Phylactolaemate bryozoans at the Zoological Survey of India and a taxonomic key to Indian Phylactolaemata
Author
Wood, Timothy S.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-11-01
5200
2
401
435
journal article
178549
10.11646/zootaxa.5200.5.1
58f68688-480d-45c7-bf1b-773e9dfd96a9
1175-5326
7270877
BF5F50EC-DD5D-4CEA-9A74-7EB4D55D9945
Stolella indica
Annandale, 1909
(
Fig. 11
)
Original description.
Stolella indica
:
Annandale, 1909a
: p. 279
, 280.
Type material.
ZEV 3482
/7 (
holotype
) collected
29 July 1908
from a pond in Bulandsharh,
Uttar Pradesh
by
H.J. Walton
Characterization.
According to
Annandale (1911)
“zoecia are short and slender, erect or nearly so, distinctly emarginate and furrowed. Their ectocyst is soft, colorless and transparent but minutely roughened on the surface.” Tentacles 30–35, colonies “usually fixed to the roots of duckweed or to the stems of other plants.” Floatoblasts distinctively shaped, widest in the middle and tapering towards narrowly rounded ends, dorsal fenestra slightly smaller than the ventral fenestra and surrounded by a slightly raised shoulder; both fenestrae covered by densely arranged tubercles bearing hypertubercles; individual cells of the annulus convex; floatoblast suture with knots and rounded protuberances projecting outwards to give the floatoblast edge a finely serrated appearance; dimensions of two similar floatoblasts about 334 µm long and 218 µm wide.
Status.
This species appears to be valid. However, the presence of hypertubercles, revealed by SEM, places it in the genus
Rumarcanella
(
Hirose & Mawatari, 2011b
)
. The updated name is
Rumarcanella indica
(Annandale, 1909)
.
Additional references.
Annandale 1910
: p. 53; 1911: p. 229, 230, fig. 45.
Distribution.
The species is known from its original collection site in
Uttar Pradesh
as well as unspecified sites near Kolkata (Annandale 1909).
Remarks.
According to
Annandale (1911)
this species was found growing over colonies of the ctenostome bryozoan,
Hislopia lacustris
Carter, 1858
. The
holotype
consists of two flat flakes, each about
2 cm
2
, composed mostly of
Hislopia
but with some tubules of the phylactolaemate, including a few floatoblasts and sessoblasts.
Another specimen, ZEV 3748/7 also is labeled
Stolella indica
“
Type
” from a “Tank east of Sealdah, Calcutta.” The material is sparse and stringy, attached to a small stem and lacking statoblasts. Its designation as a “
type
” is surely in error and should be disregarded.
Lacourt (1968)
mentions an additional specimen of
Stolella indica
, ZEV
4925/7 (from Madras, collected by K.R. Menon), and although it is listed in the ZSI catalog it seems to be missing from the collection.
The distinctive spindle shape of the floatoblast is very similar to floatoblasts of
Swarupella andamanensis
Shrivastava, 1981
and
S. kasetsartensis
Wood
et al.
, 2006
.All three species also have roughened sutures that project beyond the floatoblast margin as small spines or rounded knobs. The floatoblasts are relatively small with a length seldom exceeding 350 µm. Despite these similarities, “
Stolella indica
” is placed in the genus
Rumarcanella
because of its small statoblasts with hypertubercles while the other two species remain for now in
Swarupella
Shrivastava, 1981
due to the roughened suture. A molecular approach with fresh material may be necessary to sort this out.
This species has twice been reported in error from sites beyond
India
. A species in North American described as
Stolella indica
(
Rogick 1943
)
appears instead to be
Plumatella repens
(L.). The species in East Africa identified as
Stolella indica
(
Wiebach 1964
)
was actually an undescribed species, now
Plumatella kisalensis
Wood, 2020
.