Sycozoa umbellata ( Michaelsen, 1898 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4526.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:028FC5EA-7123-4F3A-B6C4-5EBE57ADBE23 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5995330 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A0769C75-7577-FFB5-0BB6-323111773097 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Sycozoa umbellata ( Michaelsen, 1898 ) |
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Sycozoa umbellata ( Michaelsen, 1898)
References: Colella umbellata Michaelsen 1898: 371 ;
Sycozoa umbellata Sluiter 1919: 12 ; Van Name 1945: 154, fig. 75 A–C (synonymy). Material examined: several colonies; net; -36.5433 lat. -53.3833 long. (station 5); 647 m; 10 August 2012 ( Figures 9 View FIGURE 9 A–B).
Colonies consist of small heads supported by long, thin and frequently ramified stalks ( Fig. 9A View FIGURE 9 ). On average, the heads measure 5.3 mm in length and 4.2 mm wide and are shaped in the form of ovoid masses. The stalks are smooth and extremely long. The average length of the stalks is 14 cm. Each stalk supports from one to three heads, though the most frequent configuration consists of colonies with two heads. The tunic is yellowish and transparent when alive. After conservation in formalin, it acquires a more opaque tone. Its consistency is soft in the heads and coarse in the stalks.
Each head bears longitudinal rows of three to five zooids arranged in oblique or random-like configurations ( Fig. 9B View FIGURE 9 ). On average, zooids are 1.9 mm in length. No larvae were found.
Remarks. The general shape of the colonies (small rounded heads supported by fine peduncles arising from a basal mass of stolons) resembles the closely related species Sycozoa georgiana ( Michaelsen, 1907) . According to Van Name (1945), each head of S. georgiana is "supported on a separate peduncle that can reach 3 cm in length, but is usually much shorter" (154 p.). The peduncles of the present specimen, on the contrary, reach 14 cm in length, have ramifications and usually have two heads. On the other hand, S. georgiana is cited exclusively for the South Georgia Islands. Sycozoa umbellata , in addition to the South Georgia Islands, has also been recorded in the SW Atlantic, near the area where the colonies of the present work were collected.
Van Name (1945) also notes that S. umbellata is closely related to S. sigillinoides Lesson, 1930 , of which it is distinguished by "the usual reproduction of numerous heads of the upper part of the peduncle or of broken or injured places along its length, and also fragments of peduncles" (154 p.). In addition, the length of the heads and consequently, the number of zooids per head in S. sigillinoides , is greater.
The only reliable characters to distinguish among these three species and Sycozoa gaimardi ( Herdman, 1886) , all with overlapping distribution ranges, are external: the appearance of the colony and the shape and size of the heads. Table 3 lists such differences in detail.
This is the deepest and northernmost record for the species.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Tunicata |
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Sycozoa umbellata ( Michaelsen, 1898 )
Maggioni, Tamara, Taverna, Anabela, Reyna, Paola B., Alurralde, Gastón, Rimondino, Clara & Tatián, Marcos 2018 |
Sycozoa umbellata
Van Name, W. G. 1945: 154 |
Sluiter, C. P. 1919: 12 |