Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns 1983

Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns, 1983a (Figs. 10, 11) Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns 1983a: 80–82, figs. 1i, 10a–g, map 3; Cairns & Macintryre 1992: 98, table 1; Cairns 2011: 9, fig. 7a; Cairns & Zibrowius 2013: 18–19, figs. 9a–i, 49, table 2, 51; Bax & Cairns 2014: 108–111, table 1, map 6 Di...

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Main Authors: Bernal, M. C., Cairns, S. D., Penchaszadeh, P. E., Lauretta, D.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2021
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4792426
https://zenodo.org/record/4792426
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4792426
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
Hydrozoa
Anthoathecata
Stylasteridae
Errinopsis
Errinopsis fenestrata
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Cnidaria
Hydrozoa
Anthoathecata
Stylasteridae
Errinopsis
Errinopsis fenestrata
Bernal, M. C.
Cairns, S. D.
Penchaszadeh, P. E.
Lauretta, D.
Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns 1983
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Cnidaria
Hydrozoa
Anthoathecata
Stylasteridae
Errinopsis
Errinopsis fenestrata
description Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns, 1983a (Figs. 10, 11) Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns 1983a: 80–82, figs. 1i, 10a–g, map 3; Cairns & Macintryre 1992: 98, table 1; Cairns 2011: 9, fig. 7a; Cairns & Zibrowius 2013: 18–19, figs. 9a–i, 49, table 2, 51; Bax & Cairns 2014: 108–111, table 1, map 6 Distribution. Drake Passage and Shag Rocks, 280–340 m; South Africa: Eastern Cape Province, 174– 250 m. New record off Mar del Plata, 1398 m. Material examined. USNM 52693 (holotype) off Drake Passage, Eltanin St. 254 (59° 49.4’ S, 68° 51.7’ W); MACN-In 40646 off Mar del Plata, Argentina, St. 59 (37° 49.688’ S, 54° 5.236’ W), 1398 m, September 2013. Description. Colony uniplanar and 6.0 cm wide, attached to dead specimen of scleractinian Bathelia candida through several non-expansive bases (Fig. 10). Branching dichotomous and highly anastomotic producing a fenestrate fan. Branches rectangular to elliptical in cross section (Fig. 11a), with larger axis perpendicular to plane of growth. Basal branches 1.0– 1.4 mm wide at shorter margin of cross section and around 2.0 mm wide at longer margin. Diameter of branches more or less constant from base towards tips and between branches, except new branchlets, which may be less than 1.0 mm wide. Coenosteum compact, white and porcellaneous. Microtexture more or less linear-granular. Strips 24–59 µm wide and parallel to each other, sometimes more diagonal than parallel to branch axis, ocasionally bifurcating and rejoining. Slits deep, short or long. Granules rounded, flat and sparse in some zones and more conical and clustered in others, resulting in flat or more concave strips, respectively. Fig. 11b illustrates transition from granular-imbricate texture to smoother granular one. Gastropores round, 0.2–0.3 mm wide (n=7) and arranged in anterior and antero-lateral surface of branches (Fig. 11a). Branchlet usually forms at margin of gastropore (Fig. 11a). In more or less horizontal branches, branchlets generally originate at right margin of gastropore and develop diagonally downwards towards left on inferior face of branch and diagonally upwards towards left on superior face of branch. In more or less vertical branches, branchlets originate at superior margin of gastropore and develop downwards. Gastropore tube peripheral and short, around 0.54 mm long, with spherical basal section which occupies about 2/3 of tube and encompasses most of gastrostyle (Fig. 11e). Towards surface of coenosteum a significant constriction transforms shape of superior section of tube to cylindrical, which surrounds gastrostyle tip. Gastrostyle robust (H:W=2), around 0.41 mm high and spindle-shaped, with wide smooth base; central section 0.22 mm wide at maximum diameter, bearing diagonal rows of blunt spines fused with each other, and tip that reaches beginning of cylindrical section of gastropore tube. Dactylopores of two types: those round, 32–48 µm wide (n=6), scattered uniformly on coenosteum and partially raised from surface (Fig. 11a, b) and those slit-like, 50–70 µm wide, placed along side of slender spines (Fig. 11c). Following direction of a branchlet developing downwards into a fenestrum, dactylotomes (slits) are oriented towards distal end of branchlet, thus spines bearing them are abcauline with respect to that branchlet. Spines lacking slit often present as well and higher and more slender than slitted ones (Fig. 11d). Dactylopore spines and branchlets more frequent at lateral and antero-lateral faces of branches. Branchlets seem to originate from dactylopore spines that extend and divide producing, first, additional dactylopores and, secondly, a new gastropore. Ampullae absent. Discussion. Errinopsis fenestrata was originally described by Cairns (1983a) based on specimens from Drake Passage at 280–340 m depth. Cairns and Zibrowius (2013) described specimens from South Africa at 250 m depth. The specimen from off Mar del Plata differs from the one described by Cairns (1983a) only in the width of coenosteal strips and of dactylopores. It is necessary to study more material in order to conclude whether this is normal variability within the species. The same differences exist between the Mar del Plata specimen and the material described by Cairns and Zibrowius (2013). Regarding coenosteum colour, it is orange in specimens from South Africa and white in those from off Mar del Plata and in type material. This may be due to natural variability within species. Cairns and Zibrowius (2013) mention Shag Rocks within the distribution range of E. fenestrata , but this location is not represented by specimens described in that paper nor in papers they cite. Bax and Cairns (2014) mention new records of this species in Burdwood Bank, South Georgia and Shag Rocks, but hitherto descriptions of this material haven´t been published. This publication provides an extension of the known geographical and bathimetric distribution of E. fenestrata . : Published as part of Bernal, M. C., Cairns, S. D., Penchaszadeh, P. E. & Lauretta, D., 2021, Stylasterids (Hydrozoa: Stylasteridae) from Mar del Plata submarine canyon and adjacent area (southwestern Atlantic), with a key to the species off Argentina, pp. 401-452 in Zootaxa 4969 (3) on pages 19-21, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4969.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/4751258 : {"references": ["Cairns, S. D. (1983 a) Antarctic and Subantarctic Stylasterina (Coelenterata: Hydrozoa). Biology of the Antarctic Seas XIII. Antarctic Research Series, 38 (2), 61 - 164.", "Cairns, S. D. & Zibrowius, H. (2013) Stylasteridae (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa, Filifera) from South Africa. Zootaxa, 3691 (1), 1 - 57. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 3691.1.1.", "Bax, N. & Cairns, S. D. (2014) Chapter 5.7. Stylasteridae (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa). In: De Broyer, C., Koubbi, P., Griffiths, H. J., Raymond, B., Udekem d'Acoz, C. d', Van de Putte, A. P., Danis, B., David, B., Grant, S., Gutt, J., Held, C., Hosie, G., Huettmann, F., Post, A., Ropert-Coudert, Y. (Eds.), Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean. Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, Cambridge, pp. 107 - 112."]}
format Text
author Bernal, M. C.
Cairns, S. D.
Penchaszadeh, P. E.
Lauretta, D.
author_facet Bernal, M. C.
Cairns, S. D.
Penchaszadeh, P. E.
Lauretta, D.
author_sort Bernal, M. C.
title Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns 1983
title_short Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns 1983
title_full Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns 1983
title_fullStr Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns 1983
title_full_unstemmed Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns 1983
title_sort errinopsis fenestrata cairns 1983
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4792426
https://zenodo.org/record/4792426
long_lat ENVELOPE(-42.033,-42.033,-53.550,-53.550)
ENVELOPE(-59.000,-59.000,-54.250,-54.250)
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Drake Passage
Argentina
Shag Rocks
Burdwood Bank
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Drake Passage
Argentina
Shag Rocks
Burdwood Bank
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Drake Passage
Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Drake Passage
Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research
Southern Ocean
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4792426 2023-05-15T14:02:23+02:00 Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns 1983 Bernal, M. C. Cairns, S. D. Penchaszadeh, P. E. Lauretta, D. 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4792426 https://zenodo.org/record/4792426 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/4751258 http://publication.plazi.org/id/6256ED0C494EBA3FFF93413E3235FF83 http://treatment.plazi.org/id/955B87C9A164DD35FF22FB24F1442E3B http://zoobank.org/140804AC-7852-46F4-811D-3D86F4AA1130 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4969.3.1 http://zenodo.org/record/4751258 http://publication.plazi.org/id/6256ED0C494EBA3FFF93413E3235FF83 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4751295 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4751299 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5619741 http://treatment.plazi.org/id/955B87C9A164DD35FF22FB24F1442E3B http://zoobank.org/140804AC-7852-46F4-811D-3D86F4AA1130 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4792427 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Cnidaria Hydrozoa Anthoathecata Stylasteridae Errinopsis Errinopsis fenestrata Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4792426 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4969.3.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4751295 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4751299 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5619741 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4792427 2022-02-08T12:40:44Z Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns, 1983a (Figs. 10, 11) Errinopsis fenestrata Cairns 1983a: 80–82, figs. 1i, 10a–g, map 3; Cairns & Macintryre 1992: 98, table 1; Cairns 2011: 9, fig. 7a; Cairns & Zibrowius 2013: 18–19, figs. 9a–i, 49, table 2, 51; Bax & Cairns 2014: 108–111, table 1, map 6 Distribution. Drake Passage and Shag Rocks, 280–340 m; South Africa: Eastern Cape Province, 174– 250 m. New record off Mar del Plata, 1398 m. Material examined. USNM 52693 (holotype) off Drake Passage, Eltanin St. 254 (59° 49.4’ S, 68° 51.7’ W); MACN-In 40646 off Mar del Plata, Argentina, St. 59 (37° 49.688’ S, 54° 5.236’ W), 1398 m, September 2013. Description. Colony uniplanar and 6.0 cm wide, attached to dead specimen of scleractinian Bathelia candida through several non-expansive bases (Fig. 10). Branching dichotomous and highly anastomotic producing a fenestrate fan. Branches rectangular to elliptical in cross section (Fig. 11a), with larger axis perpendicular to plane of growth. Basal branches 1.0– 1.4 mm wide at shorter margin of cross section and around 2.0 mm wide at longer margin. Diameter of branches more or less constant from base towards tips and between branches, except new branchlets, which may be less than 1.0 mm wide. Coenosteum compact, white and porcellaneous. Microtexture more or less linear-granular. Strips 24–59 µm wide and parallel to each other, sometimes more diagonal than parallel to branch axis, ocasionally bifurcating and rejoining. Slits deep, short or long. Granules rounded, flat and sparse in some zones and more conical and clustered in others, resulting in flat or more concave strips, respectively. Fig. 11b illustrates transition from granular-imbricate texture to smoother granular one. Gastropores round, 0.2–0.3 mm wide (n=7) and arranged in anterior and antero-lateral surface of branches (Fig. 11a). Branchlet usually forms at margin of gastropore (Fig. 11a). In more or less horizontal branches, branchlets generally originate at right margin of gastropore and develop diagonally downwards towards left on inferior face of branch and diagonally upwards towards left on superior face of branch. In more or less vertical branches, branchlets originate at superior margin of gastropore and develop downwards. Gastropore tube peripheral and short, around 0.54 mm long, with spherical basal section which occupies about 2/3 of tube and encompasses most of gastrostyle (Fig. 11e). Towards surface of coenosteum a significant constriction transforms shape of superior section of tube to cylindrical, which surrounds gastrostyle tip. Gastrostyle robust (H:W=2), around 0.41 mm high and spindle-shaped, with wide smooth base; central section 0.22 mm wide at maximum diameter, bearing diagonal rows of blunt spines fused with each other, and tip that reaches beginning of cylindrical section of gastropore tube. Dactylopores of two types: those round, 32–48 µm wide (n=6), scattered uniformly on coenosteum and partially raised from surface (Fig. 11a, b) and those slit-like, 50–70 µm wide, placed along side of slender spines (Fig. 11c). Following direction of a branchlet developing downwards into a fenestrum, dactylotomes (slits) are oriented towards distal end of branchlet, thus spines bearing them are abcauline with respect to that branchlet. Spines lacking slit often present as well and higher and more slender than slitted ones (Fig. 11d). Dactylopore spines and branchlets more frequent at lateral and antero-lateral faces of branches. Branchlets seem to originate from dactylopore spines that extend and divide producing, first, additional dactylopores and, secondly, a new gastropore. Ampullae absent. Discussion. Errinopsis fenestrata was originally described by Cairns (1983a) based on specimens from Drake Passage at 280–340 m depth. Cairns and Zibrowius (2013) described specimens from South Africa at 250 m depth. The specimen from off Mar del Plata differs from the one described by Cairns (1983a) only in the width of coenosteal strips and of dactylopores. It is necessary to study more material in order to conclude whether this is normal variability within the species. The same differences exist between the Mar del Plata specimen and the material described by Cairns and Zibrowius (2013). Regarding coenosteum colour, it is orange in specimens from South Africa and white in those from off Mar del Plata and in type material. This may be due to natural variability within species. Cairns and Zibrowius (2013) mention Shag Rocks within the distribution range of E. fenestrata , but this location is not represented by specimens described in that paper nor in papers they cite. Bax and Cairns (2014) mention new records of this species in Burdwood Bank, South Georgia and Shag Rocks, but hitherto descriptions of this material haven´t been published. This publication provides an extension of the known geographical and bathimetric distribution of E. fenestrata . : Published as part of Bernal, M. C., Cairns, S. D., Penchaszadeh, P. E. & Lauretta, D., 2021, Stylasterids (Hydrozoa: Stylasteridae) from Mar del Plata submarine canyon and adjacent area (southwestern Atlantic), with a key to the species off Argentina, pp. 401-452 in Zootaxa 4969 (3) on pages 19-21, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4969.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/4751258 : {"references": ["Cairns, S. D. (1983 a) Antarctic and Subantarctic Stylasterina (Coelenterata: Hydrozoa). Biology of the Antarctic Seas XIII. Antarctic Research Series, 38 (2), 61 - 164.", "Cairns, S. D. & Zibrowius, H. (2013) Stylasteridae (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa, Filifera) from South Africa. Zootaxa, 3691 (1), 1 - 57. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 3691.1.1.", "Bax, N. & Cairns, S. D. (2014) Chapter 5.7. Stylasteridae (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa). In: De Broyer, C., Koubbi, P., Griffiths, H. J., Raymond, B., Udekem d'Acoz, C. d', Van de Putte, A. P., Danis, B., David, B., Grant, S., Gutt, J., Held, C., Hosie, G., Huettmann, F., Post, A., Ropert-Coudert, Y. (Eds.), Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean. Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, Cambridge, pp. 107 - 112."]} Text Antarc* Antarctic Drake Passage Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Southern Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic Drake Passage Argentina Shag Rocks ENVELOPE(-42.033,-42.033,-53.550,-53.550) Burdwood Bank ENVELOPE(-59.000,-59.000,-54.250,-54.250)