Revisionary systematics of the endemic soft coral fauna (Octocorallia: Alcyonacea: Alcyoniina) of the Agulhas Bioregion, South Africa
Author
Mcfadden, Catherine S.
Author
Van Ofwegen, Leen P.
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-12-13
4363
4
451
488
journal article
31177
10.11646/zootaxa.4363.4.1
a141fa76-cc88-4901-944a-306171e41413
1175-5326
1114473
86DE1B94-63AE-4ABF-B28A-0ECEA22D2F10
Alcyonium dolium
,
n. sp.
Fig. 5b
,
7
?
Alcyonium sarcophytoides
(non Burchardt, 1903) Thomson 1921: 157–158.
Material
examined
.
Holotype
.
RMNH
Coel.
40204 (SAF292),
South Africa
,
KwaZulu-Natal
,
Park Rynie
,
Lander’s Reef
,
30º19.973'S
,
30º47.523'E
, depth
22–28 m
, coll.
C.S. McFadden
,
18 March 2008
.
Other
material.
Alcyonium variabile
:
RMNH
Coel.
40202,
South Africa
,
Eastern
Cape
,
Algoa Bay
,
Riy Banks
;
33º59.097'S
,
25º51.774'E
, depth
15–20 m
, coll.
C.S. McFadden
,
11 March 2008
.
RMNH
Coel.
41530
,
RMNH
Coel.
41531,
South Africa
,
Eastern
Cape
,
Algoa Bay
,
Evans Peak
,
33º50.578'S
,
25º48.998'E
, depth
22–28 m
, coll.
C.S. McFadden
,
14 March 2008
.
RMNH
Coel.
40203,
South Africa
,
Western
Cape
,
Cape
Peninsula, Vulcan Rock,
34º03.970'S
,
18º18.627'E
, depth
15–27 m
, coll.
C.S. McFadden
,
23 March 2008
.
RMNH
Coel.
40800,
South Africa
,
Eastern
Cape
,
Algoa Bay
,
Riy Banks
, depth
18–20 m
, coll.
J. Starmer
,
12 October 1998
.
Description
. The
holotype
is a firm, club-shaped colony, 4.0 cm tall (
Fig. 5b
). The stalk is
1.5 cm
long and
1.2 cm
in diameter at its widest point, and is smooth except for a few small bumps and longitudinal wrinkles. The polyparium is smooth and bulbous,
1.8 cm
in diameter at its widest point near the distal end. The stalk and polyparium are demarcated only by the presence of polyps in the latter, and by a slight difference in color. Polyps are distributed regularly over the surface of the polyparium, spaced about
1 mm
apart. The polyps are retracted flush with the colony surface, but remain visible as small, pale bumps.
The sclerites in the polyps are spindles,
0.14–0.22 mm
long, sparsely tuberculated and often with small terminal spines (
Fig. 7a
), arranged in a collaret and points. The tentacles have small, flat rods (
Fig. 7b
). The sclerites in the surface of the polyparium are stout spindles, clubs and radiates,
0.06–0.14 mm
long, with thorny tubercles (
Fig. 7c–e
). The interior of the polyparium contains needle-like spindles up to
0.47 mm
long (
Fig. 7f–g
), very sparsely distributed. The surface and interior of the stalk have tuberculated spheroids with a median waist,
0.09–0.11 mm
long and up to
0.08 mm
wide (
Fig. 7h
), barrels,
0.15 mm
long by
0.07 mm
wide (
Fig.
7i
), and a few small radiates,
0.05–0.08 mm
long (
Fig. 7j
), all with thorny tubercles.
Color
. Golden yellow with a paler yellow stalk and white polyps. The sclerites are colored, mostly yellow with a few red spindles in the colony interior. Azooxanthellate.
Etymology
. From the Latin
dolium
, a cask or tun, in reference to the barrel-shaped sclerites in the surface of the stalk.
Remarks
.
A. dolium
n. sp.
is superficially very similar to the yellow color morph of
Alcyonium variabile
(Thomson) (Williams 1986b)
. It can be distinguished from that species by differences in the colony growth form, which in
A. dolium
n. sp.
is clavate without a strong distinction between stalk and polyparium, while
A. variabile
is typically capitate, with a strongly demarcated stalk and polyparium. The form of the sclerites in the surface and interior of the stalk differs, with
A. variable
having radiates while
A. dolium
n. sp.
has barrels and spheroids with a median waist. The clubs in the polyparium surface also differ in shape from those of
A. variabile
. These distinctions can be seen by comparing
Fig. 7
to
Fig. 8
, which depicts the sclerites typically found in
A. variabile
. Phylogenetic analyses place
A. dolium
n. sp.
as a very close sister taxon to
A. variabile
(
Fig. 1
) but slightly differentiated from it genetically at all of the loci we sequenced. Pairwise genetic distances (K2p) between the two species were 0.4–0.6% at
mtMutS
, 0.1% at
COI
, and 1.5–1.7% at
28S
rDNA.
A. compactofestucum
Verseveldt & Ofwegen
differs from both
A. dolium
n. sp.
and
A. variabile
by the unique shape of the sclerites in the stalk interior, which are spindles with long, oblique spinose processes (Verseveldt & Ofwegen 1992:
Fig. 6
, r–t) rather than spheroids, barrels or radiates. Likewise,
A. studeri
(Thomson)
can be distinguished from each of these other similar species by the presence of needle-like spindles in the interior of the stalk.
Thomson (1921) identified as
A. sarcophytoides
(non Burchardt) a specimen he described as “irregularly cylindrical in shape and yellow in color,” with a distinct stalk and polyparium, and sclerites of a form he termed “Zwirnrollen” (spools). Williams (1992a) reported, however, that this specimen has long, slender spindles in the surface of the polyparium, a character that would distinguish it from
A. dolium
n. sp.
Neither author, however, gives any illustrations of the colony or its sclerites, and we were unable to examine the specimen.
A. dolium
n. sp.
occurs syntopically with
Parasphaerasclera aurea
(Benayahu & Schleyer)
, which shares a similar golden-yellow color and unbranched growth form. Colonies of
P. aurea
are, however, digitiform rather than clavate, and typically have a shorter stalk, the polyps lack sclerites, and the only sclerite forms present in the colony surface and interior are tuberculate spheroids and radiates (McFadden & Ofwegen 2013).
In addition to the four very similar species discussed above, the only other South African species that appears to belong to
Alcyonium
sensu stricto
is
A. elegans
(Kükenthal)
.
A. elegans
has an unbranched colony form with polyps restricted to the distal end of a broad and compressed sterile stalk. Like other
Alcyonium
species (McFadden & Ofwegen 2013) it has spindles arranged to form a collaret and points in the polyp, radiates in the colony surface, both radiates and slender spindles in the interior coenenchyme, and the sclerites are permanently colored (Williams 1992a). Attempts to obtain DNA sequences from specimen SAM H3802 were unsuccessful, so at present we cannot confirm this species' status as a member of
Alcyonium
sensu stricto
.
Several other South African species that are currently placed in
Alcyonium
do not, however, share the characters of that genus. We reassign
A. fauri
Thomson,
A. distinctum
Williams
and
A. wilsoni
(Thomson)
to other genera below. The correct generic placement of
A. foliatum
Thomson
, a membranous species with foliate clubs in the coenenchyme, is not clear at present, but it does not appear to belong to
Alcyonium
sensu stricto
. Attempts to sequence specimen SAM H3690 failed. Williams (1992a) discussed six additional species of
Alcyonium
that have been reported from South African waters, but whose occurrence and identity remain unverified.
Other
Alcyoniidae
.
Four additional genera endemic to
South Africa
are currently assigned to family
Alcyoniidae
. These include the monotypic
Dimorphophyton mutabiliforme
Williams
,
Lanthanocephalus clandestinus
Williams & Starmer
and
Malacacanthus capensis
Hickson
, and two species of
Verseveldtia
Williams.
Phylogenetic analysis of a
28S
rDNA sequence obtained from an uncatalogued specimen from SAM (SAF492) suggests that
Dimorphophyton
belongs not to
Alcyoniidae
but rather to
Paralcyoniidae
, where it is a sister taxon to
Studeriotes
and [
Paralcyonium
+
Ceeceenus
] (
Fig. 1
). Like these other genera,
Dimorphophyton
has a colony form consisting of a distinct, stout pedicel into which the fleshy polyparium or trunk can be partially or completely retracted. The simple, irregular rod-like sclerites of
Dimorphophyton
are also similar in form to those found in the polyps and trunk of other paralcyoniid genera (e.g., Ofwegen & Benayahu 2006), but it differs from them in lacking supporting spindles in the pedicel. Based on the molecular phylogenetic result and these morphological similarities, we hereby re-assign
Dimorphophyton
to
Paralcyoniidae
.
Among the other three endemic genera assigned to
Alcyoniidae
, molecular data are available only for
Malacacanthus capensis
.
This species occupies a unique phylogenetic position in the Holaxonia-Alcyoniina clade of octocorals, not closely related to any other genus of
Alcyoniidae
(or any other family) for which sequence data are available (
Fig. 1
). Better phylogenetic resolution of the basal relationships within the Holaxonia-Alcyoniina clade is needed, however, to determine if
Malacacanthus
merits assignment to a monotypic family. Although
Lanthanocephalus
and
Verseveldtia
are unlike any other members of
Alcyoniidae
, molecular phylogenetic datanot currently available for either genus—will be necessary to confirm their familial placement.
Lanthanocephalus
resembles
Malacacanthus
most closely in colony growth form, but unlike that genus it has sclerites (spindles and radiates) in the colony surface (Williams & Starmer 2000). The sclerites of
Verseveldtia
are permanently colored spheroids and radiates similar in form to those found in family
Parasphaerascleridae
, but it differs from
Parasphaerasclera
in having dimorphic polyps and sclerites in the autozooids (Williams 1990).