Endoxocrinus (Diplocrinus) wyvillethomsoni ( Jeffreys, 1870 )

David, Jerome, Roux, Michel, Messing, Charles G. & Ameziane, Nadia, 2006, Revision of the pentacrinid stalked crinoids of the genus Endoxocrinus (Echinodermata, Crinoidea), with a study of environmental control of characters and its consequences for taxonomy, Zootaxa 1156, pp. 1-50 : 39-40

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.172265

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6261001

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/467B4160-FFB4-FB45-FE96-689F5CF50751

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Endoxocrinus (Diplocrinus) wyvillethomsoni ( Jeffreys, 1870 )
status

 

Endoxocrinus (Diplocrinus) wyvillethomsoni ( Jeffreys, 1870)

Figures 17 View FIGURE 17 , 19 View FIGURE 19 b, 20d.

Synonymy: Pentacrinus wyville­thomsoni Jeffreys, 1870: 157, nomen nudum; Pentacrinus wyvillethomsoni Thomson, 1872: 767 ; Pentacrinus wyville­thomsoni Carpenter, 1884: 313; Isocrinus wyville­thomsoni Döderlein, 1907: 19; Endoxocrinus wyville­thomsoni A.H. Clark, 1908b: 152; Pentacrinus (Endoxocrinus) wyville­thomsoni Koehler & Vaney, 1910: 6; Cenocrinus (Diplocrinus) wyville­thomsoni Döderlein, 1912: 20–21; Annacrinus wyville­thomsoni A.H. Clark, 1923: 11; Diplocrinus (Annacrinus) wyvillethomsoni Roux, 1977: 64 ; Endoxocrinus (Diplocrinus) wyvillethomsoni David, 1998: 202 (unpublished data); Endoxocrinus (Annacrinus) wyvillethomsoni Roux et al., 2002: 820 .

Emended diagnosis

A species of the subgenus Diplocrinus with 10 to 21 smooth arms (mode 19) up to 10.5 cm long (mean 7 cm); arm branching usually isotomous; non­muscular articulation Br1+2 intermediate between synostosis and syzygy, showing a general symmorphy, tending to a true synostosis distally and to a syzygy between primibrachials; concave proximal facet of IBr2 with axial canal lumen bilobate and a radial syzygial crenularium at its aboral border; number of internodals per noditaxis 20–56 (mode 32); stalk length strongly variable, 3.5–22.5 cm (mean usually ~ 11 cm); middle and distal stalk pentagonal to circular in cross section; columnals usually homometric and relatively high; proximalmost diameter of stalk up to 4.2 mm (mean 2.9 cm); rudimentary cirri present to 3rd nodal; proximal cirri oriented upward; always 5 robust cirri; symplexies usually with 3 to 5 main crenulae per interpetaloid zone, tending to a radial pattern; cryptosymplexies flat or with slight general symmorphy; syzygial stereom predominating on interpetaloid zones and on a regular outer border of the facet; axial canal filled up by large meshed stereom not clearly separated from perilumen; secondary lumen small or absent.

Type locality

Off Portugal at a depth of 1980 m.

Lectotype: Catalogue no. 1885.3.30.19, Natural History Museum, London; we designate as the lectopype the Porcupine specimen which resembles most closely Figure 1 View FIGURE 1 , Plate 18 ( Carpenter 1884).

Occurence

Northeastern Atlantic from the northern Bay of Biscay to Madeira and south of the Canary Islands at depths from 1246 m (possibly 900 m) to 2070 m ( Conan et al., 1981). The species was recently photographed via ROV at 1214 m in the Bay of Biscay (unpublished data from Vital cruise, courtesy of O. Brosseau, MNHN Paris).

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

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