The stoloniferous octocoral, Hanabira yukibana, gen. nov., sp. nov., of the southern Ryukyus has morphological and symbiont variation
Author
Lau, Yee Wah
Author
Stokvis, Frank R.
Author
Imahara, Yukimitsu
Author
Reimer, James D.
text
Contributions to Zoology
2019
2019-05-11
88
1
54
77
http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18759866-20191355
journal article
10.1163/18759866-20191355
1875-9866
8355764
Genus
Hanabira
,
gen. nov.
Clavulariinae gen.
Okinawa
Churashima Foundation and
Biological Institute on Kuroshio
, 2016
.
Type
species.
Hanabira yukibana
,
sp. nov.
, by original designation and monotypy.
Diagnosis.
Colony with anthocodiae that retract into cylindrical to barrel-shaped calyces, which do not retract into the stolons. Tentacles with pinnules arranged adjacent to one another along either side of the tentacle rachis and are fused together (pseudopinnules). Sclerites of anthocodiae are platelets with a distinct median waist and small smooth rods, with the tentacles having only the platelet
type
. Sclerites of calyces are small spindles, which are larger than the anthocodial rods and are prickly and warty. Sclerites of stolon are a tubular network of fused sclerites. Zooxanthellate.
Etymology.
From the Japanese language ‘hanabira’ (AE"), meaning ‘petal’. After the flower petal-like shape of the polyp tentacles. Gender: feminine.
Remarks.
The main morphological differences with closest sister taxa, genera
Clavularia
and
Knopia
: the tentacle rachis of
Clavularia
contains smooth to warty rods and long, narrow spindles (~1.0 mm), which are prickly or complexly warted, and sometimes branched. The calyces of genus
Clavularia
contain similar spindles, but can be twice as long (Fabricius & Alderslade, 2001). The anthocodiae of
Hanabira
do not contain warty rods and large, prickly or warted spindles are completely lacking.