Toward a revision of the bamboo corals: Part 3, deconstructing the Family Isididae
Author
Saucier, Esprit Heestand
Faculty of Science, Brigham Young University - Hawaii, 55 - 220 Kulanui St, Laie, Hawaii, 96762, USA
Author
France, Scott C.
Department of Biology, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Lafayette, Louisiana, USA
Author
Watling, Les
School of Life Sciences, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-09-30
5047
3
247
272
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5047.3.2
1175-5326
5540714
072B07D8-324A-412E-A76E-C39067AC77AE
Family
Isididae
Lamouroux, 1812
Type
genus:
Isis
Linnaeus, 1758
Diagnosis.
Colony with articulated skeleton of gorgonin nodes alternating with calcareous internodes that are solid and composed of radiating bundles of sclerite-like units. Branches originate from the internodes, always beginning with a node at the base of the branch. Coenenchyme thick; polyps completely retractile into small pockets in the coenenchyme, leaving only small pores visible on the surface. Polyps mostly devoid of sclerites, with small rods only in the tentacles. Coenenchyme sclerites mostly small clubs, but may include 6-, 7- or 8-radiates, warty rods, spindles and crosses, heavily sculpted capstans, dumbbells, and double cones.
Included genera:
Isis
Linnaeus, 1758
Remarks.
The genus
Chelidonisis
has routinely been included in the
Isididae
subfamily
Isidinae
with
Isis
, chiefly on the basis of the presence of 6-radiate sclerites in the coenenchyme. However, there are several morphological differences that distinguish the two genera. The axis of
Isis
is thick with smooth longitudinal ridges on the internodes, whereas in
Chelidonisis
the axis is slender and the ridges on the internodes are festooned with small spines. The coenenchyme of
Isis
is very thick and encompasses retractile polyps as compared to the thin coenenchyme of
Chelidonisis
, wherein the polyps contract into armored verrucae on the branch. In addition, the coenenchyme sclerites of
Isis
are very diverse capstans, tuberculate spindles, and clubs, whereas in
Chelidonisis
the sclerites are predominantly 6-radiates and spindles, and capstans are never present. Finally, the two genera occur in widely separated clades on the molecular phylogeny (
Figures 2
,
3
), as also shown by
Quattrini
et al.
(2020)
.