Fossils reveal a high diversity of the staghorn coral genera Acropora and Isopora (Scleractinia: Acroporidae) in the Neogene of Indonesia
Author
Santodomingo, Nadiezhda
Author
Wallace, Carden C.
Author
Johnson, Kenneth G.
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2015
2015-11-18
175
4
677
763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/zoj.12295
journal article
10.1111/zoj.12295
0024-4082
5339562
ACROPORA
AFF.
DERAWANENSIS
WALLACE, 1997
FIGURE 31
Acropora derawanensis
Wallace, 1997: 33
, fig. 5
Diagnosis
Colonies arborescent to hispidose with indeterminate growth, composed of very slender and fragile branches. Axial and radials contribute equally to branch structure. Radial corallites appressed tubular, regularly distributed. Coenosteum composed of aligned simple spinules that can become costate throughout (
Wallace & Wolstenholme, 1998
;
Wallace, 1999
).
Material studied
Sumatra
:
RGM 299682
,
1 specimen
.
Modern comparative material
:
Holotype
, MTQ G48963,
Derawan Archipelago
,
East Kalimantan
,
Indonesia
.
Skeletal characteristics
Corallum
.
One thin specimen from probably a middle section of a branch as tip is broken, length
17.84 mm
, diameter 2.35–2.75–
4.10 mm
, oval on transverse section, no colony form can be inferred from the single specimen (
Fig. 31
A-C).
Corallites.
Axial corallite only visible in the axis, inner diameter
1.25 mm
, primary septa present up to threequarters R, secondary septa visible as points; radial corallites evenly sized, regularly distributed, mostly appressed tubular, round calices, not touching, arranged varies from two opposite or alternate corallites on the sides of the branches, profile length 1.31–1.50–
2.09 mm
, angle 19.67–26.47–32.82° from the axis, outer diameter 0.84–0.87–
0.91 mm
, inner diameter 0.44– 0.55–
0.68 mm
, wall thickness 0.09–0.12–
0.19 mm
, distance between centres 3.71–4.05–
4.48 mm
, primary septa quite worn, secondary septa visible as points. Corallite arrangement sequence 1–?–2–[2–3]–?.
Figure 31.
Acropora
aff.
derawanensis
RGM
299682, Muzay Valley, Nias, Sumatra, Pleistocene (0.8–2.6 Ma). A, branch showing radial corallites with opposite to alternate arrangement. B, detail of appressed tubular radial corallite. C, detail of costate coenosteum throughout.
Coenosteum.
Poorly preserved spinules arranged into costae throughout.
Occurrence
?Gelasian to Recent. The fossil specimen interpreted as
A.
aff.
derawanensis
is the earliest occurrence of the species and extends its distribution to the eastern Indian Ocean during the Early Pleistocene, Calabrian to Gelasian,
0.781
–2.588
Ma. Modern specimens of
A. derawanensis
are known from East Kalimantan, Sulawesi,
Halmahera
,
Philippines
and
Micronesia
(
Table 4
,
Wallace
et al
., 2012
).
Palaeoenvironment
The coral fauna from Nias beds comprises deepwater sediments overlaid by shallow-water reef terraces in which massive species are very abundant (
Boekschoten
et al
., 1989
). The current habitats of
A. derawanensis
are protected deep sandy slopes, in which flat-lying or upright colonies can form patches (
Wallace, 1999
).
Remarks
The thin, delicate, slender branch with typical appressed tubular corallites and costate coenosteum throughout compare well with the morphology of
A. derawanensis
exhibited by the
holotype
MTQ G48963, Derawan Archipelago. This fossil specimen was previously left in open nomenclature in the collections of the Naturalis museum identified by
Oosterbaan (1985)
. Only
one specimen
with these characteristics has been recovered, so its identification remains to be confirmed when more fossil material becomes available.