Further species and range extensions of Amazonian bryozoans: chipping away at the iceberg
Author
Wood, Timothy S.
Department of Biological Sciences, Wright State University, Dayton, OH 45435 USA. & Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, London, SW 7 5 BD UK.
Author
Okamura, Beth
Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, London, SW 7 5 BD UK.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-08-01
5169
4
381
391
journal article
112241
10.11646/zootaxa.5169.4.7
d2838a5c-dc8e-46ba-b984-d81a6af38a16
1175-5326
6952586
4B39AD1B-2643-4B84-B9A4-E83B07F33179
Timwoodiellina natans
(Wood
et al
., 2006)
Hislopia natans
: Wood
et al.
2006
, p. 108–110, figs 49–52.
Natanella natans
:
Wood & Okamura 2017
, p. 5
–6, fig. 3.
Material examined.
NHMUK 2021.11
.23.10, from the
Río Negro
, municipality of
Iranduba
,
6 km
SW of Manaus
,
Amazonas State
,
Brazil
,
3° 9.792’ S
,
60° 3.821’ W
(Site 9), collected
8 May 2018
by
T
.
Wood
and
B. Okamura
.
Remarks.
A previous sighting of this species in
Brazil
was in
Sao Paulo State
(
Wood & Okamura, 2017
). The geographic range also includes
Thailand
and
Indonesia
.
This species is easily identified from the brooding of embryos as individual outgrowths from the parent zooid (
Wood
et al.
2006a
). Once the young polypide is fully formed the outgrowth detaches and swims away under the power of its own lophophore cilia.
Timwoodiellina natans
was originally placed in the Family
Hislopidae
based solely on colony morphology. When it became apparent that colonies brood their embryos instead of releasing microlecithal eggs a new genus was proposed,
Natanella
, under a new Family
Natanellidae (
Wood & Okamura 2017
)
. However,
d’Hondt (2014)
had already reclassified the genus
Natanella
as a subgenus of
Hislopia
named
Timwoodiellina
.
On the belief that the unique brooding structure in the species warrants further distance from
Hislopia
we propose to elevate
Timwoodiellina
to the full genus level. A recent molecular phylogeny of ctenostome bryozoans (
Zhou 2020
) shows
Timwoodiellina
clustering with hislopiid species, so we now return this species to the Family
Hislopidae
.