A Review of the Pennatulacean Genus Stylatula, with the Description of a New Species from Japan (Cnidaria: Octocorallia)
Author
Williams, Gary C.
Department of Invertebrate Zoology and Geology, California Academy of Sciences, 55 Music Concourse Drive, San Francisco, California 94118, USA. Corresponding author: Email: gwilliams @ calacademy. org.;
Author
Matsumoto, Asako K.
Planetary Exploration Research Center (PERC), Chiba Institute of Technology (Chitec), Tsudanuma 2 - 17 - 1, Narashino, Chiba 275 - 0016, Japan; & Faculty of Economics and Informatics, Educational Foundation SHOUHEIKOU, Higashi Nippon International University, 37 Suganezawa, Kamata, Taira, Iwaki, Fukushima 970 - 8023, Japan
text
Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences
2015
2015-04-15
62
8
257
266
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.11512380
0068-547X
11512380
Genus
Stylatula
Verrill, 1864
GENERIC
DIAGNOSIS
.— Virgulariid pennatulaceans with slender, bilateral, often vermiform colony shape. Axis present throughout colony length, most often round in transverse section. Polyp leaves subtended by fanlike armatures of spindle-like to needle-like sclerites, which may or may not be three-flanged. Sclerites from other parts of colony inconspicuous to absent.
TYPE
SPECIES
.—
Virgularia elongata
(
Gabb, 1862
)
; subsequent designation by
Verrill
, 1864;
type
locality
California
.
ETYMOLOGY
.— The generic name is derived from the Greek
Stylos
: a style, stake, or pillar.
SYSTEMATICS
AND
PHYLOGENETIC
ASSESSMENT
.— The genus
Stylatula
contains thirteen described species from the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans (
Japan
to
Norway
), between approximately
65° north
and
50° south
latitude (
Fig. 9
). With the addition of the new species described here, thirteen species are considered valid; known geographic range Atlantic and Pacific Oceans (
Japan
to North & South America to
Norway
and
Namibia
),
0–1020 m
in depth (
Williams 1995:122
;
Williams 2011:6
;
Williams 2014
). The genus
Stylatula
differs from other genera in the family
Virgulariidae
by the presence of a conspicuous fan-shaped armature subtending each polyp leaf, comprised of relatively robust sclerites. Of the five described genera in the family, only
Stylatula
,
Acanthoptilum
, and
Scytalium
have sclerites in the rachis and polyp leafs, while
Virgularia
and
Scytaliopsis
do not.