Some shallow water octocorals (Coelenterata: Anthozoa) of the Persian Gulf
Author
Namin, Samimi
Author
Ofwegen, Van
text
Zootaxa
2009
2058
1
52
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.186743
ec14c88f-d887-4567-a824-dbf1078cda03
1175-5326
186743
Euplexaura plana
n. sp.
(
Figs. 2
d, 17)
Material:
Holotype
,
RMNH
Coel. 38778, Farur Island, coll. S.A. Mohtarami, 2006.
Description.
The
holotype
is
15.5 cm
high and
27 cm
wide (
Fig. 2
d). The colony is branched in one plane and the end branches especially are flattened in the plane of branching. On large parts of the colony the coenenchyme is lacking; the calyces are low, dome-shaped.
The polyps have points with flattened spindles, up to
0.30 mm
long (
Fig. 17
a). A collaret is not present.
The surface layer of the branch has blunt ellipsoids and spindles, up to
0.35 mm
long, with complex tubercles (
Fig 17
b). Several of them with one side less tuberculate.
The lower layer has sclerites similar to those of the surface layer, but they are less tuberculate, and smaller, up to
0.25 mm
long (
Fig. 17
c).
Colour.
Alive, the colony was pinkish in colour, preserved it is white. Sclerites are colourless.
Etymology.
The species name is from the Latin
planus
, flat, referring to the flattened branches.
Remarks.
Most
Euplexaura
species have rather small sclerites.
Kükenthal (1924: 91–98)
mentioned only four species with coenenchymal sclerites
0.25 mm
long, or more:
E. aruensis
Kükenthal, 1911
, described from the Aru Islands,
Indonesia
, with sclerites up to
0.25 mm
long;
E. erecta
Kükenthal, 1908
, from
Japan
, with sclerites up to
0.30 mm
long;
E. robusta
Kükenthal, 1908
from
Japan
, with sclerites up to
0.32 mm
long;
E. kukenthali
Broch, 1916
from NW
Australia
, with spindles up to
0.50 mm
long. All these four species show no flattened branches and are therefore considered to be different species.
E. rhipidalis
Studer, 1894
, originally described from
Singapore
, does have flattened branches, and was recorded to occur in the nearby Red Sea (
Grasshoff 2000: 59
). Grasshoff re-examined the
type
specimen of
E. rhipidalis
and observed this species actually has sclerites with a wide range of size, up to
0.30 mm
long, instead of the
0.15 mm
long measured by Studer, and being close to the
0.35 mm
reported for
E. plana
.
FIGURE 17.
RMNH Coel. 38778, holotype of
Euplexaura plana
n. sp.
: a, polyp spindles; b, ellipsoids and spindles of surface layer; c, spindles of the subsurface layer. Scale at b only applies to b.
FIGURE 18.
RMNH Coel. 6040,
Euplexaura rhipidalis
Studer, 1894
: a, tentacle rods; b, collaret and point spindles; c, ellipsoids and spindles of surface layer; d, spindles of the subsurface layer. Scale at d also applies to a.
Because of the similarities in colony shape and sclerite size between
E. plana
and
E. rhipidalis
, and because the drawings of sclerites presented by Grasshoff are rather schematic, we decided to make extra SEM photographs of RMNH Coel. 6040, a specimen identified by
Stiasny (1959: 47)
as
Muricella tenera
, but synonymized with
E. rhipidalis
by
Grasshoff (2000)
. RMNH Coel. 6040 showed even longer blunt ellipsoids and spindles than recorded by Grasshoff for
E. rhipidalis
, viz. up to
0.40 mm
long (
Fig. 18
c); like in
E. plana
several of them with one side less tuberculate. However, the interior sclerites of RMNH Coel. 6040 (
Fig. 18
d) are different from those of
E. plana
(
Fig. 17
c), they have less developed tubercles, and quite some sclerites have pointed ends. Strangely, sclerites like that were not at all depicted by Grasshoff. Because of the differently shaped interior sclerites, a character also present in the below described
Euplexaura
spp. and the much more flattened branches than in
E. rhipidalis
we decided to describe the present material as a new species.