Fossils reveal a high diversity of the staghorn coral genera Acropora and Isopora (Scleractinia: Acroporidae) in the Neogene of Indonesia
Author
Santodomingo, Nadiezhda
Author
Wallace, Carden C.
Author
Johnson, Kenneth G.
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2015
2015-11-18
175
4
677
763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/zoj.12295
journal article
10.1111/zoj.12295
0024-4082
5339562
ACROPORA RENEMAI
SP. NOV.
FIGURE 39
Diagnosis
Colony probably corymbose; radial corallites immersed, evenly sized, scattered on the branches; coenosteum with densely packed elaborated spinules throughout.
Material studied
Holotype
.
NHMUK
PI
AZ 7439
,
1 specimen
. Type locality:
TF502
,
Bontang
,
East Kalimantan
,
0°8′28.68″N
,
117°25′51.60″E
.
Tortonian
age, 9.4–9.8
Ma. Collector N. Santodomingo
,
2 July 2011
.
Paratype
.
NHMUK PI AZ 9117, 69 fragments recovered together with the
holotype
, uncertain if all specimens belong to the same colony. Type locality:
TF502
,
Bontang
,
East Kalimantan
,
0°8′28.68″N
,
117°25′51.60″E
.
Tortonian
age, 9.4–9.8
Ma. Collector N. Santodomingo
,
2 July 2011
.
Description
Corallum
. Cylindrical branches, extending randomly and sparsely from main branches, mostly broken, tapering, branch length 8.73–19.77–
25.42 mm
, angle 29.62–37.00–45.12°, basal branch diameter 7.65–8.52–
9.83 mm
, middle branch diameter 4.97–6.67–
8.54 mm
, branch tip diameter 3.72–4.44–
5.48 mm
, some portions of branches lacking radial corallites. Overall length of
holotype
15.9 mm
, mid branch diameter
5.1 mm
.
Corallites.
Axial corallites visible at some branch tips, 0.93–1.05–
1.19 mm
exsert, outer diameter 1.12–1.32–
1.50 mm
, inner diameter 0.52–0.69–
0.79 mm
, wall thickness 0.15–0.16–
0.16 mm
, primary septa two-thirds R with smooth and straight axial margins, secondary septa up to one-quarter R, S1>>S2; radial corallites dimorphic, tubular appressed towards the branch tips, round to oval calices, profile length 1.18–1.56–
1.78 mm
, angle 17.94–29.80–41.82°, outer diameter 0.71–0.80–
0.93 mm
, inner diameter 0.34–0.47–
0.56 mm
; mostly immersed radials, not touching, sparsely distributed, inner diameter 0.36–0.42–
0.50 mm
, angle 35.25–40.69– 46.12°, distance between centres 3.20–4.45–6.00 mm, primary septa up to one-quarter R, secondary septa mostly absent or visible as points. Corallite sequence arrangement 1–[1–3]–[3–6]–?.
Coenosteum.
Elaborated spinules evenly and densely distributed both on and between radial corallites. Coenosteum amount 2.54–3.83–
5.89 mm
.
Occurrence
Late Miocene. Only known as a fossil from the
type
locality, outcrop
TF502
, Bontang, of Tortonian age, 9.4– 9.8 Ma
.
Palaeoenvironment
Acropora renemai
sp. nov.
was found within a grey silty to sand-rich matrix together with a large phacelloid colony of
Caulastraea
. Other small massive corals of the genera
Dipsastraea
,
Favites
and
Platygyra
also occur in the same facies. This environment is interpreted as a shallow-water environment with calm waters, probably a lagoon.
Remarks
Branches recovered show only primary branching order, and thus a corymbose or caespito-corymbose form is inferred for this species. We have neither photographic evidence nor field notes to confirm that all recovered fragments belong to the same colony, even though they are from the same sample. For that reason, only one fragment was designated as the
holotype
(NHMUK PI AZ7439), and the rest of the specimens as
paratypes
(NHMUK PI AZ9117). Among extant species
Acropora renemai
sp. nov.
closely resembles
Acropora squarrosa
(Ehrenberg, 1874)
from the
Red Sea
, and therefore it is placed into the
loripes
species group.
Acropora renemai
sp. nov.
also resembles
Acropora maryae
Veron, 2000
from the
Red Sea
synonymized with
A. squarrosa
by
Wallace
et al
. (2012)
. According to
Wallace (1999)
,
A. squarrosa
is restricted to the
Red Sea
today. Comparisons with the
lectotype
of
A. loripes
NHMUK
1892.6.8.219 from the Great Barrier Reef show that corallites in
A. renemai
sp. nov.
are smaller and more scattered, and branches seem to be more delicate. Elaborated spinules of
A. renemai
sp. nov.
are also similar to
A. loripes
and
A. squarrosa
. This species represents the earliest occurrence of the
loripes
group in the fossil record.
Etymology
This species is named after Willem Renema for his contribution to the palaeontological and biological studies of the geology, stratigraphy and ecology of larger benthic foraminifera of
Indonesia
.