A revision of the genus Calcigorgia (Cnidaria, Octocorallia, Acanthogorgiidae) with the description of three new species
Author
Matsumoto, Asako K.
Author
Van Ofwegen, Leen P.
Author
Bayer, Frederick M.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-03-25
4571
1
1
27
journal article
28105
10.11646/zootaxa.4571.1.1
a9fc1eb5-487b-4f58-9c68-954498dd39a3
1175-5326
2605876
D1268894-FADE-482B-83F8-FD6B1C2619C1
Calcigorgia japonica
Dautova, 2007
Figures 1c
,
9
ab, 10–12
Calcigorgia japonica
Dautova, 2007
: 302
(
39°35'N
,
135°01'E
, Sea of
Japan
, 832–
736 m
deep, silted sand,
8 August 1933
, coll. K.M. Deryugin); 2018: 11.
Material examined.
ZIN
11678,
Skaly Lovushki I.
,
Sea of Okhotsk
, “Novoulyanovsk”, fishery bottom trawl Ñ79 (maybe =
Ottertrawl
), bottom: unknown (trawl has been torn to pieces; all animals were collected from warps), coll.
Alexander Ereskovsky
,
4 October 1984
; ZIN 11661, Ketoi I., Sea of Okhotsk, 47°12'8N 152°38'1E, depth
900 m
, bottom: pebbles, Ship “Odissey” Cruise 34, St. 27, small dredge, coll. Mikhail Kolesnikov and Vyacheslav Bizikov,
10 January 1985
;
ZIN
11662,
Skaly Lovushki I.
,
Sea of Okhotsk
, 48°02'17N 154°24'05 E, depth
580 m
, bottom: stones, gravel, ship “Odissey” st. 18, small dredge, coll.
Boris Sirenko
and
Mikhail Kolesnikov
,
3 August 1984
;
ZIN
11675,
Skaly Lovushki I.
,
Sea of Okhotsk
, 48°48'54N 153°43'00E, depth
800–1000 m
, “Novoulyanovsk”, fishery bottom trawl Ñ79 (maybe =
Ottertrawl
), bottom: unknown (trawl has been torn to pieces; all animals were collected from warps), coll.
Sergey Grebelnyi
and
Alexander Ereskovsky
,
4 October 1984
;
USNM
100816
N of
Four Mountains
,
Aleutian Islands
,
Bering Sea
,
52°52.69’N
169°58.78’W
, depth
62 m
, bottom temp. 4.5 °C, R/
V Vesteraalen
cruise 94-1, haul 40,
11 June 1994
, three nearly complete colonies;
USNM
1004642
Bering Sea
, 52°N 177°W, field number
AB
01-66; USNM
1006154 east of the
Delray Islands
,
Aleutian Islands
,
Bering Sea
,
51.6962°N
178.342°W
, depth
280 m
, R/
V Spirit
of the
North
, field number
AB
01-64, sample #16, coll.
Renfro, K.
,
3 March 2000
, one nearly complete colony;
USNM
1116869
British
Colombia
,
Canada
,
North Pacific Ocean
,
48.3007°N
124.935°W
, depth
227.9 m
,
Deep Sea Coral
and
Sponge Habitat Expedition
, cruise 958, st. 132, ROV
Ropos
,
1 June 2006
.
FIGURE 9. a
Calcigorgia japonica
Dautova, 2007
, ZIN11678
b
USNM1116869.
Description
. ZIN 11678 are two fragments of a colony (
Figure 9a
). The polyps are arranged spirally around the branches, they are about
5 mm
high and
2 mm
wide. Tentacles without sclerites. Polyps with spindles and clubs, up to
0.35 mm
long, with simple tubercles (
Figure 10a
). The clubs with very spiny heads. The coenenchyme with capstans, small spindles and crosses, up to
0.12 mm
long, with simple tubercles (
Figure 10
b–c).
Colour.
The fragments are brown and the sclerites are colorless.
Distribution
. Sea of
Japan
in 832–
736 m
, Sea of Okhotsk in
580–1000 m
, Bering Sea -
280 m
, West coast of North-American continent, NE Pacific in
227.9 m
(
Figure 1c
).
FIGURE 10.
Calcigorgia japonica
Dautova, 2007
, ZIN 11678
a
clubs
b
capstans and spindles
c
crosses.
FIGURE 11
Calcigorgia japonica
Dautova, 2007
, USNM 1116869
a
flattened rods
b
clubs of polyps
c
spindles and flattened spindles of polyps and coenenchyme
d
cross.
Remarks
. The long spiny clubs of the polyps of this species are unique in the genus
Calcigorgia
. USNM 1116869, the only examined material from the NE Pacific, has well developed more foliate clubs (
Figure 11b
), the other sclerites are typical
C. japonica
except for some flattened rods and spindles (
Figure 11a, c
). USNM
100816
has immature clubs (
Figure 12a
) and most of the sclerites are larger than in the other specimens (
Figure 12
). Specimens of
C. japonica
, previously known from only a single fragment, from the Sea of
Japan
(
Dautova, 2007
), from four localities of Sea of Okhotsk, with depth range
580–1000 m
, two localities in Bering Sea, up to
280 m
deep, and one locality on the west coast of the North-American continent, in
227.9 m
, extend the distribution range of the species.
We here present the nearly complete colony of USNM1006154 from the West Bering Sea (
Figure 9b
).