Illustrated guide to the echinoid (Echinodermata: Echinoidea) fauna of South Africa
Author
Filander, Zoleka
Author
Griffiths, Charles
text
Zootaxa
2017
4296
1
1
72
journal article
32399
10.11646/zootaxa.4296.1.1
ad746972-3837-4f1d-bf97-c09e5d7f1bd5
1175-5326
843325
EFE86EDD-D170-4D97-87D9-3125400713EC
*
Phyllacanthus imperialis
(
Lamarck, 1816
)
Fig. 8
A–B.
Phyllacanthus fustigera
:
A. Agassiz, 1863
: 17
.
Phyllacanthus imperialis
:
A. Agassiz, 1872
: 151
, 391. Pl. I,
Figs 1–6
, Pl. I,
Fig. 2
;
Döderlein, 1906
: 98
. Pl. XL,
Fig. 5
. a–e;
Mortensen, 1928a
: 504
–509. Pl. LIV,
Fig. 4
, Pl. LVII,
Fig. 3
, Pl. LXXIV,
Fig. 6
, Pl. LXXXVIII,
Figs 4–10
;
H.L. Clark, 1925a
: 10
; Samyn, 2003: 197,
Fig. 2
B, B’;
Schultz, 2010
: 46
, Figs 80–83;
Filander & Griffiths, 2014
: 50
. Pl. I, Fig. B.
FIGURE 8.
Phyllacanthus imperialis
(SAMC-A23447):
A
. Map showing distribution.
B
. Aboral view of preserved specimen.
Material examined.
A28211
; A23447.
Identification.
Test compact, with non-crenulated primary tubercles. Apical disc sunken, small, closely tuberculated, with ocular plates widely exsert, madreporite larger than other genital plates. Peristome larger than apical disc. Primary spines dark brown, granulated with longitudinal ridged tips; secondary spines lighter brown, strongly adpressed, smooth and somewhat fusiform.
Global maximum size.
Maximum test diameter
80 mm
.
Global distribution.
Red Sea and Madagascar to Tonga Islands, from Rui-Kui Islands to Australia; at depth
5–70 m
(
Mortensen 1928a
;
Schultz 2010
). East coast region of South Africa (
Filander & Griffiths 2014
).
Remarks.
Differs from
Eucidaris metularia
in spine characteristics,
Phyllacanthus imperialis
having long primaries, whereas
E. metularia
has short, stout ones.