Salmacina tribranchiata ( Moore, 1923 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4184.3.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3DD2861B-C3E9-474A-B442-A2BFEBB1AE9D |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5064710 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EC398785-870F-FFE1-FF24-FC435812FD0F |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Salmacina tribranchiata ( Moore, 1923 ) |
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Salmacina tribranchiata ( Moore, 1923) View in CoL
( Figures 8 View FIGURE 8 , 12 View FIGURE 12 E–F)
Filograna tribranchiata Moore, 1923: 250 View in CoL –251. Type locality: Off Santa Rosa Island , California, 69–82 m, small colony on mud, sand and rocks.
Salmacina dysteri tribranchiata View in CoL .— Monro 1933b: 1090 –1091, Text-figure 31 ( Tagus Cove , Isabela [ Albemarle ] Island, Galápagos; from a marine garden sheltered from the sun by an overhanging rock; colony); Berkeley & Berkeley 1941: 56 (Corona del Mar, Monterey Bay and Santa Cruz Island, California; 9–31 m).
Salmacina dysteri View in CoL (not Huxley, 1855).— Steinbeck & Ricketts 1941: 367 (Bahía de los Ángeles, Baja California, San Francisquito Island, Baja California Sur; encrusting rocks).
Salmacina tribranchiata View in CoL .— Rioja 1941b: 738 –739, pl. 9, Figs 11 View FIGURE 11 –14 (La Aguada Beach, Acapulco, Guerrero, on Idanthyrsus johnstoni View in CoL colonies); Hartman 1961: 44 (Southern California); Hartman 1969: 771 –772, Figs 1–6 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 View FIGURE 5 View FIGURE 6 (off Santa Rosa Island, Southern California, 70–83 m; Figs 1–2 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 from Fauvel 1927 as Salmacina dysteri View in CoL ; Figs 3–6 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 View FIGURE 5 View FIGURE 6 from Berkeley & Berkeley 1952); Salazar-Vallejo & López-Muraira 1983: 111 –112 (Bocachibampo Bay, Sonora; intertidal; epifauna of sea urchin Hesperocidaris asteriscus View in CoL ); Salazar-Vallejo 1989b: 200 (Mexican coasts, checklist); Nogueira & ten Hove 2000: 158 –159, Tables 1–2 View TABLE 1 View TABLE 2 (discussion and comparison of all Salmacina View in CoL species); Salazar-Vallejo & Londoño-Mesa 2004: 55 (Tropical Eastern Pacific, checklist); Bastida-Zavala 2008: 43, Figs 10 View FIGURE 10 H–J (Alaska, California, Hawaii, Sinaloa and Oaxaca, intertidal to 116 m); Bastida-Zavala 2009: 529, Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 X (identification key for Tropical America); ten Hove & Kupriyanova 2009: 91 (worldwide serpulid checklist); Bastida-Zavala et al. 2013: 349 (Oaxaca, checklist); Villalobos- Guerrero et al. 2014: 107 (Sinaloa, checklist).
Filograna implexa View in CoL (not Berkeley, 1835).— Kudenov 1980: 122 (Sonora coast); Kerstitch & Bertsch 2007: 38, Fig. 63 (field guide of the Gulf of California; 46 m).
Material examined. 3,840 specimens.
Baja California: UANL 7895, 60 spec. (Bahía de los Ángeles, sta. 2: 28°56’52.9”N, 113°33’24.9”W, April 17, 2011, coll. JAL & ARB). GoogleMaps
Baja California Sur: UANL 7896, 2,248 spec. ( Marina Santa Rosalía , sta. 1, 27°20’25.2”N, 112°15’56.1”W, April 31, 2011, coll. JAL & ARB); UANL 7897, 1,492 spec. ( Marina Loreto, 26°00’54.9”N, 111°20’21.4”W, April 2, 2011, coll. JAL & ARB). GoogleMaps
Oaxaca: UMAR-POLY 832, 11 spec. (Puerto Ángel, pier and beach, May 20, 2007, coll. FCC & SRH); UMAR-POLY 833, 29 spec. (Estacahuite Beach, Puerto Ángel, sample 39, April 9, 2005).
Habitat. Intertidal to subtidal (116 m, Bastida-Zavala 2008). Several samples are from anthropogenic substrates in marinas and ports (from Puerto Loreto and Santa Rosalía, Baja California Sur, from Bahía de los Ángeles, Baja California, and from Puerto Ángel, Oaxaca). Recorded from dead coral, from Oaxaca, and as fouling on PVC plates and hulls, from Alaska, California and Hawaii (Bastida-Zavala 2008). Fouling species.
Distribution. North-Eastern Pacific. From Alaska to California ( USA); Hawaii and Mexican Pacific ( Moore 1923; Nogueira & ten Hove 2000).
Remarks. Salmacina tribranchiata is a colonial species; in the Santa Rosalía and Loreto marinas, as well as on rocks of a municipal beach of Bahía de los Ángeles, it forms colonies of tens to hundreds of specimens. The species is common in anthropogenic substrates, making transport by means of ships and yachts likely.
It is problematic to distinguish the several nominal taxa of Salmacina ; Nogueira & ten Hove (2000, Table 2 View TABLE 2 ) gave a noteworthy discussion of the species and the characters used to separate them, sometimes the differences are very subtle or the characters overlap between the species; the use of SEM was recommended by Ben-Eliahu & ten Hove (2011). In this paper we regard specimens of Salmacina from Alaska to the Mexican Pacific to constitute a single species, until a molecular analysis will prove otherwise.
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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Salmacina tribranchiata ( Moore, 1923 )
Bastida-Zavala, J. Rolando, Buelna, Alondra Sofía Rodríguez, León-González, Jesús Angel De, Camacho-Cruz, Karla Andrea & Carmona, Isabel 2016 |
Filograna implexa
Kerstitch 2007: 38 |
Kudenov 1980: 122 |
Salmacina dysteri
Steinbeck 1941: 367 |
Salmacina tribranchiata
Bastida-Zavala 2013: 349 |
Hove 2009: 91 |
Salazar-Vallejo 2004: 55 |
Hove 2000: 158 |
Salazar-Vallejo 1989: 200 |
Salazar-Vallejo 1983: 111 |
Hartman 1969: 771 |
Hartman 1961: 44 |
Rioja 1941: 738 |
Salmacina dysteri tribranchiata
Berkeley 1941: 56 |
Monro 1933: 1090 |
Filograna tribranchiata
Moore 1923: 250 |