Radicipes challengeri Wright & Studer 1889

Radicipes challengeri Wright & Studer, 1889 Figs. 2 A,B, 11, 12 Strophogorgia challengeri Wright, 1885: 691 ( nom. nud .). Strophogorgia challengeri Wright & Studer, 1889: 3 –4, pl. 1, fig. 1, pl. 5a, fig. 2. Lepidogorgia challengeri: VerSluyS, 1902: 14–15, text-figS. 18-18-19.— ThomSon &...

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Main Author: Perez, Carlos D.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2017
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5634513
https://zenodo.org/record/5634513
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Summary:Radicipes challengeri Wright & Studer, 1889 Figs. 2 A,B, 11, 12 Strophogorgia challengeri Wright, 1885: 691 ( nom. nud .). Strophogorgia challengeri Wright & Studer, 1889: 3 –4, pl. 1, fig. 1, pl. 5a, fig. 2. Lepidogorgia challengeri: VerSluyS, 1902: 14–15, text-figS. 18-18-19.— ThomSon & HenderSon, 1906: 27 (tabular key).— ThomSon, 1927: 20, pl. 4, fig. 17. Radicipes challengeri: not JungerSen, 1915: 1183 –1184 (= R. gracilis ).— Kükenthal, 1919: 543 –544; 1924: 411–412.—not Kramp, 1932: 10.— Deichmann, 1936: 237.— MadSen, 1944: 44 –46, text-figS. 33–37.— Watling & AuSter, 2005: 294 (liSted).— Altuna, 2010: 10.— Watling et al. , 2011: 59 (liSted).— Cordeiro et al. , 2015: 95 (tabular key). Types and Type Locality. BMNH 1889.5.27.3 (holotype, several fragments); Chall- 4, 36°25’N, 8°12’W (off Cadiz, Spain), 1097 m. Material Examined . Ger- 142, 24°28'N, 80°12'W, 805 (USNM 57314); Pill -586, 23°32'N, 82°33'W, 1682- 1737 (USNM 57317); Or -1341, 22°55'N, 79°16'W, 439 (USNM 50184). Description . Colonies delicate, coiled in a clockwise manner towards the tip, with a calcareous and delicate holdfast. AXis with a maXimum diameter of 0.75 mm. Small polyps, 0.7 to 1.7 mm long (Fig. 2 A,B), disposed in a single line, 1.5–4.0 mm apart. Polyps with more conspicuous sclerites on abaXial and outer lateral sides, more conspicuous distally. Body wall filled with slightly to completely flattened rods, being more flattened on polyp base, tentacles and in adaXial rows, more rounded in abaXial rows. Body wall rods longitudinally arranged and fairly uniform in length, being slightly longer near oral portion, 0.15–0.53 mm long and 0.02–0.06 mm in width (Figs. 11 A, 12A). Infrabasal sclerites rare or absent, slightly to completely flattened, variable in size, immersed in a dense coenenchyme, appearing as a naked base. Tentacular rods homogeneous in size (Figs. 11 C, 12B), 0.15–0.35 mm long and 0.02–0.03 mm in width, with length equal to or smaller than those from the base, distally becoming rare or absent. Pinnular sclerites also sparse towards the tips of tentacles, 0.1–0.15 mm long and 0.02–0.04 mm in width (Fig. 11 B). AdaXial side of polyps naked or with few conspicuous sclerites. Spaces between polyps completely naked in both polypar and abpolypar faces of the colony. Coenenchymal sclerites rare or absent. When present, coenenchymal sclerites are 8-shaped scales. Comparisons . Radicipes challengeri is one of the species in the genus having few sclerites, but not essentially absent as in R. spiralis , and has the smallest polyps of those in the genus. Morphologically, the most closely-related species is R. kopelatos (southwestern Atlantic), but the species described here is distinguished from R. kopelatos by showing rare or no coenenchymal sclerites, by not having rods in the body wall in the coenenchyme between polyps, and less conspicuous and more flattened body wall rods. Young parts (terminal portions of branch) in R. gracilis might be confused with colonies of R. challengeri by showing inconspicuous sclerites in the body wall of polyps. Remarks . Of all available western Atlantic records of Radicipes , only three match the eastern Atlantic type of R. challengeri . This is the first record of this species in the western Atlantic. However, western Atlantic specimens have slightly more conspicuous body wall rods and infrabasal sclerites surrounding the aXis beneath the polyp. There are no recent eastern Atlantic records of R. challengeri , but it is possible that most of the records published as Radicipes sp. belong to this species (see Distribution section under genus Radicipes ). It remains to be determined which species correspond to the West African record (see Fig. 3). It is not unusual to find amphi-Atlantic coral species, especially in groups restricted to deep waters. Known eXamples that demonstrate this geographic pattern include scleractinians (Cairns & Chapman, 2001), octocorals (Pires & Castro, 2010) and possibly chrysogorgiids (Grasshoff, 1981; Cairns, 2001). Braga-Henriques et al. (2013: 4024) also argued that 35 % of the deep-water coral species occurring in the central northeast Atlantic (Azores) have amphi-Atlantic distributions; these authors found depth-related trends of faunal change in their dataset, i.e. the proportion of amphi-Atlantic species increased from 19% at at 100–600 m to 23% at the 1000–1500 m. The scarcity of data makes it difficult to understand how these populations were connected in the past. Lastly, as occurs in the scleractinian Lophelia pertusa (see Goff-Vitry et al. , 2004), it is even possible that eastern and western Atlantic populations of R. challengeri form a compleX of cryptic species. Distribution . Western Atlantic: Straits of Florida and Cuba; Eastern Atlantic: Iceland and Portugal (mainland), 439–1737 m. : Published as part of Perez, Carlos D., 2017, A revision of the genus Radicipes Stearns, 1883 (Anthozoa: Octocorallia: Chrysogorgiidae), pp. 1-26 in Zootaxa 4319 (1) on pages 17-20, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4319.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/893037 : {"references": ["Wright, E. P. & Studer, T. (1889) Report on the Alcyonaria collected by H. M. S. Challenger during the yearS 1873 - 1876. Report on the Scientific Results of H. M. S. Challenger during the years 1873 - 76, Zoology, 31 (64), 1 - 314.", "Wright, E. P. (1885) The Alcyonaria. In: Report on the Scientific Results of H. M. S. Challenger. Narrative, 1 (2), 689 - 693.", "ThomSon, J. A. & HenderSon, W. D. (1906) An account of the AlcyonarianS collected by the Royal Indian Survey Ship InveStigator in the Indian Ocean. Part 1. The Alcyonarians of the Deep Sea. Indian MuSeum, Calcutta, 132 pp.", "ThomSon, J. A. (1927) AlcyonaireS provenant deS campagneS ScientifiqueS du Prince Albert Ier de Monaco. Resultats des Campagnes Scientifiques Albert I, 73, 1 - 77.", "JungerSen, H. F. E. (1915) Alcyonaria, Antipatharia og Madreporaria. ConSpectuS Faunae Groenlandicae. Meddelelser Gronland, 23, 1156 - 1212.", "Kukenthal, W. (1919) Gorgonaria. Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse der Tiefsee-Expedition Valdivia, 13 (2), 1 - 946.", "Kramp, P. L. (1932) The Godthaab Expedition 1928. Alcyonaria, Antipatharia, and Madreporaria. Meddelelser Gronland, 79 (4), 1 - 20.", "Deichmann, E. (1936) The Alcyonaria of the WeStern part of the Atlantic Ocean. Memoirs of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, 53, 253 - 308.", "MadSen, F. J. (1944) Octocorallia. Danish Ingolf-Expedition, 5 (13), 1 - 65.", "Watling, L. & AuSter, P. (2005) DiStribution of deep-Water Alcyonacea off the northeaSt coaSt of the United StateS. In: FreiWald, A. & Murray, R. J. (EdS.), Cold-Water Corals and Ecosystems. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, pp. 279 - 296. httpS: // doi. org / 10.1007 / 3 - 540 - 27673 - 4 _ 13", "Altuna, A. (2010) LiStado de loS cnidarioS bentonicoS (Cnidaria) del Golfo de Vizcaya y zonaS proximaS (Atlantico NE) (42 \u00b0 N a 48 \u00b0 30 ' N y 10 \u00b0 W). In: Proyecto Fauna Iberica. MuSeo Nacional de CienciaS NaturaleS, Madrid, pp. 1 - 27.", "Watling, L., France, S., Pante, E. & SimpSon, A. (2011) Biology of deep-Water octocoralS. In: LeSSer, M. (Ed.), Advances in Marine Biology. ElSevier Academic preSS, London, pp. 41 - 122.", "Cordeiro, R. T. S., CaStro, C. B. & Perez, C. D. (2015) Deep-Water octocoralS (Cnidaria: Octocorallia) from Brazil: Family ChrySogorgiidae Verrill, 1883. Zootaxa, 4058 (1), 081 - 100.", "GraSShoff, M. (1981) Gorgonaria und Pennatularia (Cnidaria: Anthozoa) von MittelatlantiSchen Rucken SW der Azoren. Steenstrupia, 7 (9), 213 - 230.", "Goff-Vitry, M. C., RogerS, A. D. & BagloW, D. (2004) A deep-Sea Slant on the molecular phylogeny of the Scleractinia. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 30, 167 - 177."]}