A review of Australian Conescharellinidae (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata)
Author
Bock, Philip E.
Author
Cook, Patricia L.
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2004
2004-12-31
61
2
135
182
https://museumsvictoria.com.au/collections-research/journals/memoirs-of-museum-victoria/volume-61-issue-2-2004/pages-135-182/
journal article
10.24199/j.mmv.2004.61.11
1447-2554
12207880
Crucescharellina
Silén, 1947
Crucescharellina
Silén, 1947: 44
.
Agalmatozoum
Harmer, 1957: 757
.
Type
species.
Crucescharellina japonica
Silén, 1947
(original designation).
Description
. Colonies are cruciform or star-shaped and may have branches that bifurcate terminally. The adapical zooid orifices are sinuate and interspersed with lunate or rounded root pores. The antapical growing edges are positioned at the limits of the branches but an antapical surface, that is the equivalent of the exposed frontal wall of conescharelliniform colonies, is also continuous and present on the “lower, non-orificial side” of colonies. It is inferred that the colonies live, in fact, with this antapical surface upward with the orifices directed downward, because the rhizoids that occur among them are inferred to anchor the colonies above or into the surface of the bottom sediments. Rounded or acute avicularia occur, that are occasionally large and spathulate. The orifices possess an adapical pore but ovicells have not been seen. Roots were figured in
C. japonica
by
Silén (1947
: pl. 1 fig. 11) and the position of the root pores suggests that the mode of life is similar to that inferred for the genus
Euginoma
(
Hayward 1978
)
, that also occurs from abyssal depths (
d’Hondt and Schopf,1984
).
Remarks.
Crucescharellina
was introduced by
Silén (1947)
for
C. japonica
from near the Goto Islands,
Japan
, from a depth of
175 m
.
Only one colony was found; it was stellate but each branch originated from a narrow neck, one or two zooids in width. The branches rapidly expanded and then bifurcated, each subbranch starting with one or two zooids. The subbranches also expanded rapidly, so that within two as togenetic generations, the segments were 4 zooids wide. Lunate root pores were present but these were not associated with branch bifurcations and no large, spathulate avicularia were described.
Gordon and d’Hondt (1997: 73
, figs 221–223) described “
C. japonica
” from the
Philippines
from
640–
668 m
. They too, had only one colony. It differed in having much less expanded branches, regular lunate root pores, and rare large axillary avicularia. The primary orifice had a shallow sinus and paired condyles.
Silén (1947: 44)
stated that he referred
Trochosodon decussis
Canu and Bassler (1929: 495
, pl. 71 figs 7–10, from
456 m
, east of Mindanao in the
Philippines
) to his genus
Crucescharellina
.
Harmer (1957)
was unaware of Silén’s work, that was not available to him during the war of 1939–1945, and introduced
Agalmatozoum
for
Trochosodon decussis
Canu and Bassler (1929)
. Colonies of this species were cruciform, with triserial branches, and were described with lunate root pores and an elliptical secondary orifice. Avicularia or small pores were present antapically but no large avicularia were mentioned in the original description.
Harmer (1957)
listed more than ten colonies of
A. decussis
from seven localities in the
Sulu
, Banda, and Celebes Seas. The depths were nearly all abyssal, ranging from
535 to 3112 m
. The branches of the colonies were mostly biserial and the root pores were circular, placed regularly at bifurcations, and surrounded by a ring of small avicularia. In addition, large, axillary spathulate avicularia sometimes occurred on the lateral sides of branches. The species from the
Siboga
area described by
Harmer (1957)
as
A. decussis
strongly resembles
Crucescharellina australis
from
Australia
described below, not the original form from the
Philippines
described by
Canu and Bassler (1929)
.
Gordon and d’Hondt (1997: 74
, figs 224–227) introduced another very similar stellate species,
C. aster
, with biserial branches, from several New Caledonian and
New Zealand
localities at a depth range of
760 to 1573 m
. The root pores were central and rounded but no large avicularia were present. Their material included numerous colonies, that they noted resembled “clusters of snowflakes”. A single preparation of a colony in the Natural History Museum collection (
BMNH
1963.8.18.18) closely resembles the description of
C. aster
but has slightly more extended, spiny peristomes. The specimen is from
Challenger
stn 169, off
New Zealand
(
37°34'S
,
179°22'E
,
1295 m
), a station that was not mentioned by
Busk (1884)
.
Gordon (1989: 84
, pl. 1E figs 50B–E) described another biserial species,
C. jugalis
, from northern
New Zealand
, from a depth range of
1217–1357 m
. The colonies were irregularly branched but had circular root pores very similar to those of the Australian
C. australis
and
A. decussis
sensu
Harmer (1957)
.
Although there is no doubt of the synonymy of the two genera
Crucescharellina
and
Agalmatozoum
, there are uncertainties as to the identity of the various taxa referred to them in these previous descriptions. Among other records, Cook (1981) figured one of two very young, cruciform colonies from Cape York, from
279 m
(
BMNH
1976.1.6.2, part), as
Agalmatozoum
species.
These, with the specimens of
C. australis
described here from Point Hicks,
Victoria
and from eastern
Tasmania
, remain the only records of
Crucescharellina
from Australian waters to date.
Labracherie and Sigal (1975)
mentioned a form similar to
Crucescharellina
obtained from Lower Eocene samples collected from a deep-sea drilling south of
Madagascar
(
33°37.21'S
,
45°09.60'E
,
1030 m
). This was not described further but is not too remote from the Recent south-west Indo- Pacific records and, unlike the European Eocene species mentioned above, may represent an early form of
Conescharellinidae
.