A revision of the genus Eugorgia Verrill, 1868 (Coelenterata: Octocorallia: Gorgoniidae)
Author
Breedy, Odalisca
Author
Guzman, Hector M.
Author
Vargas, Sergio
text
Zootaxa
2009
2151
1
46
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.188707
bf88cf54-38da-4ec6-a560-6c1ea86bf792
1175-5326
188707
Eugorgia aurantiaca
(
Horn, 1860
)
Figure 6
, Plate 2A–D
Lophogorgia aurantiaca
Horn, 1860
: 233
.
Gorgonia aurantiaca
Verrill, 1864
: 33
(non
Gorgonia aurantiaca
,
Milne Edwards & Haime, 1857
);
Verrill 1866
: 327
.
Gorgonia
(
Eugorgia
)
mexicana
Verrill, 1869
: 415
.
Eugorgia aurantiaca
Verrill, 1868: 410
–411;
Bielschowsky 1918
: 45
; 1929: 182–183;
Kükenthal 1924
: 346
;
Stiasny 1951
: 63
–65;
Sinsel-Duarte 1991
: 30
;
Harden 1979
: 122
.
Eugorgia forreri
?
Studer, 1883
: 6
,
syn. nov.
Eugorgia forreri
Bielschowsky 1918
: 44
; 1929: 178–179;
Kükenthal 1924
: 345
;
Harden 1979
: 125
.
Material examined.
Lectotype
, here designated:
YPM
2269, dry fragment, Sinaloa, Mazatlán, G.H. Horn, (probably the
type
series collected before 1860 by Horn), no further data.
Paralectotype
:
YPM
389, same data as the
lectotype
.
Other material
:
MEXICO
:
MCZ
61014, 36185;
YPM
8715, dry, La Paz, no depth given, J. Pedersen,
1867–70
;
YPM
397, dry, La Paz,
11–15 m
, W.B. Rich, 1863;
YPM
1707, dry, Acapulco, no depth given, A. Agassiz,
1859–1860
;
MNHN
oct.0000-0549, dry, Baja California, no depth given, M.L. Diguet, 1897;
MNHN
oct.0000-0554, oct.0000-0559, dry, Mazatlan, no depth given, M. le Général Rollin, 1864.
PANAMA
:
USNM
1016591, dry, west coast of
Panama
, E. Deichmann, no further data;
USNM
33603, dry, no further data. Without data:
MNHN
oct.0000-0552, dry, original label from
RMNH
;
MNHN
oct.0000-0551, dry, original label from
RMNH
.
Description.
The examined specimens reach up to
32 cm
in height and
38 cm
in width. The
lectotype
is a fragment
8 cm
in height and
3 cm
in width, and the
paralectotype
is a smaller fragment
3 cm
in height and
1.5 cm
in width (Plate 2A, branch and detail). Colonies form densely branched fans (Plate 2B, C). Main stems are
4–6 mm
in diameter, compressed, and up to
2 cm
long or absent, so the branches emerge directly from spreading holdfasts. Main branches are compressed and divergent,
2–3 mm
in diameter, branching irregularly pinnate, the pinnae
1–2 mm
in diameter and they are irregularly arranged and not close together (Plate 2C). Several of the pinnae rebranch giving off secondary pinnae, some are pseudoanastomosed (anastomosis of the coenenchyme, not of the axes). Unbranched terminal twigs are blunt, and reach up to
3 cm
in length. Polypmounds are prominent, with bilabiate apertures, and reach up to
1 mm
in diameter. The polyp-mounds are placed in irregular longitudinal rows along the branches, and do not crowd the surface (Plate 2C). Colonies are dark orange, streaked with bright yellow on the branches and with yellow rings on polyp-mounds. The main branches have numerous yellow, longitudinal grooves that are more evident on thick branches. Sclerites of the coenenchyme are red and yellow (Plate 2D). In the
lectotype
, they are mostly double discs reaching up to
0.07 mm
in length, and
0.05 mm
in width (
Fig. 6
). Capstans are about the same size with complex tubercles at the ends. Spindles reach up to
0.11 mm
in length and
0.045 mm
in width, with 3–5 whorls of warty tubercles, with mostly acute ends; and crosses about 0.06 by
0.06 mm
(
Fig. 6
). No anthocodial sclerites were obtained in the samples examined. Size and shapes of the sclerites in the examined specimens are as in the
lectotype
.
Distribution
. Sinaloa,
type
locality; La Paz, Acapulco, Cabo Pulmo (
Sinsel-Duarte 1991
) and
Panama
(
Table 4
).
Remarks.
This species was described by
Horn (1860)
probably based on large specimens, but all that seems to have remained are the two fragments, YPM 2269 and 389, which were given to Verrill (YPM) by Horn from the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. The original specimens collected by Horn were supposedly deposited in the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, but we could not locate them. Horn reported an unknown locality of collection, but Verrill (1868) indicated that it was Mazatlan, as is the case for
Leptogorgia clavata
(
Horn, 1860
) (
Breedy & Guzman 2007
)
, and
Pacifigorgia englemanni
(
Horn, 1860
) (
Breedy & Guzman 2002
)
.
Two specimens of
E. aurantiaca
from Mazatlan found in the MNHN (oct.0000-0554, oct.0000-0559) were identified by Valenciennes in 1864 as
Gorgonia bicolor
, however this species name was never published.
Studer (1883)
identified a collection from the Gulf of California, La Paz and Mazatlan given to him by Alfonse Forrer. He reported 15 gorgonian species, among them three species of
Eugorgia
:
E. aurantiaca
,
E. bradleyi
, and the newly described
E. forreri
, with a question mark, with neither illustrations, nor
holotype
designation. We could not locate any
syntypes
of this species for examination, but Studer’s description matches
E. aurantiaca
. For these reasons we herein synonymise
E. forreri
. Some specimens in the California Academy of Sciences identified as
E. forreri
do not match Studer´s description. They probably constitute new species but were found too late for inclusion in this work.