Description of a new species of Membranobalanus (Crustacea, Cirripedia) from southern Australia
Author
Hosie, Andrew M.
Author
Fromont, Jane
Author
Munyard, Kylie
Author
Jones, Diana S.
text
ZooKeys
2019
873
25
42
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.873.35421
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.873.35421
1313-2970-873-25
6149E4233C2847BB89FC927209B5D2DE
Membranobalanus Hoek, 1913
Type species.
Balanus declivis
Darwin, 1854: 275, pl. 7 fig. 4
a-d
; by subsequent designation (
Pilsbry 1916
: 229).
Species composition.
M. brachialis
(Rosell, 1972);
M. costatus
Zullo & Standing, 1983;
M. cuneiformis
(Hiro, 1936);
M. declivis
(Darwin, 1854);
M. koreanus
Kim & Kim, 1983;
M. longirostrum
(Hoek, 1913);
M. nebrias
(Zullo & Beach, 1973);
M. orcutti
(Pilsbry, 1907);
M. porphyrophilus
sp. nov.;
M. robinae
Van Syoc, 1988.
Nomen dubium.
M. orcuttiformis
(
Kolosvary
, 1941).
Diagnosis.
Parietes solid, unornamented, weakly articulated, basis membranous. Rostrum scoop or boat-shaped, often elongate relative to other parietes. Tergum with spur furrow open. Cirrus IV with erect spines, with or without recurved teeth on anterior ramus.
Remarks.
With the addition of the below described species, there are now 10 species included within
Membranobalanus
.
Utinomi (1968)
synonymised the taxa
Balanus (Membranobalanus) longirostrum var. krusadaiensis
Daniel, 1955,
B. (M.) basicupula
Suhaimi, 1966, and
B. (M.) roonwali
Prem-Kumar & Daniel, 1968 under
M
. longirostrum
, proposing that the differences observed are within the bounds of intraspecific variability. Recently,
van Syoc et al. (2015)
transferred
Acasta acuta
(Kolbasov, 1993) out of
Membranobalanus
based primarily on the presence of calcareous spines on the parietal wall, a character no other
Membranobalanus
possess and in reference to a cladistic analysis in an unpublished thesis. The fact that
A. acuta
is found in sponges of the family
Petrosiidae
(order
Haplosclerida
), not the
Clionaidae
as reported for the remaining members of the genus, separates this species ecologically from
Membranobalanus
, was used as further justification. The general appearance, membranous basis and elongated rostrum of
A. acuta
are typical features of
Membranobalanus
, however. While we treat this reassignment with caution, we have no evidence with which to dispute it.
Kolosvary
(1941)
described
Balanus (M.) orcuttiformis
based on the parietes of a single empty specimen. The locality details of the specimen are vague, only given as "India Orient.", but presumably meaning eastern India. No detail regarding a host was given. The description is very brief, giving very few clues to the identification of this species, and the only illustration of the specimen, in lateral view, could belong to a number of genera, but not
Membranobalanus
as currently defined. Most notable is the absence of any elongation of the rostrum and the largely horizontal basal rim of the parietal wall gives the appearance that it was attached to, rather than embedded within, a substrate. Additionally, the exceptionally broad alae and absent radii are reminiscent of the
Pachylasmatoidea
, which possess solid parietes and often have a membranous base (see
Jones 2000
).
Membranobalanus orcuttiformis
has not been recorded since its description and unfortunately the specimens are missing from the Museo di Storia Naturale
dell'Universita
di Firenze, Italy and thus cannot be reexamined (
Innocenti 2006
). For these reasons, this species is considered herein a
nomen dubium
and has been excluded from the key below.
The remaining
Membranobalanus
species can be separated into two morphological lineages, approximating an American centred group and an Indo-West Pacific group. The former have recurved teeth, similar to those present in some members of the
Acastinae
, as well as erect spines on cirrus IV, smooth growth lines on the scutum and the articular ridge and groove of the scutum is prominent, extending well beyond the articular margin, with a correspondingly wide articular groove on the tergum. The latter group bears only the erect spines on cirrus IV, finely striated growth lines, and has relatively weak articular structures on the opercular plates. From a biogeographic perspective one species disrupts this pattern:
Membranobalanus koreanus
from the waters around the Korean Peninsula. As described and figured by
Kim and Kim (1983)
,
M. koreanus
has recurved teeth and a large articular ridge on the scutum. The records of
M. orcutti
by
Barnard (1924)
and
Rosell (1973
,
1975
) from South Africa and the Sulu Archipelago, respectively, were considered suspect by
Zullo and Beach (1973)
and
Van Syoc and Winther (1999)
. The Sulu Archipelago specimens lack the recurved teeth on cirrus IV of the specimens described from Catalina Island by
Zullo and Beach (1973)
, and while
Barnard's
description specifically mentions recurved teeth on cirrus IV, most of his description is deferred back to either
Pilsbry's
(1907
,
1916
) descriptions of
M. orcutti
or
Hoek's
(1913)
description of
M. longirostrum.
Of particular note in
Barnard's
description
is that the scutum has an external, setose membrane, a character seen in some species of the
Acastinae
, but not
Membranobalanus
. Both reports should be considered
species inquirenda
, but potentially represent previously undescribed species.