Triphyllozoon mauritzoni Silén, 1943

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 : 70-73

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.10248937

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4B6E902E-FFEF-FFDC-FF46-FA591EB2FF76

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Triphyllozoon mauritzoni Silén, 1943
status

 

Triphyllozoon mauritzoni Silén, 1943 View in CoL

( Figs 38 View FIGURE 38 , 39 View FIGURE 39 ; Table 34)

Triphyllozoon mauritzoni Silén, 1943: 89 View in CoL , figs 1–10.

Material examined. Lectotype (designated here) LUZM 57 a, Great Barrier Reef, Heron Island , Australia. Leg. Dr J. Mauritzon 1936 . Paralectotypes: LUZM 57 b, c, same details as the lectotype . LUZM 57 a ( Fig. 38 View FIGURE 38 , 2.2 View FIGURE 2 × 2.4 mm, unbleached) correspond to the specimen on the right-hand side of fig. 1 in Silén (1943) ; LUZM 57 b ( Fig. 39 View FIGURE 39 , 2.7 View FIGURE 2 × 1.8 mm, bleached) and LUZM 57 c (not illustrated, 1.8 × 1.2 mm) seem to be the result of fragmentation of the specimen on the left-hand side of fig. 1 in Silén (1943) .

Description. Colony erect, rigid, reticulate, with a wavy surface; fenestrae oval ( Figs 38A, B, H View FIGURE 38 , 39A, F View FIGURE 39 ), 0.47–0.77 × 0.30–0.42 mm, and trabeculae consisting of 2–10 alternating autozooidal series, more commonly 4–5 ( Figs 38F View FIGURE 38 , 39C, D View FIGURE 39 ).

Autozooids rectangular to hexagonal, longer than wide (mean L/ W 1.51), either distinct, with boundaries marked by thin furrows and/or raised margins of smooth calcification ( Figs 38C, D, F View FIGURE 38 , 39B, D View FIGURE 39 ), or sometimes indistinct ( Fig. 39B View FIGURE 39 ); frontal shield generally smooth ( Fig. 39B, C View FIGURE 39 ) except for recently budded zooids at the tips of the branch ( Fig. 39D View FIGURE 39 ) and areas around the fenestrae appearing finely granular to tubercular, flat to slightly convex, imperforate except for a few sparse, round, elliptical or slit-like pores along the lateral and proximal margins, 15–25 µm in diameter/length ( Fig. 39B, C View FIGURE 39 ).

Peristome deep, forming a raised collar proximally and laterally almost completely hiding the orifice in frontal view, and with a deep (55–80 µm) drop-shaped pseudosinus proximally ( Figs 38D View FIGURE 38 , 39B View FIGURE 39 ); peristomial avicularium (type 1) present in each completely developed zooid, elliptical, embedded in the peristome and placed horizontally, rostrum slightly raised and denticulate, directed laterally, mandible semielliptical, crossbar complete ( Fig. 39C View FIGURE 39 ); at least 1–2 oral spines always visible in each autozooid, even if ovicellate, 7–20 µm in diameter at the base, up to 4–5 spines visible around the distal margin of the orifice of autozooids placed at the growing tip of the branches ( Figs 38E View FIGURE 38 , 39C, D View FIGURE 39 ); secondary orifice subelliptical. Primary orifice visible on tilted autozooids with incomplete peristome at the growing tip, elliptical with denticulate anter, a pair of short triangular condyles, and a short, rectangular median process occupying most of the proximal margin and outlining two small indentations, 65 µm long by 90 µm wide ( Figs 38E View FIGURE 38 , 39D View FIGURE 39 ).

A medium-sized, adventitious, frontal avicularium (exceptionally two) developing in some autozooids, parallel-sided elliptical or with slightly spatulate rostrum (mean L/ W 1.72; type 2), placed on the proximal zooidal corner or medially and directed proximally, or placed at mid-length on one side and directed laterally, with a slightly raised, smooth rostrum and semielliptical mandible ( Figs 38D, F View FIGURE 38 , 39B, C View FIGURE 39 ), crossbar complete. Rarely, a type (3) larger avicularium, placed on the frontal of zooids adjacent to the fenestrae, with tricuspid rostrum directed proximally, and bicuspid mandible (mandible length 187 µm) ( Fig. 38C View FIGURE 38 ). On the dorsal side adjacent to some of the fenestrae two types of avicularia are present, the same type (2) observed on the frontal shield of autozooids and a type (4) small, circular avicularium (mean L/ W 0.98), randomly directed with semicircular, denticulate rostrum and complete crossbar ( Figs 38H, I View FIGURE 38 , 39F View FIGURE 39 ).

Ovicell hyperstomial, prominent; ooecium flat frontally, almost as wide as long (mean L/ W 1.04), tubercular, with Y-shaped dentate suture ( Figs 38G View FIGURE 38 , 39C View FIGURE 39 ); relative length of the median and lateral sutures variable, with some ooecia having longer and others having a shorter median suture than lateral sutures; median suture 90–145 µm long, lateral sutures 65–115 µm long; lateral sutures of different length in the same ooecium, diverging at 125–130°. Labellum short and square.

Dorsal side evenly and densely granular (granules diameter 5–10 µm), with raised vertical and oblique vibices (10 µm wide) outlining irregularly polygonal sectors; avicularia rare, of two types (described above), and mainly on the inner areas around the fenestrae ( Figs 38H View FIGURE 38 , 39F View FIGURE 39 ); the dorsal side near the encrusting base characterised by smaller rectangular sectors with several areolar pores along the margins, and constantly at least one (often more) small circular avicularium ( Fig. 39E View FIGURE 39 ); pillar-like kenozooidal, tubular projections developing perpendicular or obliquely from the dorsal side ( Fig. 38I View FIGURE 38 ).

Remarks. Specimen LUZM 57a was designated here as the lectotype because of the unique presence, although rare, of the large frontal avicularia with tricuspid rostrum and bicuspid mandible, developed only on autozooids placed adjacent to the fenestrae. Those avicularia were not observed in the paralectotypes.

In the original description of this species, Silén (1943) remarked on the absence of oral spines. However, 1–2 spines are always present ( Figs 38C, D View FIGURE 38 , 39B, C View FIGURE 39 ), even in ovicellate zooids ( Fig. 39C View FIGURE 39 ), while autozooids at the growing tip of the branches show 4–5 spines ( Figs 38E View FIGURE 38 , 39D View FIGURE 39 ) that are gradually covered by the calcification spreading from the areolar pores of the distal zooids.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Bryozoa

Class

Gymnolaemata

Order

Cheilostomatida

Family

Phidoloporidae

Genus

Triphyllozoon

Loc

Triphyllozoon mauritzoni Silén, 1943

Martino, Emanuela Di 2023
2023
Loc

Triphyllozoon mauritzoni Silén, 1943: 89

Silen, L. 1943: 89
1943
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