Bryozoa collected by the United States Antarctic Research Program: new taxa and new records
Author
Hayward, Peter J.
Author
Winston, Judith E.
text
Journal of Natural History
2011
2011-10-31
45
37 - 38
2259
2338
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2011.574922
journal article
10.1080/00222933.2011.574922
1464-5262
5204333
Reteporella sulcula
sp. nov
(
Figure 29B, C
)
Material
Holotype
.
NMNH 1154047
:
Eltanin
cruise 9, station 740, 56
◦
06’ to
56
◦
07’ S
, 66
◦
19’ to
66
◦
30’ W
, 494–
384 m
,
18 September 1963
; fragment, 30 ×
30 mm
.
Paratypes
.
VMNH
013670.00: same data as holotype: numerous fragments, including three recognizable colony bases
Description
Colony architecture unknown, but fragments are mostly flat, suggesting an open, shallow cup without infolded rim. Fenestrulae elongate oval, 2.0–3.25 by 0.5–1.0 mm; trabeculae slender, consisting commonly of three alternating, longitudinal autozooid series, increasing to five at points of trabecular fusion. Autozooids elongate, separated by conspicuous raised sutures; frontal shield flat or gently convex, finely granular, with sparse (four or fewer) marginal pores. Primary orifice wider than long, obscured by a deep peristome with a medio-proximal fissure running from a peaked rim to an oval pseudospiramen, the distance between it and the peristome rim equivalent to one-quarter total frontal length of autozooid; two pairs of lateral spines present on peristome rim. Frontal adventitious avicularia present, typically one per autozooid, median in position, directed proximally or proximo-laterally; rostrum slightly acute to frontal plane, drop shaped, with complete crossbar and stout columella above a small palatal foramen. Vicarious avicularia sparse, in proximal axils of fenestrulae,
0.35 mm
long, with swollen cystid; rostrum broadly oval, distal rim straight and bicusped, crossbar complete, with stout columella above a minimal palatal foramen. Ovicell broader than long, smooth surfaced, with very small, inconspicuous frontal foramen; labellum narrowly tapered to a rounded edge, with a broad fissure on each side.
Etymology
Latin,
sulcus
: grooved, with reference to the sutures bordering the frontal shields of the autozooids.
Remarks
Species of
Phidoloporidae
are distributed in shelf seas worldwide, and among them
Reteporella
is possibly the most widespread genus, with numerous species described from polar, temperate and tropical environments. Phidoloporids are morphologically complex, and before the broad application of SEM methods descriptions were incomplete and often misleading, with much resulting taxonomic confusion. North Atlantic species of
Reteporella
are adequately described (
Hayward and Ryland, 1999
), numerous species from the tropical southwest Pacific have been described and illustrated by SEM (Hayward, 1999, 2000, 2004), as have all species presently known from
Antarctica
(
Hayward, 1995
), but for much of the marine realm
Reteporella
species
have yet to be adequately described or figured.
López Gappa (1978)
listed just three taxa attributed to
Reteporella
(as
Sertella
) from the Argentinian Patagonian Shelf, including
Reteporella magellensis
(above), yet it is probable that the diversity of the genus in this region is at least as great as in the Antarctic.
Reteporella sulcula
sp. nov.
is a distinctive species, especially characterized by its elongate, symmetrically oriented labial fissure, connecting the pseudospiramen to the peristome rim, its four oral spines and the large, axial vicarious avicularia, with broad, straight distal edge. The ovicell is also characteristic, being broad and short, with only a transient median foramen, and a pronounced labellum