Re-description of type material of Xenia Lamarck, 1816 (Octocorallia: Xeniidae)
Author
Halász, Anna
Author
Mcfadden, Catherine S.
Author
Toonen, Robert
Author
Benayahu, Yehuda
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-08-08
4652
2
201
239
journal article
26061
10.11646/zootaxa.4652.2.1
72dd17e4-7c47-41d2-b49b-971d6b63ba7f
1175-5326
3363653
04D7DC4C-5EBC-4C5A-9E68-7795E8E60ECA
Xenia viridis
Schenk, 1896
Fig. 15
Xenia viridis
Schenk, 1896: 62–63
, plate 2,
Figs. 4–8
Xenia viridis
;
Ashworth 1900: 516–518
fig. 14;
Kükenthal 1902: 649–650
;
Kükenthal 1911: 309
;
Thomson & Dean 1931: 26
;
Roxas 1933: 84
fig. 6;
Verseveldt 1960: 246–247
fig. 4c;
Tixier-Durivault 1966: 363–5
, fig 328; Verseveldt 1971: 63–64;
Benayahu 1990: 118
, table 1, listed only;
Janes 2013
;
Janes
et al
. 2014
;
McFadden
et al
. 2014a
.
FIGURE 14.
Scanning electron micrographs of polyp sclerites of
Xenia ternatana
Schenk, 1896
holotype (SMF 43). a. Ellipsoid platelets, most fractured; b. Fractured sclerite composed of dendritic calcite rods; c. Sclerites with surface crest. Scale bar 0.010 mm.
Material.
Holotype
:
SMF 42
,
Indonesia
,
Ternate Island
, 1894, coll.
W. Kükenthal
;
additional material:
SMF 77
,
Indonesia
,
Klein-kei Nuhu
,
3–4 m
, 1908, coll.
Wertau
, determined by:
W. Kükenthal.
The
holotype
is
40 mm
high; its stalk is
25 mm
long,
17 mm
wide at its base and
42 mm
wide at its uppermost part. The polyp body is up to
3 mm
long, and the tentacles up to
3.5–4 mm
long, featuring three rows of pinnules on each side. The pinnules are slender, up to
0.50 mm
long and
0.25 mm
wide,
15–22 in
the outermost row with spacing of no gap up to half a pinnule-width between adjacent pinnules.
Sclerites are present in all parts of the colony, less dense in the stalk than in the polyps and lacking in the distal parts of the pinnules. They are ellipsoid platelets, measuring
0.008
–0.013
X
0.013
–0.020
mm
in diameter (
Fig. 15
, n=26). Some of the sclerites possess a longitudinal or diagonal-transverse crest (
Fig. 15b
) and some a furrow on their narrow side (see arrow in
Fig. 15a
). They are composed of calcite rods arranged radially, but assembled randomly at the sclerite center (
Fig. 15c
). The sclerite surface is granular. The ethanol-preserved
holotype
is light beige in color, polyps are lighter.
FIGURE 15.
Scanning electron micrographs of polyp sclerites of
Xenia viridis
Schenk, 1896
holotype (SMF 42). a. Ellipsoid platelets featuring rough granulated surface, arrow indicates surface furrow; b. Sclerites with surface crest, fractured; c. Fractured sclerites composed of a latticework matrix of calcite rods, dendritic and sinuous, and radially arranged in peripheral region. Scale bar at a and b 0.010 mm, at c 0.002 mm.
The dimensions of the additional colony examined are similar to the
holotype
; its polyp body is up to
8 mm
long, and the tentacles are up to
6 mm
long, featuring three rows of pinnules on each side,
15–20 in
the outermost row with a space of up to half a pinnule-width between adjacent pinnules. Sclerites are present in all parts of the colony, measuring
0.010
–0.017
X
0.022
–0.026
mm
in maximal diameter (n=24). They are ellipsoid platelets, composed of calcite rods, arranged radially, at least on the sclerite surface. The ethanol-preserved colony is light beige in color.
Remarks.
In the original description of
X. viridis
,
Schenk (1896)
indicated three rows of pinnules, with 14–15 pinnules in a row and sclerites of
0.010
–0.015
mm
in diameter. The number of rows corresponds to the current findings, but the range in number of pinnules was found to be slightly larger,
15–22 in
the
holotype
and
15–20 in
the other material. The sclerite dimensions were found to be larger than in the original observation. In his revision of
Xeniidae,
Kükenthal (1902)
indicated the presence of the species in
New Caledonia
.
Verseveldt (1960)
reported it in
Indonesia
, with three rows and 15–17 pinnules, and sclerites
0.017
–0.020
X
0.015 mm
in diameter, in full agreement with the type.
Reinicke (1997)
raised doubts concerning the presence of the species in the Red Sea, based on his examination of the material noted in
Benayahu (1990)
, which he concluded should be assigned to
X. crenata
Reinicke, 1997
(=
O. crenata
in
Halász
et al.
2014
). In McFadden
et al
. (2014) two specimens identified as
X. viridis
were described, bearing three rows and 14–18 pinnules in the outermost one, which partially overlaps with the current re-description of the type.
Similar species and conclusion.
Xenia blumi
and
X. viridis
feature three rows of pinnules and an overlapping number of pinnules in the outermost row. They also feature dendritic sclerite microstructures. Unlike
X. blumi
,
X. viridis
exhibits crests on the sclerite surface whose suggested taxonomic significance was noted above, and, therefore, it is concluded that these two species should be considered as separate.
Distribution.
Indonesia
:
Ternate Island
and Klein-kei Nuhu, Red Sea.