Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis Stampar & Mills & Keable 2020, sp. nov.

Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: BC26F829-165B-4AA4-B4CF-0AF6673C72E7 Figs 11–13, Table 4 Holotype . NIWA Invertebrate Collection (NIC), NIWA 87139, Gaer Arm, Whale Rock, Fiordland, 45.2825°S 167.1211667°E (19/ii/2013), depth c. 15 m. Paratype . NIWA 145027, same deta...

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Main Authors: Stampar, Sérgio N., Mills, V. Sadie, Keable, Stephen J.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654275
https://zenodo.org/record/4654275
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4654275
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Cnidaria
Anthozoa
Ceriantharia
Cerianthidae
Ceriantheopsis
Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Cnidaria
Anthozoa
Ceriantharia
Cerianthidae
Ceriantheopsis
Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis
Stampar, Sérgio N.
Mills, V. Sadie
Keable, Stephen J.
Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis Stampar & Mills & Keable 2020, sp. nov.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Cnidaria
Anthozoa
Ceriantharia
Cerianthidae
Ceriantheopsis
Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis
description Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: BC26F829-165B-4AA4-B4CF-0AF6673C72E7 Figs 11–13, Table 4 Holotype . NIWA Invertebrate Collection (NIC), NIWA 87139, Gaer Arm, Whale Rock, Fiordland, 45.2825°S 167.1211667°E (19/ii/2013), depth c. 15 m. Paratype . NIWA 145027, same details as holotype. Diagnosis . Labial tentacles dark brown. Eight mesenteries attached to siphonoglyph, P2 with 3/4 of gastral cavity, labial tentacles in three rows. Variation . Long (up to 150 mm long) and thin (10–20 mm width) cerianthid; 64–70 light brown marginal tentacles (20–22 mm in preserved specimens), at least one line over marginal tentacle length, arrangement 3412.3412.3412, with more than 6 pores per tentacle; 56–62 dark brown labial tentacles (up to 07 mm long in preserved specimens), arrangement (2)313.2123.2123, unpaired labial tentacle present; pleated stomodeum extending over 1/6 to 1/7 of total body length, hyposulcus 3 mm long, hemisulci distinct; siphonoglyph wide, connected to four pairs of mesenteries; free parts of sterile directive mesenteries shorter than siphonoglyph length, without mesenterial filaments. Second protomesenteries almost reaching aboral pole with 3/4 of gastral cavity, fertile, bearing ciliated tracts with bundles of craspedonemes at the very beginning, followed by very short cnido-glandulars tract and long (c. 90% of the mesentery) craspedion tracts. Third protomesenteries sterile, longer than B1 and much longer than directives, with craspedonemes. M and m-metamesenteries long, fertile; M1 reach 3/5 of total body length and M2 reaching almost the same, but shorter than M1, with bundles of craspedonemes; B and b-mesenteries, sterile, with B almost twice length of b; see Fig. 12 for schematic arrangement of mesenteries. The cnidome of the species (Fig. 13) is composed of spirocysts, holotrichs, microbasic b-mastigophores (three types) and ptychocysts distributed as shown in Table 4. Holotype description (NIWA 87139). Rather elongated polyp, 7 cm long, 19 mm diameter just below marginal tentacles and 7 mm near aboral end. Marginal tentacles 64, arranged in four pseudocycles, 20–22 mm long and 0.8–1 mm in diameter near the base, light brown with longitudinal line. The space between cycles of marginal and labial tentacles dark brown coloured. Labial tentacles 56, about 07 mm long, brown, directive labial present, arrangement of marginal tentacles 3412.3412.3412… and labial tentacles (2)313.2123.2123.... Oral disk 16 mm wide, stomodeum 10 mm long, dark brown, siphonoglyph wide and rather short with 8 mesenteries attached, hyposulcus 3 mm long with short hemisulci 1 mm long. Free parts of directive mesenteries without mesenterial filament. Second protomesenteries almost reach aboral pole, fertile, bearing ciliated tract with bundle of craspedonemes. Third protomesenteries sterile, longer than B1, with craspedonemes. M and m-metamesenteries long, fertile; M1 and M2 reach 3/4 of total body length and M1 longer than M2, with bundle of craspedonemes; B and b-mesenteries, B twice longer than b. Stampar et al. : Ceriantharia from Australia, New Zealand and Antarctica 93 Remarks . This species is only known from two specimens collected from a rock wall habitat in Fiordland at scuba diving depths. Environmental conditions in the fjords create unique conditions in the shallow sub-tidal zone, just below the low-salinity layer, making it similar to deep-sea habitats; hence many deep sea dwelling and ancient species can be found at a much shallower depth in Fiordland than anywhere else in the world (Wing, 2003). Ceriantharia have been recorded as dominant members of the soft sediment community on the sand slope areas of the rock wall zone in Fiordland (Grange et al. , 1981), but their ability to escape from the tube they occupy into the sediment is a reason for loss in most sampling attempts (Stampar et al. , 2016). Thus, while image-based records of Ceriantharia by divers and underwater camera systems are numerous, corresponding instances of specimens are rare. The range of this species is very close to that recorded for Pachycerianthus fiordlandensis sp. nov. and they are probably sympatric in some localities. Although the anatomy is quite distinct, based solely on external morphology it is quite difficult to discern between the two species. However, like all species of the genus Ceriantheopsis , C. zealandiaensis is quite thin and long compared to Pachycerianthus and this may give a gross guide in the field. Unlike Pachycerianthus antarcticus , Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis does not appear to maintain already fertilized oocytes: although both specimens examined are already fully mature, there is no sign of these in the gastrovascular cavities. Distribution . Fiordland, New Zealand. Etymology . The specific name, zealandiaensis , is based on the name of the ancient submerged continent that contains New Zealand, the country where the specimens were collected. Order Penicillaria Hartog, 1977 Family Arachnactidae McMurrich, 1910 : Published as part of Stampar, Sérgio N., Mills, V. Sadie & Keable, Stephen J., 2020, Ceriantharia (Cnidaria) from Australia, New Zealand and Antarctica with Descriptions of Four New Species, pp. 81-100 in Records of the Australian Museum 72 (3) on pages 91-95, DOI: 10.3853/j.2201-4349.72.2020.1762, http://zenodo.org/record/4654407 : {"references": ["Wing, S. 2003. Fiordland. Chapter 30. In The Living Reef: The ecology of New Zealand's Rocky Reefs, ed. N. Andrew and M. Francis, pp. 238 - 247. Nelson: Craig Potton Publishing.", "den Hartog, J. C. 1977. Descriptions of two new Ceriantharia from the Caribbean region, Pachycerianthus curancaoensis n. sp. and Arachnanthus nocturnus n. sp. with a discussion of the cnidom and of the classification of the Ceriantharia. Zoologische Mededelingen 51: 211 - 242.", "McMurrich, J. P. 1910. Actiniaria of the Siboga expedition, part I. Ceriantharia. Siboga-Expeditie Monographes 10: 1 - 48."]}
format Text
author Stampar, Sérgio N.
Mills, V. Sadie
Keable, Stephen J.
author_facet Stampar, Sérgio N.
Mills, V. Sadie
Keable, Stephen J.
author_sort Stampar, Sérgio N.
title Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis Stampar & Mills & Keable 2020, sp. nov.
title_short Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis Stampar & Mills & Keable 2020, sp. nov.
title_full Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis Stampar & Mills & Keable 2020, sp. nov.
title_fullStr Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis Stampar & Mills & Keable 2020, sp. nov.
title_full_unstemmed Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis Stampar & Mills & Keable 2020, sp. nov.
title_sort ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis stampar & mills & keable 2020, sp. nov.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654275
https://zenodo.org/record/4654275
long_lat ENVELOPE(-45.667,-45.667,-60.800,-60.800)
geographic New Zealand
Whale Rock
geographic_facet New Zealand
Whale Rock
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
antarcticus
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
antarcticus
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4654275 2023-05-15T14:00:22+02:00 Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis Stampar & Mills & Keable 2020, sp. nov. Stampar, Sérgio N. Mills, V. Sadie Keable, Stephen J. 2020 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654275 https://zenodo.org/record/4654275 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/4654407 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC0FFE6CF23FFECFFE0FF81D63CC53D http://zoobank.org/62E3C79A-499F-48DE-AFD9-111D52235D33 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.2201-4349.72.2020.1762 http://zenodo.org/record/4654407 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC0FFE6CF23FFECFFE0FF81D63CC53D https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654429 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654431 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654433 http://zoobank.org/62E3C79A-499F-48DE-AFD9-111D52235D33 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654276 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Cnidaria Anthozoa Ceriantharia Cerianthidae Ceriantheopsis Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654275 https://doi.org/10.3853/j.2201-4349.72.2020.1762 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654429 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654431 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654433 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4654276 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: BC26F829-165B-4AA4-B4CF-0AF6673C72E7 Figs 11–13, Table 4 Holotype . NIWA Invertebrate Collection (NIC), NIWA 87139, Gaer Arm, Whale Rock, Fiordland, 45.2825°S 167.1211667°E (19/ii/2013), depth c. 15 m. Paratype . NIWA 145027, same details as holotype. Diagnosis . Labial tentacles dark brown. Eight mesenteries attached to siphonoglyph, P2 with 3/4 of gastral cavity, labial tentacles in three rows. Variation . Long (up to 150 mm long) and thin (10–20 mm width) cerianthid; 64–70 light brown marginal tentacles (20–22 mm in preserved specimens), at least one line over marginal tentacle length, arrangement 3412.3412.3412, with more than 6 pores per tentacle; 56–62 dark brown labial tentacles (up to 07 mm long in preserved specimens), arrangement (2)313.2123.2123, unpaired labial tentacle present; pleated stomodeum extending over 1/6 to 1/7 of total body length, hyposulcus 3 mm long, hemisulci distinct; siphonoglyph wide, connected to four pairs of mesenteries; free parts of sterile directive mesenteries shorter than siphonoglyph length, without mesenterial filaments. Second protomesenteries almost reaching aboral pole with 3/4 of gastral cavity, fertile, bearing ciliated tracts with bundles of craspedonemes at the very beginning, followed by very short cnido-glandulars tract and long (c. 90% of the mesentery) craspedion tracts. Third protomesenteries sterile, longer than B1 and much longer than directives, with craspedonemes. M and m-metamesenteries long, fertile; M1 reach 3/5 of total body length and M2 reaching almost the same, but shorter than M1, with bundles of craspedonemes; B and b-mesenteries, sterile, with B almost twice length of b; see Fig. 12 for schematic arrangement of mesenteries. The cnidome of the species (Fig. 13) is composed of spirocysts, holotrichs, microbasic b-mastigophores (three types) and ptychocysts distributed as shown in Table 4. Holotype description (NIWA 87139). Rather elongated polyp, 7 cm long, 19 mm diameter just below marginal tentacles and 7 mm near aboral end. Marginal tentacles 64, arranged in four pseudocycles, 20–22 mm long and 0.8–1 mm in diameter near the base, light brown with longitudinal line. The space between cycles of marginal and labial tentacles dark brown coloured. Labial tentacles 56, about 07 mm long, brown, directive labial present, arrangement of marginal tentacles 3412.3412.3412… and labial tentacles (2)313.2123.2123.... Oral disk 16 mm wide, stomodeum 10 mm long, dark brown, siphonoglyph wide and rather short with 8 mesenteries attached, hyposulcus 3 mm long with short hemisulci 1 mm long. Free parts of directive mesenteries without mesenterial filament. Second protomesenteries almost reach aboral pole, fertile, bearing ciliated tract with bundle of craspedonemes. Third protomesenteries sterile, longer than B1, with craspedonemes. M and m-metamesenteries long, fertile; M1 and M2 reach 3/4 of total body length and M1 longer than M2, with bundle of craspedonemes; B and b-mesenteries, B twice longer than b. Stampar et al. : Ceriantharia from Australia, New Zealand and Antarctica 93 Remarks . This species is only known from two specimens collected from a rock wall habitat in Fiordland at scuba diving depths. Environmental conditions in the fjords create unique conditions in the shallow sub-tidal zone, just below the low-salinity layer, making it similar to deep-sea habitats; hence many deep sea dwelling and ancient species can be found at a much shallower depth in Fiordland than anywhere else in the world (Wing, 2003). Ceriantharia have been recorded as dominant members of the soft sediment community on the sand slope areas of the rock wall zone in Fiordland (Grange et al. , 1981), but their ability to escape from the tube they occupy into the sediment is a reason for loss in most sampling attempts (Stampar et al. , 2016). Thus, while image-based records of Ceriantharia by divers and underwater camera systems are numerous, corresponding instances of specimens are rare. The range of this species is very close to that recorded for Pachycerianthus fiordlandensis sp. nov. and they are probably sympatric in some localities. Although the anatomy is quite distinct, based solely on external morphology it is quite difficult to discern between the two species. However, like all species of the genus Ceriantheopsis , C. zealandiaensis is quite thin and long compared to Pachycerianthus and this may give a gross guide in the field. Unlike Pachycerianthus antarcticus , Ceriantheopsis zealandiaensis does not appear to maintain already fertilized oocytes: although both specimens examined are already fully mature, there is no sign of these in the gastrovascular cavities. Distribution . Fiordland, New Zealand. Etymology . The specific name, zealandiaensis , is based on the name of the ancient submerged continent that contains New Zealand, the country where the specimens were collected. Order Penicillaria Hartog, 1977 Family Arachnactidae McMurrich, 1910 : Published as part of Stampar, Sérgio N., Mills, V. Sadie & Keable, Stephen J., 2020, Ceriantharia (Cnidaria) from Australia, New Zealand and Antarctica with Descriptions of Four New Species, pp. 81-100 in Records of the Australian Museum 72 (3) on pages 91-95, DOI: 10.3853/j.2201-4349.72.2020.1762, http://zenodo.org/record/4654407 : {"references": ["Wing, S. 2003. Fiordland. Chapter 30. In The Living Reef: The ecology of New Zealand's Rocky Reefs, ed. N. Andrew and M. Francis, pp. 238 - 247. Nelson: Craig Potton Publishing.", "den Hartog, J. C. 1977. Descriptions of two new Ceriantharia from the Caribbean region, Pachycerianthus curancaoensis n. sp. and Arachnanthus nocturnus n. sp. with a discussion of the cnidom and of the classification of the Ceriantharia. Zoologische Mededelingen 51: 211 - 242.", "McMurrich, J. P. 1910. Actiniaria of the Siboga expedition, part I. Ceriantharia. Siboga-Expeditie Monographes 10: 1 - 48."]} Text Antarc* Antarctica antarcticus DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) New Zealand Whale Rock ENVELOPE(-45.667,-45.667,-60.800,-60.800)