A review of gorgonian coral species (Cnidaria, Octocorallia, Alcyonacea) held in the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History research collection: focus on species from Scleraxonia, Holaxonia, Calcaxonia - Part II: Species of Holaxonia, families Gorgoniidae and Plexauridae
Author
Horvath, Elizabeth Anne
text
ZooKeys
2019
860
67
182
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.860.33597
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.860.33597
1313-2970-860-67
128BC1830A6A423488931CBD2D2AF962
Muricea plantaginea (Valenciennes, 1846)
Figure 42
A-K
Gorgonia plantaginea
Valenciennes, 1846: pl 15.
nec
Gorgonia plantaginea
Lamarck, 1815: 163.
nec
Eunicea plantaginea
Valenciennes, 1855: 13;
Milne Edwards and Haime 1857
: 146, 151.
Eunicea tabogenesis
Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1860: 17; 1864 [1866]: 111.
Kuekenthal
1924
: 145.
Eunicea ransoni
Stiasny, 1937: 331, 334-336, figs 5, 6, 7.
?
Muricea appressa
Verrill, 1864: 37 [January]; 1866: 329; 1868a: 412; 1869a: 444-446; pl VIII, fig. 13.
Kuekenthal
1919
: 752;
1924
: 145. Reiss 1929: 390-391.
Hardee and Wicksten 1996
: 132-136 (syn. n).
Muricea appressa var. flavescens
Verrill, 1869a: 446.
Kuekenthal
1919
: 752;
Kuekenthal
1924
: 145 (syn. nov.).
Hickson 1928
: 371-372. Reiss 1929: 389-390.
Stiasny 1943
: 72-74.
Muricea plantaginea
Lamarck, 1836: 333.
Breedy and
Guzman
2016b
: 25-32.
Muricea californica
Aurivillius, 1931: 111-114 [according to Grigg, 1977: 280, after Grigg, 1970: xiv, 20, 25, 207].
Muricea tenella
Verrill, 1869a: 446-448.
Kuekenthal
1919
: 752;
1924
: 145.
Hickson 1928
: 371-372. Reiss 1929: 389-390.
Stiasny 1943
: 72-74.
Type locality.
Holotype
Mazatlan
, Mexico, Voyage sur la
Fregate
La
Venus
, MA Du Petit Thouars, 1836-1839. Also, Peru, Tumbes Department, Zorritos, 3-5 fm [6-9 m]. Specimen from NMNH (USNM 33585, and many others) collected in the North Pacific, Panama.
Type specimens.
Syntype YPM 1616A of
Muricea appressa var. flavescens
. As well, housed at NMNH, USNM 33585, listed as a Syntype, with SEM image #2517; [dry]. Syntype specimen at NMNH was examined.
Material examined.
A number of lots housed in SBMNH collection (see Appendix 1: List of material examined).
Remarks.
Included here is a brief commentary on this species, and an SEM plate (Figure 42
A-K
) is provided as a means of comparison, because as
Grigg (1977)
stated "this could be synonymous with
M. californica
." However, the work of
Hardee and Wicksten (1996)
led them to conclude that M
appressa
(=
M. plantaginea
) is not synonymous with
M. californica
. Based on my own observations and research,
M. appressa
is more likely to be found south of the California Bight (Baja, CA Sur, Ecuador,
Galapagos
, etc.).
Johnson and Snook (1927)
made mention of storm-washed living specimens of
Eunicea
Lamouroux, 1816 (but no reference to a species) with the living polyps yellowish white (the black and white photograph of a specimen shown in that volume looked most like a somewhat worn specimen of either
M. californica
, or perhaps
M. fruticosa
typical). While those identified as
M. appressa
in the SBMNH collection generally seemed more prickly in overall appearance (as compared to
M. californica
), along with slightly smaller-diameter branches, any cursory visual inspection of gorgonian specimens from this genus could misidentify species. A more intentional study of calyx shape along with further comparisons of sclerites from freshly collected specimens over the total range of the Bight to clarify the possible synonymy of this species with
Muricea californica
is underway. I am inclined to keep
Muricea appressa
(=
M. plantaginea
) a separate species while this further study is being conducted.
Figure 42.
Muricea plantaginea
(=
Muricea appressa
), SBMNH 422909 (Ecuador) and SBMNH 422417 (Baja CA Sur). Image included for comparison between sclerites found in
M. californica
and those seen in
M. plataginea
[=
M. appressa
Breedy &
Guzman
, 2016]. SEM image.
A-F
SBMNH 422909 (
A-C
);
E-F
Calycular/coenenchymal sclerites A Elongated, jagged spindles B Small torch-type C Rounded, stout torches D Shorter, jagged spindles (axial sheath) E Unilateral spinous spindle F A second unilateral spinous form tending to torch shape
G-K
SBMNH 422417 Calycular and coenenchymal sclerites G Fan-shaped sclerite H Large, truncated unilateral spinous spindles I Stout prickly spindle J Rounded, unilateral spinous type K Torch-types typical of
M. californica
. Compare sclerites
A-F
with those shown in Breedy and
Guzman
2016 (fig. 15, for
M. plantaginea
) and sclerites
G-K
with those shown in Breedy and
Guzman
2016 (fig. 21, for
M. californica
).
Several additional locations were noted for this species in
Verrill's
(1864
;
1869a
) description:
Panama
and the Pearl Islands, in pools at extreme low water; ex. FH Bradley; also, JH Sternbergh and FH Bradley. Also, records from Nicaragua, Corinto; ex. JA McNiel and from Mexico, La Paz; ex. J Pedersen. Note that all of these locations lie well south of the California
Bight's
southern boundary.
Compounding the confusion surrounding
Muricea
species, particularly in the southern portion of
California's
geographical range, is that in the following description of
Muricea fruticosa
, two very distinct colony forms must be mentioned: that which looks very much like the typical
Muricea californica
(the typical colony shape, albeit with white polyps, according to most encountering it in the field) and that with a far smaller, stiffer, shorter-branched cespitose or fruticose bushy shape, a distinctly different variant of
M. fruticosa
according to
Verrill (1868a
;
1869a
). As this latter variant is not encountered in the southern California Bight it is not discussed here.