete. P. plan and columella are similar to those of C. japonica . Living corallites are deep pink or white with transparent tentacles.

Distribution

Galápagos Islands ( Wells 1983) and widespread in the Central Pacific including Japan ( Ogawa et al. 1996), Conic Island and Steep Island Caves, Hong Kong (this study).

Ogawa K, Takahashi K, Tachikawa H, Chiba J. 1996. A revision of Japanese ahermatypic corals around the coastal region with a guide to identification - III. Genera Rhizotrochus, Javania, Desmophyllum, Culicia, Phyllangia and Oulangia. Nankiseibutu 38: 37 - 48.

Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. 1833. Zoophytes. Voyage de decouvertes de l'Astrolabe execute par ordre du Roi, pendant les annees 1826 - 1827 - 1828 - 1829, sous le commandement de M. J. Dumont d'Urville. Zoologie 4: 175 - 255.

Wells JW. 1983. Annotated list of the scleractinian corals of the Galapagos. In: Glynn PW, Wellington GM, editors. Corals and Coral Reefs of the Galapagos Islands. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 212 - 219.

Gallery Image

Figure 2. Tubastrea sp. A–B, calicular (longer diameter58.2 mm) and top view of a colony of T. coccinea (length×width598.7 mm×34.6 mm); C–D, calicular (longer diameter56.37 mm) and top view of a colony of T. faulkneri (length×width568.9 mm×21.56 mm); E–J, calicular and side views of colonies of T. diaphana (height of F533 mm, height of G and H518.5 mm, longer calicular diameter and height of I and J59.9 and 21.5 mm, respectively); K–L, calicular (longer diameter59.5 mm) and top view of a colony of T. sibogae (height531.3 mm); M–O, calicular (longer diameter58.3 mm), top and side view of a colony of T. turbinata (height522.7 mm).

Gallery Image

Figure 3. Tubastrea diaphana collected from Conic Island cave being grazed by three individuals of Aeolidiella sp. The white area of the skeleton is the grazed area. One Aeolidiella is on the top of the colony, the second is on the bottom and the third one was dislodged during collection.

Gallery Image

Figure 4. Cyathelia sp., Culicia sp. and Oulangia sp. A–B, calicular (longer diameter55.1 mm) and colony of Cyathelia axillaris (height535.85 mm); C, calicular of Culicia japonica (longer diameter55.9 mm); D, caliculars of Culicia rubeola (colony size515.3 mm×14 mm) and E, calicular of Oulangia stokesiana (longer diameter59 mm).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Cnidaria

Class

Anthozoa

Order

Scleractinia

Family

Rhizangiidae

Genus

Culicia