Diversity of marine bryozoans inhabiting demosponges in northeastern Brazil
Author
Almeida, Ana C. S.
Author
Souza, Facelucia B. C.
Author
Menegola, Carla
Author
Vieira, Leandro M.
text
Zootaxa
2017
4290
2
281
323
journal article
32714
10.11646/zootaxa.4290.2.3
eeec8306-8c71-4db6-834a-c70396d43a82
1175-5326
892719
0AE2706B-F77D-4903-B3A6-BB11891CD67B
Marcusadorea pinheroi
n. sp.
(
Figs. 62–65
;
Table 6
)
Material examined.
Holotype
:
UFBA
1186
,
Camamu Bay
,
13°53’S
,
38°59’W
,
18–20 m
, coll.
October
2012
(on sponge
Timea
sp.)
.
Paratype
:
UFBA
1946
,
Salvador
,
Bahia
,
Brazil
,
12°57’S
,
38°21’W
, intertidal, coll.
April
2012
.
Type
locality.
Camamu Bay
,
Bahia
State, NE
Brazil
.
Etymology.
Named after Ulisses Pinheiro (Universidade Federal de
Pernambuco
), in recognition of his contribution to the knowledge of Brazilian biodiversity.
FIGURES 60–65. 60–61.
Hippaliosina imperfecta
, UFBA 1187.
60,
Overview of encrusting colony;
61,
Close-up of autozooids showing orifices and avicularia.
62–65.
Marcusadorea pinheroi
n. sp.
, UFBA 1186 holotype, Bahia State, Brazil.
62,
Overview of encrusting colony;
63,
Close-up of autozooid;
64,
Close-up of primary orifice showing the condyles;
65,
Close-up of ovicelled zooid. Scale bars: 60, 62 = 500 µm; 61, 63, 65 = 200 µm; 64 = 100 µm.
Description.
Colony encrusting, spot-like, unilaminar. Colony pale yellow. Zooids semi-erect, large, globular, limited by raised distinct lateral walls. Frontal shield heavily calcified, granular, with small nodules of calcification, frontally punctured by 20–24 pseudopores except at the peristomial calcification that remains imperforate; marginally with a distinct row of 12–20 pores. Primary orifice large, hoof-shaped, with a pair of small lateral triangular condyles.
No
oral spines. Secondary orifice raised, forming a well-developed tubular peristome with circular aperture that obscures the primary orifice, with same calcification as frontal shield but without pores; aperture oval in ovicelled zooids. Avicularia absent. Ovicell prominent; ooecia globose,
0.396 mm
long and
0.649 mm
wide, same granular, nodular and porous calcification as in autozooids, opening into the peristome above zooidal operculum.
Remarks.
Currently four
Marcusadorea
species are recognized—
Marcusadorea corderoi
(
Marcus, 1949
)
,
Marcusadorea efatensis
(Tilbrook, 2006)
,
Marcusadorea jamaicensis
Vieira, Migotto & Winston, 2010
and
Marcusadorea tubulosa
(
Canu & Bassler, 1928b
)
.
Marcusadorea pinheroi
n. sp.
most closely resembles
M. efatensis
in having a frontal shield with numerous pseudopores, a subcircular primary orifice with small condyles, ooecia with tha same calcification as frontal shields, and no avicularia. Both differ, however, in the autozooids (semi-erect in
M. pinheroi
n. sp.
and non-elevate in
M. efatensis
), development of the peristome (conspicuous in autozooids and ovicelled zooids of
M. pinheroi
n. sp.
, and especially well-developed in ovicelled zooids of
M. efatensis
), and the marginal pores (non-differentiated in
M. pinheroi
n. sp.
and large and distinct in
M. efatensis
). Other species of
Marcusadorea
are readily distinguished from
M. pinheroi
n. sp.
in having suboral avicularia (that are absent in
M. pinheroi
n. sp.
), frontal walls with scattered pseudopores (entirely punctured in
M. pinheroi
n. sp.
), and forming a pseudosinus (absent in
M. pinheiroi
).
Marcusadorea pinheroi
n. sp.
is also the only species of the genus that has semi-erect autozooids.
No information regarding substrate type used by
Marcusodarea
species was given, but
M. tubulosa
from NE Brazil is often seen on rocks and coral rubble (L.M. Vieira, unpub. data). Here we found colonies of
M. pinheroi
n. sp.
attached to the smooth-textured surface of
Timea
sp. (
Fig. 16
).
Distribution.
Atlantic:
Brazil
(
Bahia
).