Cheilostome Bryozoa from Penang and Langkawi, Malaysia
Author
Taylor, Paul D.
7AFF2929-DF5B-46B2-94E6-B26B396CC2C8
urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: 7 AFF 2929 - DF 5 B- 46 B 2 - 94 E 6 - B 26 B 396 CC 2 C 8
Author
Tan, Shau-Hwai Aileen
FB8279A2-D0D7-4151-A30E-81761FA26709
urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: FB 8279 A 2 - D 0 D 7 - 4151 - A 30 E- 81761 FA 26709
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2015
2015-11-03
149
1
34
journal article
22374
10.5852/ejt.2015.149
5f7efcfd-9137-4909-8125-f4cc7d9bae9f
2118-9773
3787554
Sinoflustra amoyensis
(
Robertson, 1921
)
Fig. 5
D–F
Membranipora amoyensis
Robertson, 1921: 49
, fig. 6.
Sinoflustra amoyensis
–
Liu & Yang 1995: 349
, figs 1–2.
Fig. 5. — A–C
.
Arbopercula
sp. Pulau Betong, Penang, MSL BRY009. A. Group of zooids. B. Zooids showing spines. C. Distal end of a zooid with a pair of oral spines and the proximal circumopesial spine of the next distal zooid. —
D–F
.
Sinoflustra amoyensis
(
Robertson, 1921
)
. Batu Muang, Penang, MSL BRY010. D. Part of a colony. E. Detail of a group of zooids at the broken edge. F. Opesia and cryptocystal spinules. Scale bars: A, D = 500 μm; B, E = 200 μm; C, F = 100 μm.
Material
MALAYSIA
: MSL BRY010, Batu Muang,
Penang
, encrusting a barnacle from debris adjacent to a fishing jetty.
Description
Colony encrusting, multiserial, unilamellar. Ancestrula and early astogeny not observed. Autozooids subrectangular, rounded distally, slender, typically twice as long as wide,
0.43–0.63 mm
long by
0.18–0.28 mm
wide; zooidal boundaries marked by a narrow fissure; opesia occupying two-thirds of frontal surface, elongate inverted pear-shaped; cryptocyst convex, widest proximally, narrowing distally, covered by small pustules, about 10–16 cryptocystal spinules extending from mural rim over proximal two-thirds of opesia, but not meeting, distal third of opesia broad and spineless (
Fig. 5F
); gymnocyst lacking. Spines present at distolateral corners of autozooids, spines broken off in studied specimens, leaving a small rounded triangular base with a central pore (
Fig. 5F
). Avicularia not observed.
Remarks
The original figure of
Robertson (1921
: fig. 6) shows zooids with branching spines at the distolateral corners. Although spines are not preserved in the studied material from
Penang
, their bases are clearly visible in these locations. Robertson’s Chinese material also has slightly shorter cryptocystal spinules and the opesia is ellipsoidal in outline compared with the elongate inverted pear-shaped opesia of the
Penang
specimens. However,
Liu
et al.
(2001
: pl. 18, fig. 3) figured a Chinese specimen of
S. amoyensis
with longer spinules and opesia that broaden distally. A putative colony of this species epizoic on a turtle has broader autozooids and short cryptocystal spinules (
Frazier
et al.
1992
: fig. 1). In view of the morphological variability encompassed by specimens assigned to the species, the
Penang
material can be identified as
S. amoyensis
.
Not seen in the Malaysian specimens, but sporadically developed elsewhere in this species, are vicarious avicularia (e.g.,
Liu
et al.
2001
: pl. 18, fig. 3). These are longer and wider than the autozooids, and the distal part of the opesia is particularly broad, raised slightly and separated from the proximal part by two small, condyle-like indentations.