Adeonella cf. lichenoides ( Lamarck, 1816 )

Martino, Emanuela Di & Taylor, Paul D., 2018, Early Pleistocene and Holocene bryozoans from Indonesia, Zootaxa 4419 (1), pp. 1-70 : 17-20

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4419.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:03CAFD21-185F-4C86-ACC3-8CEB61E7F7DD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3799564

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CF6D87AA-E85E-D25A-FF7D-FA12091FFE59

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Plazi

scientific name

Adeonella cf. lichenoides ( Lamarck, 1816 )
status

 

Adeonella cf. lichenoides ( Lamarck, 1816)

( Figs 35–44 View FIGURES 35–40 View FIGURES 41–44 ; Table 11)

cf. Eschara lichenoides Lamarck, 1816: 176 .

cf. Eschara platalea: Busk, 1854: 90 , pl. 105, figs 1–3, pl. 108, fig. 4.

cf. Adeonella platalea: Harmer, 1957: 809 , pl. 53, figs 2, 4–12.

cf. Adeonella lichenoides: Taylor & Tan, 2015: 17 , fig. 9.

cf. Adeonella cf. lichenoides: Hirose, 2016: 4 , figs 2, 3.

Figured material. RGM.1350554, early Pleistocene, Java; RGM.1350555, Holocene, UPGG 041, off South Sulawesi.

Description. Colony rigidly erect, adeoniform. Branches strap-like, about 2 mm wide, arising from an encrusting base, bifurcating at angles of 80–90˚, bilaminate, with 6–12 longitudinal rows of alternating autozooids, the zooids in the central rows aligned parallel to the branch axis and the outer zooids directing outwards. Autozooids distinct with shallow interzooidal furrows, dimorphic, hexagonal, elongate (mean L/W = 1.86). Frontal shield convex proximally owing to the presence of a solid tubercle, but flat distally, finely granular with a suboral spiramen. Areolar pores circular to oval, 15–30 µm in diameter, arranged in one to three rows; accessory pores delimiting the suboral avicularian cystid. Spiramen circular, relatively large, 40–55 µm in diameter, placed either medially or laterally (off-centre), about 30 µm below the orifice. Orifice semicircular to circular; peristome slightly projecting. A suboral avicularium often present, variously placed, either horizontally and parallel to the proximal rim of the orifice, at the same level but opposite to the spiramen, laterally and inwardly directed, or oblique and indenting the lateral or proximal rim of the orifice, distally directed; rostrum rounded or pointed triangular with a pair of blunt pivotal condyles. Frontal avicularia often present at about half zooidal length or more proximally placed, similar in shape to suboral avicularia but longer, rostrum proximolaterally directed. Vicarious avicularia rare, club-shaped, bordered by a row of marginal areolar pores. Orifice sealed in some zooids as ontogenetic calcification progresses. Fertile zooid slightly larger than autozooids, with pseudoporous frontal shield, crescentic orifice, divided spiramen, and small, paired, suboral avicularia, medially and distolaterally directed; no frontal avicularium.

N, Number of colonies and number of zooids measured; SD, standard deviation; Av, avicularium; Vic, vicarious; *fertile zooids.

Remarks. Forty-seven branch fragments of Adeonella cf. lichenoides were found in our samples. Adeonella lichenoides was first described from the Indian Ocean, and subsequently recorded broadly from East Africa to eastern Australia. Harmer (1957) discussed the difficulty in establishing clear distinctions between species of Adeonella owing to the high intraspecific variability, and distinguished three variants of Adeonella platalea from the Indo-Pacific based on the shape of vicarious avicularia (i.e. absent, rounded or subtriangular). Hayward (1988), after examining the type material of A. platalea ( Figs 45, 46 View FIGURES 45, 46 ; NHMUK 1854.11.15.185) and A. lichenoides , synonymized the two species. Specimens of A. cf. lichenoides found in our samples differ mainly in the shape of vicarious avicularia, which are subtriangular in specimens from the UPG sample ( Fig. 44 View FIGURES 41–44 ), and more rounded in the specimens from the Kali Klagen sample ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 35–40 ). Hirose (2016, fig. 2E) illustrated a specimen of A. cf. lichenoides from Japan which shows the variability of vicarious avicularia in the same fragment. Adeonella intricaria ( Busk, 1884) , recorded from the Malay Archipelago to the Torres Strait, differs in having especially long and acute frontal avicularia, and triangular vicarious avicularia ( Figs 47–52 View FIGURES 47–52 ; NHMUK 1899.7.1.25.19).

RGM

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

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