Actinostola crassicornis (Hertwig, 1882)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3624.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:940B865F-D618-49E0-8762-9986F55F5F10 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039E87F6-1119-CB64-6FFB-FE83FD6D80BE |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Actinostola crassicornis (Hertwig, 1882) |
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Actinostola crassicornis (Hertwig, 1882) View in CoL
( Figs. 14 View FIGURE 14 , 23–24 View FIGURE 23 View FIGURE 24 ; Table 10; Appx. 1, 2)
Dysactis crassicornis Hertwig, 1882a View in CoL , b; Hertwig 1888; McMurrich 1893.
Actinostola crassicornis: Carlgren 1927 View in CoL ; Carlgren 1949; Riemann-Zürneck 1978a.
Actinostola excelsa McMurrich, 1893 View in CoL ; Riemann-Zürneck 1978b.
Actinostola pergamentacea McMurrich, 1893 View in CoL ; Riemann-Zürneck 1978a.
? Actinostola intermedia Carlgren, 1899 View in CoL ; Carlgren 1927; Carlgren 1949.
non Actinostola crassicornis: Fautin 1984 View in CoL .
MATERIAL EXAMINED
Polarstern ANT XIX/5 : stn. PS61/150 (AMNH-4704, 2 specimens); stn. PS61/153 (AMNH-4698, 3 specimens) .
COMPARATIVE MATERIAL EXAMINED
Dysactis crassicornis (Hertwig, 1882) . SMNH-Type-1183. Holotype. “ Leg. Challenger, st. 313; 52ºS 68ºW, 55 fm”. Also labelled as Actinostola (Dysactis) crassicornis (Hertwig, 1882) .
Actinostola intermedia Carlgren, 1899 View in CoL . SMNH-Type-1184. Holotype. “ The Strait of Magellaen , Cap. Vicente, 150 m. Dead shell and stone bottom, Leg. ¿?”.
DIAGNOSIS
Pedal disc well developed, flat, to 45 mm diameter. Column smooth, tough, cylindrical or funnel-shaped, slightly wider distally than proximally, to 43 mm diameter and 60 mm height in preserved specimens, not divisible into regions. Oral disc very wide, flat, to 70 mm diameter. Living specimens with white column; tentacles and oral disc with irregular dark red spots; preserved specimens retain red colour of oral disc and tentacles. Tentacles to 190, restricted to column margin, inner longer than outer ones. Marginal sphincter muscle mesogleal, very weak, diffuse and long. More mesenteries proximally than distally. Mesenteries thin, arranged in five cycles; first and second cycles perfect and sterile, rest imperfect and fertile; fourth and fifth cycles arranged according to the Actinostola rule (mesenteries of pair developed unequally; one facing the precedent cycle more developed). Retractor muscles weak, diffuse; parietobasilar muscles poorly developed. Longitudinal muscles of tentacles mesogleal. Juveniles internally brooded in coelenteron. Cnidom: Spirocysts, basitrichs, and microbasic b - and p -mastigophores. Relatively large microbasic b -mastigophores in base of outer tentacles, to 56 µm long; mesenterial filaments with basitrichs. For a complete description of Actinostola crassicornis , see Riemann-Zürneck (1978a).
GEOGRAPHIC AND BATHYMETRIC DISTRIBUTION
Actinostola crassicornis was originally described by Hertwig (1882a, b; 1888) in the southeastern coast of Chile. Subsequently, the geographic range of the species was extended to the southwestern coast of Argentina (McMurrrich 1893; Carlgren 1927; Riemann-Zürneck 1978a). The material from this study considered as A. crassicornis , has been collected in the sub-Antarctic region, in the northern branch of the Scotia Arc , east of Burdwood Bank, between 277–296 m depth, a region that encompasses the distribution described by Riemann- Zürneck (1978a) for A. crassicornis .
Actinostola crassicornis is distributed in the southwestern Atlantic and the sub-Antarctic region, in continental shelf and bathyal depths ( Fig. 14f View FIGURE 14 ).
REMARKS
Austral species within the genus Actinostola are very difficult to distinguish based on traditional morphological characters (Riemann-Zürneck 1978a; Häussermann 2004). Fautin (1984) synonymized five austral species of Actinostola as A. crassicornis ( A. excelsa , A. pergamentacea , A. intermedia Carlgren, 1899 , A. chilensis McMurrich, 1904 , and A. clubbi Carlgren, 1927 ) and identified the Antarctic specimens of the genus that she studied as A. crassicornis ( Fautin 1984) . However, the specimens studied by Fautin are the only ones of A. crassicornis in Antarctic waters. The material of Fautin’s (1984) study needs to be re-examined to confirm her conclusions. We consider here A. crassicornis sensu Riemann-Zürneck (1978a) . This species has a smooth but tough column with short and tough tentacles, and its geographic distribution only reaches sea floors north of the Polar Front. Furthermore, we consider here the identity of A. intermedia and A. clubbi dubious until further revision. The present study suggests that none of the arguments provided by previous authors (e.g. cnidae, number of tentacles and mesenteries, etc. see Riemann-Zürneck 1978a; Fautin 1984; Häussermann 2004) to establish identities or synonymies of these species are robust.
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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Genus |
Actinostola crassicornis (Hertwig, 1882)
Rodríguez, Estefanía & López-González, Pablo J. 2013 |
Actinostola crassicornis:
Fautin 1984 |
Actinostola crassicornis:
Carlgren 1927 |
Actinostola intermedia
Carlgren 1899 |
Actinostola intermedia
Carlgren 1899 |
Actinostola excelsa
McMurrich 1893 |
Actinostola pergamentacea
McMurrich 1893 |
Dysactis crassicornis
Hertwig 1882 |