Aetea ligulata Busk, 1852

Taylor, Paul D. & Tan, Shau-Hwai Aileen, 2015, Cheilostome Bryozoa from Penang and Langkawi, Malaysia, European Journal of Taxonomy 149, pp. 1-34 : 5-6

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2015.149

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3793837

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9C3C87B4-BB3F-E431-FDF1-FD61FD41FB23

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Aetea ligulata Busk, 1852
status

 

Aetea ligulata Busk, 1852 View in CoL

Fig. 2 View Fig A–F

Aetea ligulata Busk, 1852: 31 View in CoL , pl. 42.

Aetea ligulata View in CoL – Osburn 1950: 13, pl. 1, fig. 4.

Material

MALAYSIA: MSL BRY001a, Pantai Pasir Hitam, Langkawi, collected intertidally from coral reef, fouling Hippopodina feegeensis . MSL BRY002, Kampung Kuala Temoyong, Langkawi, encrusting shell found among fishing debris.

Description

Colony encrusting, uniserial, runner-like with widely spaced branches ( Fig. 2 View Fig A–B), delicate, feebly calcified. Autozooids slender with elongate pyriform proximal base and an erect distal part; proximal base 1.1–1.3 mm long by about 0.13 mm maximum width ( Fig. 2C View Fig ), with irregular transverse growth wrinkles and locally minutely porous or with finely reticulate ornamentation, a narrow proximal cauda of about same length as broader distal part; erect part often broken off or collapsed, about 0.42 mm long by 0.07 mm maximum width, proximally with widely spaced, hoop-like annulations about 0.02 mm apart ( Fig. 2D View Fig ), expanding a little distally where an elongated opesia, 0.25 mm long by 0.05 mm wide, is developed on proximal-facing side ( Fig. 2E View Fig ).

Remarks

This species was erected by Busk (1852) based on material collected by Charles Darwin from the coast of Patagonia and the Magellan Strait. Busk’s figure shows clearly the coarsely annulated erect parts of the zooids, very different from the finely striated annulations seen in the two common cosmopolitan species Aetea anguina ( Linnaeus, 1758) and A. sica (Couch, 1844) . A modern systematic study of Aetea combining morphological and molecular data is required and in the meantime there must be reservations about the identities of species with such seemingly wide latitudinal distributions as A. ligulata .

Abundant evidence of damage and repair can be observed in the skeleton. The skeletons of some zooids were apparently partly destroyed, eliciting reparative growth, sometimes on multiple occasions ( Fig. 2C View Fig ). Broken zooids may also reveal internal stolon-like structures ( Fig. 2F View Fig ), indicating growth through the dead zooid to re-establish connections between zooids and allow growth from the open ends of branches. Although the straggly, runner-like form of Aetea and various other uniserial cheilostomes would suggest a reduced commitment to maintaining the integrity of the colony, reparative growth that renews links between zooids and re-uses substrate space once occupied by dead zooids is a common feature of such bryozoans, Recent and fossil ( Taylor 1988).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Bryozoa

Class

Gymnolaemata

Order

Cheilostomatida

Family

Aeteidae

Genus

Aetea

Loc

Aetea ligulata Busk, 1852

Taylor, Paul D. & Tan, Shau-Hwai Aileen 2015
2015
Loc

Aetea ligulata

Osburn R. C. 1950: 13
1950
Loc

Aetea ligulata

Busk G. 1852: 31
1852
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