Adeonellopsis gracilis, Liow & Gordon, 2020

Liow, Lee Hsiang & Gordon, Dennis P., 2020, New species of Adeonellopsis (Bryozoa: Adeonidae) from southern Zealandia and the western Tasman Sea, Zootaxa 4895 (3), pp. 301-331 : 323-325

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4895.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C6F85190-D79E-429E-9B5B-FD0E54AE96BC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4383120

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F50791DC-CA3C-4AC4-BD60-98E9011BDFEC

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:F50791DC-CA3C-4AC4-BD60-98E9011BDFEC

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Adeonellopsis gracilis
status

sp. nov.

Adeonellopsis gracilis n. sp.

( Figs 3I View FIGURE 3 , 16 View FIGURE 16 , 17C View FIGURE 17 ; Tables 1, 2)

Etymology. Latin gracilis , slender, alluding to the thin colony branches.

Material examined. Holotype: NIWA 92745 , Stn KAH1206 /4, 40.0140° S, 174.1600°E, South Taranaki Bight GoogleMaps ,

64 m. Paratypes: NIWA 144899 View Materials , 146097 View Materials , 146099 View Materials , Stn TQI1201/25, 40.0013° S, 174.0112° E, South Taranaki Bight GoogleMaps , 82 m. Other : NIWA 146153 View Materials , Stn W 74 .

Diagnosis. Branches slender, mostly 1 mm wide. Autozooids averaging 442 μm long, 222 μm wide. Spiramen longitudinally elongate and subtriangular, mostly with 6 pores. Small suboral avicularia paired, transverse, their acute tips touching. Smaller adventitious avicularia often occurring elsewhere on zooid. No large avicularia or interzooidal avicularia on branch margins. Putative gonozooids with proportionally narrower and wider orifices and larger spiramina with 10 pores.

Description. Mature intact colony not seen. Isolated branches slender, 0.8–1.1 mm wide, mostly 1 mm, more or less bifurcating in more than one plane, twiggy. Colour of dried colony pale creamy-brown.

Autozooids arranged in quincunx; 5–6 longitudinal series across width of branch. Neanic zooids variably elongate-subhexagonal. Interzooidal boundaries indicated by thin lines of calcification in interzooidal furrows, which are bordered by 9–14 small areolar pores (mostly 10–12) in a series around the entire zooidal margin. Autozooids averaging 442 μm long, 222 μm wide in about five series across branch width ( Fig. 16A View FIGURE 16 ).

Autozooidal peristomial orifice more or less transversely oval to roundly D-shaped, the unbroken distal margin sometimes raised forward and cowl-like; proximal margin straight or weakly concave. Discrete round spiramen lacking; instead, 4–11 spiraminal pores arranged in median longitudinal row, frequently subtriangular ( Fig. 16B, E View FIGURE 16 ); distribution of pores in proximal direction variable, generally 2-2-1, 1-2-2-1, 2-1-1-1- 1 in neanic zooids; average length 114 μm, width 53 μm. Spiraminal spokes 6–10, varying in length, simple or bifurcate, some touching or overlapping; spiraminal area increasingly sunken as zooids age with some pores immersed in and concealed by calcification.

Suboral avicularia ( Fig. 16 View FIGURE 16 B–D) paired (very rarely single), their cystids merged and rostra directed transversely or slightly obliquely toward each other, their tips sometimes touching. In ephebic zooids, orifice, suboral avicularia and spiramina in common furrow. No large avicularia or interzooidal avicularia on branch margins.

Putative gonozooids ( Fig. 17C View FIGURE 17 ) with proportionally narrower and wider orifices (mean width 103 μm) and larger spiramina with 10 pores.

Ancestrula and early astogeny not seen.

Remarks. Adeonellopsis gracilis n. sp. is wholly endemic to New Zealand. Its branches are as slender as those of A. minor n. sp., but it has the smallest zooids, orifices and suboral avicularia of any of the species described herein. Apart from its diminutive dimensions, the most distinctive zooidal attributes are the elongate-triangular distribution of spiraminal pores and the consistently transverse orientation of the paired suboral avicularia.

An undescribed late Eocene Australian fossil [Brown’s Creek Clay, Aldingan (Priabonian), southwest Victoria], in the collection of P.E. Bock may be an early antecedent of A. gracilis n. sp. —it has slenderer branches with only three longitudinal autozooidal series across the branch width but a similar elongate spiramen.

Distribution. New Zealand: Greater Cook Strait, 32– 80 m. Endemic.

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