Revision of the genus Crepis Jullien (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) with description of a new genus and family and notes on Chlidoniidae
Author
Reverter-Gil, Oscar
Author
Souto, Javier
Author
Fernández-Pulpeiro, Eugenio
text
Zootaxa
2011
2993
1
22
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.203919
2af3e798-9a86-4a06-b094-009841e06894
1175-5326
203919
Crepis sinensis
n. sp.
(
Figs 19–20
;
Table 6
)
?
Crepis longipes
:
Harmer 1926
: 318
(part).
Material examined.
Holotype
:
SMF
5429, South
China
Sea, Hainan, Yalong Bay, Yezhou Island,
18º14’ N
,
109º39’ E
,
7–8 m
, Liu,
25/11/1990
(coated for SEM).
Paratype
:
SMF
5430, same locality as
holotype
.
Etymology.
The material referred to this species was collected in the South
China
Sea.
Description.
Colony adnate, delicate, of branching uniserial series. Autozooidal dilatation oval, somewhat variable in shape, with rounded distal rim; tapering proximally and prolonged into a slender cauda of variable length but generally short. Lateral walls vertical, irregular in their basal contact with the substratum, with smooth exterior-walled (gymnocystal) calcification. Frontal area of dilatation bordered by thin, even rim. Gymnocyst reduced to the proximal cauda. Cryptocyst smooth, flat, its distal edge abruptly raised to form proximal border of opesia; the calcification sometimes curving proximally where it abuts the lateral wall. Opesia semi-elliptical, occupying more than one third of frontal area, with slightly concave proximal edge; operculum occupying its distal half.
Zooidal branching frequent, each autozooid giving rise to two lateral buds from the dilatation, their caudae at right angles to the parent zooid. Spines and heterozooids absent. Ancestrula and ovicell unknown.
Remarks.
The studied material, consisting of two samples from the South
China
Sea (Hainan), was originally identified as
C. longipes
. It seems not to have been reported in any publication.
Crepis sinensis
shares certain characteristics with
C. sidneyi
, such as its small size, the oval shape of the zooids, a smooth cryptocyst and peripheral rim, and an ecological setting in shallow waters using erect bryozoans as substrata. It differs, however, in having a significantly smaller size, a flatter cryptocyst that is more abruptly raised distally, and typically a proximal curvature of calcification where the distal cryptocystal rim encounters the lateral wall on each side.
As mentioned for the previous species, the material reported as
C. longipes
by
Harmer (1926)
from Seget, northern New
Guinea
(ZMA V.Bry. 1813) (
Figs 21, 22
) consists of only two zooids, one of them evidently deformed, and it is difficult to decide on its status. Nevertheless, in its small size and the appearance of the cryptocyst, smooth and flat, it might correspond to
C. sinensis
.
Crepis sinensis
is so far known only from Yalong Bay, Hainan, at
7–8 m
depth.
TABLE 6.
Measurements (in mm) of
Crepis sinensis
n. sp.
(SMF 5429, holotype)
Mean SD Minimum Maximum N Frontal surface length 0.189 0.0114 0.174 0.204 5 Frontal surface width 0.108 0.0071 0.101 0.118 5 Opesia length 0.075 0.0106 0.063 0.086 5 Opesia width 0.080 0.0131 0.058 0.090 5 Opesia L/Zooid L 39.7 % 36.2 % 42.2 %
Cauda width 0.028 0.0041 0.019 0.035 10
SD, Standard deviation; N, number of measurements.