Glabrilaria antoniettae Ramalho & Moraes & Salgado & Bastos & Moura 2021, n. sp.

Glabrilaria antoniettae Ramalho & Moraes n. sp. (Fig. 6A–C) Material examined. Holotype: MNRJBRY-1526; Paratypes: MNRJBRY-1478: Brazil, Maranhão state (Sta #7, 00°14.742’S – 044°54.089’W), 23 m, on sponge, 29 September 2014; MNRJBRY-1400, MNRJBRY-1427, MN- RJBRY-1483: Brazil, Amapá state (Sta #3...

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Main Authors: Ramalho, Laís V., Moraes, Fernando C., Salgado, Leonardo T., Bastos, Alex C., Moura, Rodrigo L.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2021
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4663142
https://zenodo.org/record/4663142
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4663142
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
Bryozoa
Gymnolaemata
Cheilostomatida
Cribrilinidae
Glabrilaria
Glabrilaria antoniettae
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Bryozoa
Gymnolaemata
Cheilostomatida
Cribrilinidae
Glabrilaria
Glabrilaria antoniettae
Ramalho, Laís V.
Moraes, Fernando C.
Salgado, Leonardo T.
Bastos, Alex C.
Moura, Rodrigo L.
Glabrilaria antoniettae Ramalho & Moraes & Salgado & Bastos & Moura 2021, n. sp.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Bryozoa
Gymnolaemata
Cheilostomatida
Cribrilinidae
Glabrilaria
Glabrilaria antoniettae
description Glabrilaria antoniettae Ramalho & Moraes n. sp. (Fig. 6A–C) Material examined. Holotype: MNRJBRY-1526; Paratypes: MNRJBRY-1478: Brazil, Maranhão state (Sta #7, 00°14.742’S – 044°54.089’W), 23 m, on sponge, 29 September 2014; MNRJBRY-1400, MNRJBRY-1427, MN- RJBRY-1483: Brazil, Amapá state (Sta #3, 03°35.4267’N – 049°07.6028’W), 90 m, on sponge, 26 September 2014; MNRJBRY-1499: Brazil, Amapá state (Sta #1, 04°23.807’N – 050°41.646’W), 64 m, on sponge, 24 September 2014; MNRJBRY-1487: Brazil, Pará state (Sta #4, 01°17.989’N – 046°46.732’W), 55 m, on sponge, 27 September 2014; MNRJBRY-1449: Brazil, Pará state (Sta #6, 00°45.359’N – 046°38.49’W), 50 m, on rhodoliths, 28 September 2014; collected by Fernando Moraes & Rodrigo Moura (NHo Cruzeiro do Sul). Etymology. In honour of Antonietta Rosso (University of Catania, Italy) for her relevant work on Cribrilinidae. Diagnosis. Autozooid with 16–20 costae, the first pair forming a bifid protuberance, and seven oral spines; interzooidal avicularia semi-erect, with acicular and serrated rostrum oriented distally or distolaterally; single or paired semi-erect avicularia associated with the type A ovicell ornamented with a median suture. Description. Colony encrusting, multiserial, unilaminar. Autozooids polygonal, longer than wide [L 258–352– 479 (SD 52, N 22); W 213–256– 307 µm (SD 25, N 22)] (Fig. 6A). Orifice transversally D-shaped, wider than long [L 34–49–64 (SD 5, N 21); W 52–59– 67 µm (SD 4, N 21)], with seven (non-ovicellate zooids) or four (ovicellate zooids) oral spines (Fig. 6A–C); the most proximal pair of spines only slightly above the proximal border of the orifice; base of the spines thick, surface irregularly calcified ending in a thin tip (Fig. 6B, C). Proximal and distal orifice edges smooth, without beaded margin or condyles (Fig. 6A, B). Frontal surface with 16–20 costae converging towards the median line and 5–7 intercostal lacunae; first pair of costae, when not developed, leaving an elliptical pore visible, but often more developed and raised, forming a bifid protuberance hiding the elliptical proximal pore (Fig. 6B, C). Interzooidal avicularia semi-erect [L 98–137– 180 µm (SD 22, N 25)], large, oriented distally or distolaterally, developed from one pore on the lateral wall; rostrum acicular with serrated margins, ending in a hooked tip; proximal region rounded with a large pore; blunt condyles (Figs 6A, B). One or two semi-erect avicularia associated with ovicell (Fig. 6A, C). Ovicell hyperstomial, type A ( sensu Bishop & Househam 1987), wider than long [L 93–113–129 (SD 9, N 15); W 128–158– 176 µm (SD 13, N 10)], irregular in shape, occupying part of the next distal zooid, with smooth ooecial surface; a median suture extending from proximal border to mid region (Fig. 6A, C); aperture closed by zooidal operculum. Remarks. To date there are no Glabrilaria species described from Brazil (Vieira et al . 2008; Winston et al . 2014). Among Brazilian cribrilinids only Puellina octospinata Winston et al ., 2014, here re-assigned to Cribrilaria , C. octospinata n. comb. , following Rosso et al. (2018), has 7–8 oral spines but differs in having smaller and not semi-erect avicularia. The most similar species is Cribrilaria harmeri (Ristedt, 1985), from the Pacific Ocean, which has seven oral spines, four visible in fertile zooids, and a single subapertural lumen. However, it differs from the new species in having the first pair of costae proximal to the orifice forming a shorter umbo, a narrower interzooidal avicularium (not semi-erect) that can have either smooth or finely serrated margin (always serrated in the new species), smaller polymorphs (zooids, avicularia and ovicells) than the new species (see Dick et al . 2007; Dick & Grischenko 2017; Yang et al . 2018a), and an umbo near the proximal margin of the ovicell (not observed in the new species). Glabrilaria africana (Hayward & Cook, 1983) and G. corbula Bishop & Househam, 1987 also have seven oral spines, but the former species has a greater number of subapertural pores (up to five large and many small ones), no suboral umbo, and a small umbo on the ovicell, while the latter species has avicularia with smooth rostrum and ovicell ornamented by 4–6 ridges. From the North Atlantic, there are two Glabrilaria species, G. hirsuta Rosso et al ., 2018 and G. polita Rosso et al ., 2018. Both species differ from the new species by having erect avicularia, and a different number of oral spines (six in G. hirsuta and five in G. polita ). : Published as part of Ramalho, Laís V., Moraes, Fernando C., Salgado, Leonardo T., Bastos, Alex C. & Moura, Rodrigo L., 2021, Bryozoa from the reefs off the Amazon River mouth: checklist, thirteen new species, and notes on their ecology and distribution, pp. 1-45 in Zootaxa 4950 (1) on pages 11-13, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4950.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/4643245 : {"references": ["Bishop, J. D. D. & Househam, B. C. (1987) Puellina (Bryozoa; Cheilostomatida; Cribrilinidae) from British and adjacent waters. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), Zoology, 53, 1 - 63.", "Vieira, L. M., Migotto, A. E. & Winston, J. E. (2008) Synopsis and annotated checklist of recent marine Bryozoa from Brazil. Zootaxa, 1810 (1), 1 - 39. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 1810.1.1", "Winston, J. E., Vieira, L. M. & Woollacott, R. M. (2014) Scientific Results of the Hassler Expedition. Bryozoa. No. 2. Brazil. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, 161 (5), 139 - 239. https: // doi. org / 10.3099 / MCZ 14.1", "Ristedt, H. (1985) Cribrilaria - Arten (Bryozoa) des Indopazifiks (Rotes Meer, Seychellen, Philippinen). Mitteilungen aus dem Geologisch-Palaontologischen Institut der Universitat Hamburg, 59, 15 - 38.", "Dick, M. H., Tilbrook, K. J. & Mawatari, S. F. (2007) Diversity and taxonomy of rocky-intertidal Bryozoa on the Island of Hawaii, USA. Journal of Natural History, 40 (38), 2197 - 2258. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222930601062771", "Dick, M. H. & Grischenko, A. V. (2017) Rocky-intertidal cheilostome bryozoans from the vicinity of the Sesoko Biological Station, west-central Okinawa, Japan, Journal of Natural History, 51 (3 - 4), 141 - 266. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222933.2016.1253797", "Yang, H. J., Seo, J. E., Min, B. S., Grischenko, A. V. & Gordon, D. P. (2018 a) Cribrilinidae (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) of Korea. Zootaxa, 4377 (2), 216 - 234. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4377.2.4", "Hayward, P. J. & Cook, P. L. (1983) The South African Museum's Meiring Naude Cruises. Part 13, Bryozoa II. Annals of the South African Museum, 91, 1 - 161."]}
format Text
author Ramalho, Laís V.
Moraes, Fernando C.
Salgado, Leonardo T.
Bastos, Alex C.
Moura, Rodrigo L.
author_facet Ramalho, Laís V.
Moraes, Fernando C.
Salgado, Leonardo T.
Bastos, Alex C.
Moura, Rodrigo L.
author_sort Ramalho, Laís V.
title Glabrilaria antoniettae Ramalho & Moraes & Salgado & Bastos & Moura 2021, n. sp.
title_short Glabrilaria antoniettae Ramalho & Moraes & Salgado & Bastos & Moura 2021, n. sp.
title_full Glabrilaria antoniettae Ramalho & Moraes & Salgado & Bastos & Moura 2021, n. sp.
title_fullStr Glabrilaria antoniettae Ramalho & Moraes & Salgado & Bastos & Moura 2021, n. sp.
title_full_unstemmed Glabrilaria antoniettae Ramalho & Moraes & Salgado & Bastos & Moura 2021, n. sp.
title_sort glabrilaria antoniettae ramalho & moraes & salgado & bastos & moura 2021, n. sp.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4663142
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geographic Pacific
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geographic_facet Pacific
Hayward
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genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4663142 2023-05-15T17:37:37+02:00 Glabrilaria antoniettae Ramalho & Moraes & Salgado & Bastos & Moura 2021, n. sp. Ramalho, Laís V. Moraes, Fernando C. Salgado, Leonardo T. Bastos, Alex C. Moura, Rodrigo L. 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4663142 https://zenodo.org/record/4663142 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/4643245 http://publication.plazi.org/id/7D45FFF9FFEAFFA0A275FF88FFFFFFEA http://zoobank.org/B9578A01-9B27-40B9-BEF9-C6DEB714C652 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4950.1.1 http://zenodo.org/record/4643245 http://publication.plazi.org/id/7D45FFF9FFEAFFA0A275FF88FFFFFFEA https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4643259 http://zoobank.org/B9578A01-9B27-40B9-BEF9-C6DEB714C652 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4663143 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Bryozoa Gymnolaemata Cheilostomatida Cribrilinidae Glabrilaria Glabrilaria antoniettae Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4663142 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4950.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4643259 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4663143 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Glabrilaria antoniettae Ramalho & Moraes n. sp. (Fig. 6A–C) Material examined. Holotype: MNRJBRY-1526; Paratypes: MNRJBRY-1478: Brazil, Maranhão state (Sta #7, 00°14.742’S – 044°54.089’W), 23 m, on sponge, 29 September 2014; MNRJBRY-1400, MNRJBRY-1427, MN- RJBRY-1483: Brazil, Amapá state (Sta #3, 03°35.4267’N – 049°07.6028’W), 90 m, on sponge, 26 September 2014; MNRJBRY-1499: Brazil, Amapá state (Sta #1, 04°23.807’N – 050°41.646’W), 64 m, on sponge, 24 September 2014; MNRJBRY-1487: Brazil, Pará state (Sta #4, 01°17.989’N – 046°46.732’W), 55 m, on sponge, 27 September 2014; MNRJBRY-1449: Brazil, Pará state (Sta #6, 00°45.359’N – 046°38.49’W), 50 m, on rhodoliths, 28 September 2014; collected by Fernando Moraes & Rodrigo Moura (NHo Cruzeiro do Sul). Etymology. In honour of Antonietta Rosso (University of Catania, Italy) for her relevant work on Cribrilinidae. Diagnosis. Autozooid with 16–20 costae, the first pair forming a bifid protuberance, and seven oral spines; interzooidal avicularia semi-erect, with acicular and serrated rostrum oriented distally or distolaterally; single or paired semi-erect avicularia associated with the type A ovicell ornamented with a median suture. Description. Colony encrusting, multiserial, unilaminar. Autozooids polygonal, longer than wide [L 258–352– 479 (SD 52, N 22); W 213–256– 307 µm (SD 25, N 22)] (Fig. 6A). Orifice transversally D-shaped, wider than long [L 34–49–64 (SD 5, N 21); W 52–59– 67 µm (SD 4, N 21)], with seven (non-ovicellate zooids) or four (ovicellate zooids) oral spines (Fig. 6A–C); the most proximal pair of spines only slightly above the proximal border of the orifice; base of the spines thick, surface irregularly calcified ending in a thin tip (Fig. 6B, C). Proximal and distal orifice edges smooth, without beaded margin or condyles (Fig. 6A, B). Frontal surface with 16–20 costae converging towards the median line and 5–7 intercostal lacunae; first pair of costae, when not developed, leaving an elliptical pore visible, but often more developed and raised, forming a bifid protuberance hiding the elliptical proximal pore (Fig. 6B, C). Interzooidal avicularia semi-erect [L 98–137– 180 µm (SD 22, N 25)], large, oriented distally or distolaterally, developed from one pore on the lateral wall; rostrum acicular with serrated margins, ending in a hooked tip; proximal region rounded with a large pore; blunt condyles (Figs 6A, B). One or two semi-erect avicularia associated with ovicell (Fig. 6A, C). Ovicell hyperstomial, type A ( sensu Bishop & Househam 1987), wider than long [L 93–113–129 (SD 9, N 15); W 128–158– 176 µm (SD 13, N 10)], irregular in shape, occupying part of the next distal zooid, with smooth ooecial surface; a median suture extending from proximal border to mid region (Fig. 6A, C); aperture closed by zooidal operculum. Remarks. To date there are no Glabrilaria species described from Brazil (Vieira et al . 2008; Winston et al . 2014). Among Brazilian cribrilinids only Puellina octospinata Winston et al ., 2014, here re-assigned to Cribrilaria , C. octospinata n. comb. , following Rosso et al. (2018), has 7–8 oral spines but differs in having smaller and not semi-erect avicularia. The most similar species is Cribrilaria harmeri (Ristedt, 1985), from the Pacific Ocean, which has seven oral spines, four visible in fertile zooids, and a single subapertural lumen. However, it differs from the new species in having the first pair of costae proximal to the orifice forming a shorter umbo, a narrower interzooidal avicularium (not semi-erect) that can have either smooth or finely serrated margin (always serrated in the new species), smaller polymorphs (zooids, avicularia and ovicells) than the new species (see Dick et al . 2007; Dick & Grischenko 2017; Yang et al . 2018a), and an umbo near the proximal margin of the ovicell (not observed in the new species). Glabrilaria africana (Hayward & Cook, 1983) and G. corbula Bishop & Househam, 1987 also have seven oral spines, but the former species has a greater number of subapertural pores (up to five large and many small ones), no suboral umbo, and a small umbo on the ovicell, while the latter species has avicularia with smooth rostrum and ovicell ornamented by 4–6 ridges. From the North Atlantic, there are two Glabrilaria species, G. hirsuta Rosso et al ., 2018 and G. polita Rosso et al ., 2018. Both species differ from the new species by having erect avicularia, and a different number of oral spines (six in G. hirsuta and five in G. polita ). : Published as part of Ramalho, Laís V., Moraes, Fernando C., Salgado, Leonardo T., Bastos, Alex C. & Moura, Rodrigo L., 2021, Bryozoa from the reefs off the Amazon River mouth: checklist, thirteen new species, and notes on their ecology and distribution, pp. 1-45 in Zootaxa 4950 (1) on pages 11-13, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4950.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/4643245 : {"references": ["Bishop, J. D. D. & Househam, B. C. (1987) Puellina (Bryozoa; Cheilostomatida; Cribrilinidae) from British and adjacent waters. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), Zoology, 53, 1 - 63.", "Vieira, L. M., Migotto, A. E. & Winston, J. E. (2008) Synopsis and annotated checklist of recent marine Bryozoa from Brazil. Zootaxa, 1810 (1), 1 - 39. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 1810.1.1", "Winston, J. E., Vieira, L. M. & Woollacott, R. M. (2014) Scientific Results of the Hassler Expedition. Bryozoa. No. 2. Brazil. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, 161 (5), 139 - 239. https: // doi. org / 10.3099 / MCZ 14.1", "Ristedt, H. (1985) Cribrilaria - Arten (Bryozoa) des Indopazifiks (Rotes Meer, Seychellen, Philippinen). Mitteilungen aus dem Geologisch-Palaontologischen Institut der Universitat Hamburg, 59, 15 - 38.", "Dick, M. H., Tilbrook, K. J. & Mawatari, S. F. (2007) Diversity and taxonomy of rocky-intertidal Bryozoa on the Island of Hawaii, USA. Journal of Natural History, 40 (38), 2197 - 2258. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222930601062771", "Dick, M. H. & Grischenko, A. V. (2017) Rocky-intertidal cheilostome bryozoans from the vicinity of the Sesoko Biological Station, west-central Okinawa, Japan, Journal of Natural History, 51 (3 - 4), 141 - 266. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222933.2016.1253797", "Yang, H. J., Seo, J. E., Min, B. S., Grischenko, A. V. & Gordon, D. P. (2018 a) Cribrilinidae (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) of Korea. Zootaxa, 4377 (2), 216 - 234. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4377.2.4", "Hayward, P. J. & Cook, P. L. (1983) The South African Museum's Meiring Naude Cruises. Part 13, Bryozoa II. Annals of the South African Museum, 91, 1 - 161."]} Text North Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Pacific Hayward ENVELOPE(167.350,167.350,-78.117,-78.117) Moura ENVELOPE(28.483,28.483,66.450,66.450)