An overview of the shallow-water calcified hydroids from Brazil (Hydrozoa: Cnidaria), including the description of a new species
Author
Amaral, Fernanda M. D.
Author
Steiner, Andrea Q.
Author
Broadhurst, Matt K.
Author
Cairns, Stephen D.
text
Zootaxa
2008
1930
56
68
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.184834
9d04ad5c-5e90-4bf2-bf7e-80faa3906077
1175-5326
184834
Millepora braziliensis
Verrill, 1868
Similar to
M. alcicornis
,
M. braziliensis
,
is also highly variable in form. According to Amaral (1997) and
Amaral
et al.
(2002)
, most colonies are honeycombed, but can also be hemispheric, ramified, columnar, laminate, fan shaped, totally incrusting, or a mixture of these forms. The surface texture also varies, but in most colonies tends towards irregular.
Laborel (1970)
suggested that
M. braziliensis
varied in shape according to wave exposure: colonies in sheltered sites tend to have laminate and fine branching forms, whereas specimens in more exposed areas tend to have more massive, honeycombed forms. Nevertheless, Amaral (1997) and
Amaral
et al.
(2002)
did not confirm these observations, with specimens collected from a single area of a reef at Tamandaré Beach (Pernambuco) observed to have several different forms.
Millepora braziliensis
has a very irregular surface texture, ampullae that varied from shallow to deep (
Table 1
), and the greatest mean number of dactylopores per gastropore (
Table 2
). The mean diameters of gastropores and dactylopores are similar to
M. nitida
(
Table 2
) (Amaral 1997).