Identification guide to the shallow water (0 - 200 m) octocorals of the South Atlantic Bight 2599
Author
Devictor, Susan T.
Author
Morton, Steve L.
text
Zootaxa
2010
2010-08-31
2599
1
1
62
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.2599.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.2599.1.1
11755334
10095192
Telesto fruticulosa
Dana, 1846
(
Figure 25
)
Telesto fruticulosa
Dana, 1846:632
.—
Laackmann 1909:74
; Plate 8 fig. 32; text fig. B.—
Deichmann 1936: 43
; Plate 2 figs. 20–22.—
Bayer 1961:46
;
Figs. 7
,
9c
.—
Cairns
et al.
2002:33
.
Material examined.
SERTC
S1743
,
13.7
m, off
Charleston
,
South Carolina
,
May 13, 2003
;
SERTC
S2486
,
21.6
m, off
St. Catherine’s Island
,
Georgia
,
June 3, 2004
.
SERTC
S1744
,
12.4
m, off
Charleston
,
South Carolina
,
April 21, 2004
.
SERTC
S
2688, 7 m
, off
Debidue Island
,
South Carolina
,
November 8, 2002
.
SERTC
S2691
,
21.4
m, off
Charleston
,
South Carolina
,
August 15, 2006
.
SERTC
S2687
,
19.5
m,
Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary
, off
Savannah
,
Georgia
,
May 31, 2006
.
SERTC
S
2690, 24 m
, off
Charleston
, SC,
August 15, 2006
.
Remarks.
Telesto fruticulosa
colonies are monopodially branched and usually found in colonies of multiple branches. The daughter polyps sometimes develop into tertiary branches. The color of the coenenchyme may be orange, light red, or yellow, but may be obscured or completely encrusted by fouling organisms such as sponges and bryozoans. One encrusting sponge produced a thin veneer that was observed to be the bright red of
Telesto sanguinea
, a species closely resembling
T. fruticulosa
, such that the true color of the colony was completely obscured until preserved in ethanol. As is typical of the members of this genus in the Atlantic, there are eight longitudinal grooves present in the body wall of the primary polyps, but they are sometimes more distinct near the calyces or the base of the colony. There is a dense cluster of vertically oriented, overlapping flat rods in the base and proximal half of the polyp tentacles.
This species can be distinguished from
T. sanguinea
by the absence of dense rows of horizontally oriented flat rods in the distal region of the tentacles. If horizontal rods are present in the distal region they are sparse and do not reach the tip of the tentacles. The coenenchymal sclerites consist of glassy, blunt, branching bodies and some small (0.2 mm) granules that are opaque and lumpy on one side and coarsely warty and glassy on the other. Occasionally weak fusion of the sclerites is observed.
T. fruticulosa
is a very common species in hardbottom habitats within the SAB. The polyps are usually expanded during the day but, unless relaxed prior to preservation, retreat into the cylindrical calyces when exposed to preservatives or disturbance.There are numerous lots of specimens of this species in the collections of the NMNH (Smithsonian) that were collected from the shallow SAB.
FIGURE 25
.
Telesto fruticulosa
:
A,
sclerites (S2690):
a, b)
fused sclerites from coenenchyme;
c–e)
sclerites from coenenchyme;
f, g)
anthocodial sclerites; (scale bar for
a–e
= 0.05 mm;
f, g
= 0.02 mm);
B,
polyp (live specimen), arrow indicating anthocodial rods in basal region of rachis;
C,
preserved colony (approximately 12 cm in height).
Atlantic distribution:
Coasts of the
North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia
and northern
Florida
, 7–100
m (
Deichmann 1936
;
Bayer 1961
; NMNH collections; SERTC collection).