A review of Australian Conescharellinidae (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata)
Author
Bock, Philip E.
Author
Cook, Patricia L.
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2004
2004-12-31
61
2
135
182
https://museumsvictoria.com.au/collections-research/journals/memoirs-of-museum-victoria/volume-61-issue-2-2004/pages-135-182/
journal article
10.24199/j.mmv.2004.61.11
1447-2554
12207880
Conescharellina perculta
sp. nov.
Figures 11A–D
Holotype
.
NMV
F98998
, slide labelled E3195 (
Locality
unknown, probably off
New South Wales
).
Paratypes
.
NMV
F98999
, locality as above
.
Etymology. percultus
(L.) – highly adorned, with reference to the patterning of the numerous avicularia and colony calcification.
Diagnosis and description.
Colonies small, discoid, distinctly wider than high, with a mamillate centre and prominent marginal peristomes, calcification delicate and finely tuberculate. Orifices quincuncial, becoming radial. Primary orifice with a rounded sinus. Peristomes elongated and tubular, raised antapically and prolonged into a spout, prominent at the colony margin. Adapical pore present on outer face of the peristomes. Root pores circular, surrounded by up to 5 small avicularia. All avicularia small, rostrum rounded, bar with a minute ligula. Each orifice with 1 adapical, 1 lateral and 1 antapical pair of avicularia. Further pairs of lateral and antapically placed avicularia, that are visible from the antapical surface, are accompanied by pairs of pores.
Largest colony about
2.3 mm
wide and
0.5 mm
high, with 6 astogenetic generations and probably up to 11–12 zooids per whorl at margin.
Remarks
. The locality from that the three small colonies of were collected also provided two well preserved colonies of
C. biarmata
and therefore is inferred to have been collected from
New South Wales
.
C. perculta
is distinguished by its delicate, semitransparent, finely tuberculate calcification, with numerous avicularia surrounding the spout-shaped peristomial orifices. As in
C. eburnea
,
C. ocellata
and
T. diommatus
, the marginal peristomes can be recognised from the antapical surface by the pattern or outline of the associated paired avicularia. In many other respects, such as the depth of the peristome, the distribution of circum-oral avicularia, and
type
of root pore,
C. perculta
greatly resembles
C. plana
, from which it differs principally in colony size, the patterning and shape of the orifices, and nature of the antapical surface, including the peristomes. The circular root pores, with their surrounding avicularia, resemble those of
C. eburnea
,
C. plana
and
C. humerus
, as well as those of
Crucescharellina australis
.