Parellisina sileni Osburn, 1949
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5379.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:430102D2-4EAA-41B3-B57F-CC532F929DA3 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10248883 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4B6E902E-FFBE-FF83-FF46-F99D1943FC06 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Parellisina sileni Osburn, 1949 |
status |
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Parellisina sileni Osburn, 1949 View in CoL
( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ; Table 9)
Ellisina latirostris Silén, 1941: 36 , figs 41, 42.
Parellisina sileni Osburn, 1949: 5 View in CoL , fig. 10.
Material examined. Holotype by original designation SMNH-Type-3081, North Pacific , Yokohama Bay, Tokyo, Japan; depth 115 m. Leg. Vega Expedition 1878–1880, Station 1083.
Description. Colony encrusting a flat rocky substrate, 2.5 × 4.5 cm in size; colony size 3.523 × 2.648 mm ( Fig. 8A View FIGURE 8 ); one distal pore-chamber window visible on zooids at colony growing edge, elliptical, 60 × 28–38 µm ( Fig. 8H View FIGURE 8 ). Ancestrula seemingly tatiform and elliptical, about 300 µm long by 215 µm wide, with at least seven spines encircling the opesia ( Fig. 8B View FIGURE 8 , arrowed).
Autozooids oval, longer than wide (mean L/ W 1.37). Gymnocyst mostly not visible but in some zooids extensive proximally (85–145 µm), narrow (20–50 µm) to minimal laterally, smooth, convex ( Fig. 8C–E View FIGURE 8 ); cryptocyst raised, beaded, narrow proximally (50–90 µm), tapering (30–55 µm) and steeply sloping inwards the opesia laterally, disappearing distally ( Fig. 8C, D View FIGURE 8 ). Interzooidal communication through uniporous septula, elliptical, about 20 µm long by 15 µm wide, visible on lateral walls at zooidal mid-length ( Fig. 8I View FIGURE 8 , arrowed).
Opesia oval, occupying almost the entire length of the frontal surface ( Fig. 8D View FIGURE 8 ); operculum semicircular ( Fig. 8F View FIGURE 8 ). Pair of delicate spines placed distolaterally on the gymnocyst, the basal diameter 5–7 µm, visible also in ovicellate zooids; an additional spine placed at about zooidal mid-length visible in some autozooids ( Fig. 8C, D View FIGURE 8 ).
Avicularia vicarious, falciform, placed on a polygonal or often rectangular cystid with the gymnocyst always well developed laterally and sometimes extensive distally ( Fig. 8C, F View FIGURE 8 ); proximal cryptocyst narrow, beaded as in autozooids ( Fig. 8F View FIGURE 8 ); rostrum asymmetrical, curved to either side, rounded, jagged, raised and distally directed; opesia small, elliptical to subcircular, 78–116 long by 54–68 µm wide; condyles triangular and robust; mandible shape similar to that of the rostrum ( Fig. 8F View FIGURE 8 ). Kenozooids distal to avicularium asymmetrically triangular with a central, rounded triangular to subcircular opening, 40–70 µm long by 50–70 µm wide ( Fig. 8G, H View FIGURE 8 ).
Ovicells globular, not closed by the operculum, resting on the proximal gymnocyst of the distal zooid, indenting and modifying the outline of its cryptocyst ( Fig. 8C View FIGURE 8 ); ectooecium uncalcified except for a narrow smooth band of calcification visible distally ( Fig. 8E View FIGURE 8 ), endooecium coarsely granular ( Fig. 8C–E View FIGURE 8 ).
Remarks. Silén (1941) described this species as Ellisina latirostris before being aware of the description of the new genus Parellisina , and the species P. latirostris , by Osburn (1940). The new genus was introduced for membraniporid/calloporid taxa having interzooidal avicularia associated with a kenozooid, as is the case in Silén’s species. When Osborn (1949) transferred Silén’s species to Parellisina the specific name was preoccupied and he renamed it as P. sileni in honour of its original author. Parellisina sileni differs from Parellisina latirostris in the shape of the avicularian rostrum, falciform in the former species and spatulate in the latter, and of the associated kenozooid, triangular and spade-shaped, respectively (see Fig. 8G View FIGURE 8 and Osburn 1940, pl. 4, figs 33, 34).
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.
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Parellisina sileni Osburn, 1949
Martino, Emanuela Di 2023 |
Parellisina sileni
Osburn, R. C. 1949: 5 |
Ellisina latirostris Silén, 1941: 36
Silen, L. 1941: 36 |