Revision of the genus Adelogorgia Bayer, 1958 (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Octocorallia) with the description of three new species
Author
Breedy, Odalisca
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-01-05
4369
3
327
348
journal article
31070
10.11646/zootaxa.4369.3.2
46e89323-2930-4b98-a26b-4ef7cd978a1f
1175-5326
1135792
4939D717-EC0A-488C-86C7-62D0BD2F976F
Adelogorgia hannibalis
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 10–11
,
7B
)
Material examined.
Holotype
:
STRI 1206
A, ethanol preserved,
Hannibal Bank
,
Panamá
,
184 m
deep,
Dive
1552, submersible
DeepSee
, M
/
V
SeaHunter
,
9 March 2012
.
Paratypes:
STRI 1205, 1206B,
1207-1212
, data as the holotype.
STRI 1243
, ethanol preserved,
Hannibal Bank
,
Panamá
,
200 m
deep,
Dive
1552, submersible
DeepSee
, M
/
V
SeaHunter
,
9 March 2012
.
STRI-HH 1047
, ethanol preserved,
Hannibal Bank
,
181 m
deep,
Dive
288, submersible
Nadir
, M
/
V
Alucia
,
2 April 2015
. HH 1088, ethanol preserved, Hannibal Bank,
182 m
deep,
Dive
290, submersible
Nadir
, M
/
V
Alucia
,
5 April 2015
.
STRI-HH 1090
, ethanol preserved,
Hannibal Bank
,
203 m
deep,
Dive
290, submersible
Nadir
, M
/
V
Alucia
,
5 April 2015
.
STRI-HH 1142
, ethanol preserved,
Hannibal Bank
,
188 m
deep, DR 310, submersible
Nadir
, M
/
V
Alucia
,
5 April 2015
.
GenBank accession numbers
MF579539
and
MF579542
.
Diagnosis.
Colonies flexible with few branches, branching dichotomous, without anastomoses. Branches thin, of uniform thickness
1.5–2 mm
in diameter. Branching up to 12 times, mostly 3–6 times. End branches up to
70 mm
long. Polyps distributed all around branches. Polyp mounds prominent, sparsely placed, closer at branch tips. Anthocodiae with about 8 slightly curved spinous rods in points up to
0.2 mm
long. Coenenchyme with tuberculate spindles, up to
0.15 mm
long, double discs with serrate edges up to
0.11 mm
long and
0.09 mm
wide; and leaf clubs up to
0.19 mm
long. Outermost coenenchyme with predominance of double discs. Axial sheath with less complex spindles and smaller radiates. Colony orange. Sclerites orange, red, whitish to transparent.
Description.
The
holotype
is a sparse, flexible colony,
18 cm
long and
16 cm
wide colony. The branching is mostly dichotomous (
Fig. 10A
). The stem,
2 mm
diameter and
3 mm
long, rises from a
1 cm
diameter holdfast. The stem subdivides producing branches of uniform thickness,
1.5–2 mm
diameter. They bifurcate mostly
0.5–2.5 cm
apart at angles of 30–90°. Some branches extend and curl inwards in larger angles (180°). The colony branches up to 12 times. Unbranched terminal ends are
3–7 cm
long (
Fig. 10
A-B). The polyps are distributed all around the branches, up to
2 mm
apart, closer at the tips (
Fig. 10B
). The axes are composed of longitudinal gorgonin layers with a loculated central cord filled with organic fibres without mineralization (
Fig. 7B
). The polyps are fully retractile into raised polyp mounds,
0.5-0.75 mm
height, with circular apertures (
Fig. 10B
). The polyp mounds do not have a special
type
of sclerites but they mostly contain leaf clubs and spindles. The anthocodiae are composed of eight points consisting of a few vertically arranged spiny rods each one, without a collaret. The anthocodial rods are
0.148–0.2 mm
long and
0.029–0.06 mm
wide (
Fig. 11A
). The coenenchyme is thin. The superficial layer with a dominance of double discs. Beneath this layer, warty spindles, radiates, and immature forms. The leaf clubs are
0.11–0.196 mm
long and
0.04–0.08 mm
wide (at the head) with warty handlers and from elongated warts to foliate heads (
Fig. 11B
). The spindles are
0.11–0.17 mm
long and
0.06–0.078 mm
wide (
Fig. 11C
), immature forms
0.09– 0.10 mm
long and
0.05–0.08 mm
wide; radiates are
0.05–0.09 mm
long and
0.02–0.05 mm
wide (
Fig. 11D
). The double discs are
0.06–0.088 mm
long and
0.08–0.11 mm
wide (along the disc’s crests) (
Fig. 11E
). Coenenchymal sclerites are orange, red and whitish to transparent (
Fig. 10C
). Colour of the colony is orange, with reddish polyp mounds (
Fig. 10
A-B).
The colony has some nude branches colonised by polychaete tubes and cirripedia.
Variability.
The colony colour varies to lighter hues of orange in some
paratypes
(STRI 1209, 1212) and the branch thickness reaches up to
3 mm
in the
paratype
STRI 1212. The polyp mounds extend up to
1 mm
in STRI 1212. The
paratype
series are
7-16.5 cm
long. All of them with scant branching, less than the
holotype
, which is the most copious colony. The
paratype
sclerites are consistent with the
holotype
.
FIGURE 10.
Adelogorgia hannibalis
sp. nov.
, STRI 1206 (holotype) (A) colony; (B) detail of the branches; (C) sclerites.
FIGURE 11.
Adelogorgia hannibalis
sp. nov.
, STRI 1206 (holotype) SEM micrographs. (A) anthocodial rods; (B) leaf clubs; (C) spindles; (D) spindles from inner coenenchyme; (E) double discs.
Habitat and Distribution.
The species was found on the Hannibal Bank, a coastal guyot-type seamount that rises from approximately
500 m
to
45 m
, located
50 km
from the mainland (
Cunningham et al. 2013
). The seamount is relatively protected as part of the Coiba National Park and World Heritage. The species was found on rocky substrate with strong currents. It is only known from the
type
locality, Hannibal Bank, from
180 to 200 m
deep.
Etymology.
Named after the Hannibal Bank and the surveyor USS
Hannibal
that discovered and charted the bank for the first time, presumably in 1934. The name Hannibal evokes the Carthaginian general, considered one of the greatest military commanders in ancient history. In genitive:
hannibalis
(L) meaning ¨of Hannibal¨.
Remarks.
This species is the only one that has colonies with elongated branches and free branches up to
7 cm
long. Furthermore, it has a characteristic orange colony. The closest species is
A. osculabunda
(as discussed above). However, the flabellate branching pattern in
A. osculabunda
, the prominent polyp-mounds and the coenenchymal sclerites, make clear distinction among these two species. The comparative characteristics are in
Tables 1
and
2
.