Notes on astogeny of some Petraliellidae (Bryozoa) from Australia
Author
Cook, P. L.
Author
Bock, P. E.
text
Journal of Natural History
2002
2002-09-30
36
13
1601
1619
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00222930110052463
journal article
4732
10.1080/00222930110052463
49960699-495a-4910-bdf5-ce616eea71bc
1464-5262
5298706
Riscodopa
Gordon, 1989
Type
species
:
Riscodopa parva
Gordon, 1989
.
Description
Colony discoid, free living, budded radially, anchored by rhizoids originating from basal septular pores. Ancestrula either tatiform or similar to succeeding zooids. Zooid ori ces with oral spines, paired lateral denticles and a proximal lyrula. Avicularia lateral and oral, sometimes proximal and associated with a mucro. Ovicell hyperstomial, prominent, with numerous small pores or tubercles, known or inferred not to be closed by the operculum.
Remarks
Species here assigned to
Riscodopa
fall into two groups; the Recent species, which have a tatiform ancestrula, and the fossil species, which do not. Genera which include species with diVerent kinds of ancestrula have been documented (Cook, 1985: 51), and the genus
Mucropetraliella
, which is usually characterized by the presence of a proximal mucro and avicularium, does include some species in which these do not occur (
Cook and Chimonides, 1981a: 117
).
Gordon (1989: 57)
stipulated that there was ‘no suboral aviculiferous mucro’ in
Riscodopa
. A mucro occurs in
R. biincisa
and
R. paucipora
, but is absent from
R. parva
,
R. cotyla
and
R. hyalina
. However, the similarities in colony form and basal septular pores suggest that all the species described here may be contained within the genus
Riscodopa
. In all species, the ancestrula is surrounded by a circlet of ve or six primary autozooids. These appear to be budded as a distal pair or triad, followed by a proximal triad, which may be derived equally from the lateral zooids as well as from the ancestrula.
Riscodopa parva
and
R. cotyla
live, anchored by basal rhizoids, on particulate substrata in deep water (477–4059 and
320–660 m
, respectively), from the
New Zealand
shelf;
R. hyalina
occurs oV the coast of
New South Wales
from
429 to
503 m
. The numerous other fossil bryozoan species associated with
R. biincisa
and
R. paucipora
in the Tertiary samples from
Victoria
suggest, in contrast, that although similar kinds of particulate sea-bottom occurred in Australian Tertiary seas, it is very unlikely that any of these fossil forms lived in deep water (
Wass
et al
., 1970
). Similar apparent discrepancies between the known depth range of Recent species, and the depths inferred for their fossil congeners, occur among several groups of species in the Australian Tertiary, and have been noted for
Selenariopsis
(
Bock and Cook, 1996
)
,
Siphonicytara
(
Bock and Cook, 2001
)
and for
Chelidozoum
and other species (Bock and Cook, in press). One possible explanation is that the hydrodynami c conditions of the shelf environments of the mid-Tertiary were much less agitated by wave activity than the modern shelf of southern
Australia
. This in turn, may be related to the narrower zone of open ocean that existed between
Antarctica
and
Australia
, or that the severe storms in this zone were less frequent or less intense during this interval of milder climate. The lack of strong bottom current or wave activity is also re ected in the presence of clay-rich sediments over large intervals and areas in the Tertiary, whereas clay-rich sediments are generally little-represented on the modern continental shelf.