Taxonomy, ecology and zoogeography of the Recent species of Rhamphostomella Lorenz, 1886 and Mixtoscutella n. gen. (Bryozoa, Cheilostomata)
Author
Grischenko, Andrei V.
gat1971@mail.ru
Author
Gordon, Dennis P.
dennis.gordon@niwa.co.nz
Author
Taylor, Paul D.
p.taylor@nhm.ac.uk
Author
Kuklinski, Piotr
kuki@iopan.gda.pl
Author
Denisenko, Nina V.
ndenisenko@zin.ru
Author
Spencer-Jones, Mary E.
m.spencer-jones@nhm.ac.uk
Author
Ostrovsky, Andrew N.
andrei.ostrovsky@univie.ac.at
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-05-02
5131
1
1
115
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5131.1.1
journal article
54924
10.11646/zootaxa.5131.1.1
1daf4875-bf0f-4fb9-b648-459a83357801
1175-5326
6521113
CF550031-D6A9-48A3-A953-A1BD40C72F5E
Genus
Rhamphostomella
Lorenz, 1886
Type
species:
Eschara scabra
Fabricius, 1824
.
Rhamphostomella
Lorenz 1886
, p. 11
;
Osburn 1952
, p. 424
;
Kluge 1962
, p. 535
; 1975, p. 650.
Revised diagnosis.
Colony encrusting, multiserial, unilaminar, or erect-bilamellar with encrusting part attached to substratum. Frontal shield umbonuloid, with marginal areolae except around distal margin. Primary orifice with or without lyrula and condyles. Oral spines present or absent. Secondary orifice cormidial. Peristome present or absent. Suboral avicularium always present; additional adventitious and large vicarious avicularia present in some species. Ovicell hyperstomial; with age, ooecium becoming less prominent, being covered by secondary calcification in some species. Ooecium formed by distal autozooid, ectooecium pseudoporous. Multiporous septula present in transverse zooidal walls, mural pore chambers in lateral walls. Basal zooidal wall fully calcified, with or without protuberances. Ancestrula tatiform in species where it has been observed, its basal wall sometimes with non-calcified window.
Remarks.
Many authors have described or mentioned species of
Rhamphostomella
, and it was practically impossible to trace all previously reported specimens and corroborate their identifications. We made the list of “Additional references” following each synonymy as complete as we could but stress that nominal records lacking a description and/or illustrations (as often happens, for example, in faunal lists) may have been misidentified, which could in turn affect to some extent inferences of geographical distribution.