A revision of the soft coral genus, Eunephthya Verrill, 1869 (Anthozoa: Octocorallia: Nephtheidae), with a description of four new species from South Africa
Author
Mcfadden, Catherine S.
Author
Van, Leen P.
text
Zootaxa
2012
3485
1
25
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.213868
24874d9c-87a9-4c1e-a374-402b197ff209
1175-5326
213868
B706A33A-DA90-4E71-99E1-A75943F4CABF
Eunephthya ericius
,
new species
Figures 3d, 4b, 6
Material examined.
Holotype
:
RMNH
Coel. 40176,
South Africa
, Algoa Bay, Bell Buoy 1,
33º58.927'S
,
25º41.473'E
, depth
17–22 m
, coll. C.S. McFadden,
15 March 2008
.
Paratypes
:
RMNH
Coel. 40178,
South Africa
, Algoa Bay, White Sands 15,
33º59.900'S
,
25º42.522'E
, depth
14–16 m
, coll. C.S. McFadden,
12 March 2008
;
USNM
1178382,
USNM
1178383, same data as
RMNH
Coel. 40178.
Description.
The
holotype
is an arborescent colony, 4.0 cm tall with a well-demarcated stalk and wider polyparium (Fig. 4b). The stalk is 2.0 cm long and
1.2 cm
in diameter, with a few longitudinal furrows and numerous transverse wrinkles. The polyparium is more or less spherical, 2.0 cm tall and 2.0 cm in diameter at its widest point, and consists of a number of elongated lobes. Catkins bearing 10–15 polyps each are distributed over the surface of the lobes. The polyps are club-shaped and curved inwards with the oral surface facing the catkin axis; most have the tentacles contracted. In situ, the expanded colony can be seen to have a central stalk with the catkinbearing lobes arising at intervals as short branches (Fig. 3d).
Sclerites are distributed asymmetrically around the body of the polyp. The polyp’s convex abaxial surface is heavily armed with unilaterally spinose spindles (Fig. 6a) and leaf clubs (Fig. 6b),
0.12–0.20 mm
long, with simple to complex tubercles. These sclerites are oriented with spines or leaves protruding outward. The concave adaxial surface of the polyp has transverse rows of flat spindles,
0.12–0.24 mm
long, with complex tubercles (Fig. 6c). The bases of the tentacles have small spindles,
0.09–0.14 mm
long, with complex tubercles, distally becoming flatter with fewer tubercles (Fig. 6d). The surface of the polyparium and stalk have small radiates and tuberculate spheroids,
0.03–0.06 mm
long (Fig. 6e). The interior of the colony lacks sclerites.
The
paratypes
range from
1.7 to 3.7 cm
tall; in all of them the stalk comprises approximately one-half of the total colony height. In all other respects they resemble the
holotype
. The
holotype
and
paratypes
have identical DNA sequences at
28S
rDNA, but vary slightly at
mtMutS
(1.5-1.9%) and
COI
(0.5-1.0%) (Fig. 1).
Color.
In life, colonies are pale orange (Fig. 3d), fading to cream in alcohol. The sclerites are colorless.
Etymology.
From the Latin
ericius
meaning hedgehog, also “thickly studded with iron spikes as a military barrier”, reflecting the high unilateral spines on the spindles.
Remarks.
As
discussed above,
E. ericius
n. sp.
is similar morphologically to
E. celata
n. sp.
, but differs from it genetically and in the form of the polyp sclerites. Both of these species are also similar to
E. susanae
(
Williams, 1988
)
. In
E. susanae
, however, the colony growth form is digitate rather than arborescent (Fig. 3e), with the polyps on catkins that are arranged around an unbranched polyparium rather than on lobes. In addition, in
E. susanae
the radiates in the stalk surface and interior of the colony (Fig. 12) are twice the size of those found in either
E. ericius
n. sp.
or
E. celata
n. sp.