Intertidal Bryozoa from Korea — new additions to the fauna and a new genus of Bitectiporidae (Cheilostomata) from Baengnyeong Island, Yellow Sea
Author
Min, Bum Sik
Author
Seo, Ji Eun
Author
Grischenko, Andrei V.
Author
Gordon, Dennis P.
text
Zootaxa
2017
4226
4
451
470
journal article
37251
10.11646/zootaxa.4226.4.1
8903776b-ace3-4ff6-aa28-635145d78260
1175-5326
265060
64B19A58-BBB5-4858-833F-F7937C3A351F
Porella donoghueorum
Dick, Grischenko & Mawatari, 2005
(
Figs 19–23
)
Porella donoghueorum
Dick, Grischenko & Mawatari, 2005
: 3735
, fig, 12C–H (
cum syn.
).
Material examined.
NIBRIV0000325937, Yeonhwa-ri, Baengnyeong Island. Other material: Woosuk University collction—Baengnyeong Island: Junghwadong (3 colonies), Dumujin (6 colonies), Jinchon-ri (9 colonies), Yeonhwa-ri (50 colonies); mostly on rocky substrata, but also on shell and crustose coralline algae (
Clathromorphum
).
Description.
Colony encrusting, unilaminar, up to
10 mm
in diameter, whitish. Zooids contiguous, arranged regularly in quincunx, more or less rounded-hexagonal, squat or only slightly elongate. Frontal shield more or less smooth, convex, rising to suboral umbonate area associated with avicularian chamber. Internal umbonuloid area of shield occupying about half shield length. Up to 8–9 relatively large areolar pores occur around the margin, fewer, larger pores apparent in older zooids. Primary orifice somewhat sunken below peristomial rim, its proximal margin with a relatively broad short, truncate convexity that simulates a lyrula but lacks alae; a short condyle evident in each proximolateral corner. Oral spines 4, relatively short, in developing zooids at colony margin, mostly becoming immersed in calcification. Median suboral avicularium set in proximal peristomial rim, rostrum rounded-triangular, with relatively large palatal foramen; crossbar complete. Avicularian chamber originating from an areolar pore on each side, the cystid with a proximal pair of pores that are retained as further calcification merges the cystid into the zooidal frontal shield. Occasional additional frontal avicularia in older part of colony. Ooecium recumbent, with membranous ectooecium and smooth skeletal endooecium, occupying about half the frontal area of the distal zooid; proximal rim of ooecium continuous with peristome as a combined secondary orifice; ooecium opening into space above primary orifice, below level of peristome. A well-developed pair of distolateral pore-chambers present.
Measurements.
ZL, 297–391 (332) µm; ZW, 180–260 (220) µm; OrL, 63–76 (71) µm; OrW, 113–126 (120) µm; OoL, 101–142 (113) µm; OoW, 129–172 (152) µm.
Remarks.
The species bears a striking resemblance to some species of
Aimulosia
Jullien, 1888
from the
Australasian region
, especially
Aimulosia marsupium
(
MacGillivray, 1869
)
and
Aimulosia costata
(
Powell, 1967
)
. Prior to transferral to
Aimulosia
by
Gordon (1989)
, these species had been included in
Porella
(
Hamilton 1898
;
Brown 1952
;
Powell 1967
;
Gordon 1984
). Gordon’s (1989) grounds for transferring MacGillivray’s species from
Porella
to
Aimulosia
were based on examination of the
type
species of
Aimulosia
,
Aimulosia australis
Jullien, 1888
, from magellanic
South America. It
has a short, rounded projection in the proximal margin of the orifice (
Gordon 1989
, pl. 25F, G;
Hayward 1995
, p. 276).
For
this reason,
Jullien
(1888)
included
Aimulosia
in the
Smittinidae
(as Smittidae), as did
Gordon
(1984
,
1989
).
The
species from the
Australasian region
also clearly resemble
A. australis
in the external appearance of the frontal shield and ooecium.
Indeed
,
Waters
(1904)
believed
MacGillivray’s
species was identical.
They
are not, but they are clearly morphologically similar.
Subsequently
,
Gordon
et al
. (2009)
included
Aimulosia
in the
Buffonellodidae Gordon & d’Hondt, 1997
, characterized by a lepralioid frontal shield and the same external characters that are also seen in
A. australis
.
Although
Buffonellodes
Strand, 1928
has a sinusoid orifice, the short rounded lyrulate structure in
A. australis
does not preclude a relationship with
Buffonellodes
and related genera—Berning
et al
. (2014) described how
Pseudoflustra
Bidenkap, 1898
includes both lyrulate and non-lyrulate species.
The ooecium in both
Porella
and
Aimulosia
has the same structure, comprising a membranous ectooecium and a smooth imperforate endooecium, and the two genera are so close one must ask what separates them. The answer is, the frontal shield, which is lepralioid in
Aimulosia
(Buffonellodidae)
and umbonuloid in
Porella
(Bryocryptellidae)
, the latter noted by (
Hayward & Ryland 1999
). The interior of the frontal shield in
A. australis
,
A. marsupium
and
Buffonellodes rimosa
Jullien, 1888
(the
type
species of
Buffonellodes
and
Buffonellodidae
) is lepralioid (D. Gordon, pers. observ.), whereas it is indeed umbonuloid in
P. donoghueorum
. But the question remains whether the
type
of frontal shield is adequate to separate
Porella
and
Aimulosia
, or even
Bryocryptellidae
and
Buffonellodidae
, as it is now known that some clades contain both
types
of frontal shield (e.g.
Adeonidae
and
Smittinidae
), with transitional forms between the two (e.g.
Gordon 2000
), in presumed ancestor-descendant relationships.
Dick
et al
. (2005)
described the ancestrula of
P. donoghueorum
, which is oval, with a transversely Dshaped orifice surrounded by eight spines.