Triphyllozoon regulare Silén, 1954

Martino, Emanuela Di, 2023, Scanning electron microscopy study of Lars Silén’s cheilostome bryozoan type specimens in the historical collections of natural history museums in Sweden, Zootaxa 5379 (1), pp. 1-106 : 76-78

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.10248941

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4B6E902E-FFE1-FFD8-FF46-FD1D18DBFC6A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Triphyllozoon regulare Silén, 1954
status

 

Triphyllozoon regulare Silén, 1954 View in CoL

( Fig. 41 View FIGURE 41 ; Table 36)

Triphyllozoon regulare Silén, 1954: 32 View in CoL , fig. 14, pl. 2, fig. 10.

Material examined. Holotype by monotypy LUZM 55 , off NE of Rottnest Island, Western Australia; depth 18–46 m. Leg. Prof. T. Gislén , Australia Expedition 1951–1952, collected 27.11.1951.

Description. Colony erect, rigid, reticulate; holotype specimen fragment 2.5 × 1.5 cm; fenestrae oval, 0.70– 0.85 × 0.48–0.62 mm, and trabeculae consisting of 2–5 alternating autozooidal series, more commonly three ( Fig. 41A View FIGURE 41 ).

Autozooids rectangular to flask-shaped, longer than wide (mean L/ W 1.87), distinct with boundaries marked by raised margins; frontal shield tubercular, flat to slightly convex, imperforate ( Fig. 41B View FIGURE 41 ).

Peristome forming a raised collar around the orifice with a deep, median suture (90–120 µm long) terminating in a small, teardrop-shaped pseudosinus ( Fig. 41B, C View FIGURE 41 ); peristomial avicularium (type 1) placed horizontally on one lobe, elliptical, with denticulate rostrum directed laterally ( Fig. 41D View FIGURE 41 ); two lateral oral spines constantly present, an additional distolateral pair visible only in a few autozooids ( Fig. 41G View FIGURE 41 , see arrow); spine diameter at the base about 30 µm, tapering distally (about 5 µm at the tip), ‘telescopic’-like ( Fig. 41D View FIGURE 41 ), 60–65 µm long when complete; secondary orifice elliptical.

Frontal avicularia uncommon, two types recognizable: type (2) small, elliptical avicularium with slightly spatulate rostrum directed proximally, and mandible semielliptical, placed immediately below the pseudosinus and leaning more on one side ( Fig. 41B View FIGURE 41 , see arrow); type (3) larger, pear-shaped avicularium with channelled rostrum directed proximolaterally, mandible triangular, cystid raised occupying the proximal half of the autozooid ( Fig. 41E, F View FIGURE 41 ). The largest avicularium found adjacent to the fenestrae (type 4), either placed proximally and horizontally directed laterally or placed proximolaterally and obliquely directed proximolaterally, pear-shaped with bicuspid rostrum and triangular mandible with hooked tip pointing downward, slightly exceeding the length of the rostrum (mandible length 250 µm; rostrum length 220 µm) ( Fig. 41A View FIGURE 41 see arrows, E, G). On the dorsal side a limited number of type (5) medium-sized avicularia, similar to type (2) on the frontal but with a more spatulate rostrum, usually placed near the fenestrae and randomly directed with spatulate mandible ( Fig. 41H–K View FIGURE 41 ). All avicularia with complete crossbar.

Ovicells not observed.

Dorsal side coarsely granular (granules diameter 10–20 µm), with vertical and oblique vibices (10–25 µm wide), outlining irregularly polygonal sectors, and a limited number of avicularia as described above commonly adjacent to the fenestrae ( Fig. 41H View FIGURE 41 ).

Remarks. Silén (1954) considered the small size of the fragment and the lack of ovicells as issues against the description of a new species. Eventually, the author decided to introduce the new species because of the unique set of avicularia observed. Similar giant avicularia at the bottom of the fenestrae were described in T. inornatum Harmer, 1934 , while similar peristome and secondary orifices were seen in several species of the genus such as T. mucronatum Harmer, 1934 and T. bimunitum Harmer, 1934 . As the other species of Triphyllozoon described by Silén (1943, 1954), Triphyllozoon regulare has never been reported in the literature since its first description. However, 12 occurrences of T. regulare are registered in GBIF (https://www.gbif.org/occurrence/map?taxon_key=1004915 accessed 31.10.2022) from six localities along the western and southern coast of Australia.

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Bryozoa

Class

Gymnolaemata

Order

Cheilostomatida

Family

Phidoloporidae

Genus

Triphyllozoon

Loc

Triphyllozoon regulare Silén, 1954

Martino, Emanuela Di 2023
2023
Loc

Triphyllozoon regulare Silén, 1954: 32

Silen, L. 1954: 32
1954
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