Licornia

Martino, Emanuela Di & Taylor, Paul D., 2018, Early Pleistocene and Holocene bryozoans from Indonesia, Zootaxa 4419 (1), pp. 1-70 : 15-16

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.3799524

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CF6D87AA-E840-D241-FF7D-FA86099FFEED

treatment provided by

Plazi (2020-04-27 15:04:51, last updated 2024-11-24 23:25:03)

scientific name

Licornia
status

 

Licornia View in CoL sp.

( Figs 29–32 View FIGURES 29–32 ; Table 9)

Figured material. RGM.1350552, Holocene, UPGG 041, off South Sulawesi.

N, Number of colonies and number of zooids measured; SD, standard deviation.

Description. Colony erect, flexible, jointed; branches presumably biserial but broken into a uniserial series in the single specimen available. Autozooids club-shaped, longer than wide (mean L/W = 1.66). Gymnocyst extensive proximally, tapering laterally and reduced distally, flat, smooth; cryptocyst forming a narrow border around the opesia. Opesia oval with an undulate margin, occupying about half of the frontal surface. Oral spines absent. Base of scutum only on the inner margin of the unique ovicellate zooid. A structure resembling a small, frontal, adventitious avicularium present in one of the zooids, seemingly triangular and directed outwardly and distolaterally, about 65 µm long by 40 µm wide. Marginal lateral avicularia small, 55–60 µm long, placed on the distolateral corner of the opesia, directed outwardly and laterally. A single broken ooecium present, 130 µm long by 145 µm wide. Dorsal side occupied by drop-shaped vibracular chambers, tapering distally, 270 µm long by 110 µm wide, with a 30 µm wide, straight, transverse setal groove, and a rhizoidal foramen.

Remarks. Only half an internode of Licornia sp. was found in our samples. Licornia sp. is characterized by the presence of scuta only on ovicellate zooids, as in L. cyclostoma ( Busk, 1852) ( Vieira et al. 2014) .

Busk, G. (1852) An account of the Polyzoa, and sertularian zoophytes, collected in the Voyage of the Rattlesnake, on the coasts of Australia and the Louisiade Archipelago. In: MacGillivray, J. (Ed.), Narrative of the Voyage of the H. M. S. Rattlesnake 1. T. & W. Boone, London, pp. 343 - 402.

Vieira, L. M., Spencer Jones, M. E., Winston, J. E., Migotto, A. E. & Marques, A. C. (2014) Evidence for polyphyly of the genus Scrupocellaria (Bryozoa: Candidae) based on a phylogenetic analysis of morphological characters. PLOS One, 9 (4), e 95296. https: // doi. org / 10.1371 / journal. pone. 0095296

Gallery Image

FIGURES 29–32. Licornia sp., RGM.1350552, Holocene, UPGG041, off South Sulawesi. 29. View of the half internode. 30. Close-up of an autozooid with incomplete ooecium, scutum base, distolateral avicularium and vibraculum in frontal view. 31. Close-up of a zooid with a putative frontal avicularium. 32. Close-up of the vibracular chamber on the dorsal side. Scale bars: Fig. 29 = 500 µm; Figs 30–32 = 100 µm.

RGM

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Bryozoa

Class

Gymnolaemata

Order

Cheilostomatida

SubOrder

Neocheilostomina

InfraOrder

Flustrina

SuperFamily

Buguloidea

Family

Candidae