Schizoplumularia elegans Agís, Ramil & Calder, 2016, n. sp.

Schizoplumularia elegans n. sp. (Figs 6‒9; Table 4) Material examined. New Caledonia . BIOCAL 1, stn CP 110, 22°12.383'‒ 22°13.315'S, 167°06.434' ‒167°09.936'E, 275‒320 m, 09-IX-1985: five fragmented colonies to 60 mm high; two colonies with damaged gonothecae. One colony, 120 mm...

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Main Authors: Agís, José Ansín, Ramil, Fran, Calder, Dale R.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5684339
https://zenodo.org/record/5684339
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5684339
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
Leptothecata
Plumulariidae
Schizoplumularia
Schizoplumularia elegans
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Cnidaria
Hydrozoa
Leptothecata
Plumulariidae
Schizoplumularia
Schizoplumularia elegans
Agís, José Ansín
Ramil, Fran
Calder, Dale R.
Schizoplumularia elegans Agís, Ramil & Calder, 2016, n. sp.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Cnidaria
Hydrozoa
Leptothecata
Plumulariidae
Schizoplumularia
Schizoplumularia elegans
description Schizoplumularia elegans n. sp. (Figs 6‒9; Table 4) Material examined. New Caledonia . BIOCAL 1, stn CP 110, 22°12.383'‒ 22°13.315'S, 167°06.434' ‒167°09.936'E, 275‒320 m, 09-IX-1985: five fragmented colonies to 60 mm high; two colonies with damaged gonothecae. One colony, 120 mm high in two fragments is the holotype (MNHN-IK-2012-16603); remaining colonies are paratypes (MNHN-IK-2012-16604; RMNH.Coel.42071). MUSORSTOM 4, stn CP 171, 18°57.8'S, 163°14.0'E, 435 m, 17-IX-1985: some badly damaged colonies up to 112 mm high; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 4, stn CP 172, 19°01.2'S, 163°16.0'E, 275‒330 m, 17-IX-1985: one mutilated colony of 70 mm with a few hydrocladia; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 4, stn CP 180, 18°56.8'S, 163°17.7'E, 450 m, 18-IX-1985: five fragmented colonies and a number of pieces, maximal height c. 60 mm; no gonothecae. (MNHN). CHALCAL 2, stn DW 80, 23°26.70'S, 168°01.80'E, 160 m, 31-X-1986: one fragment 15 mm high; with damaged gonothecae. (MNHN). Loyalty Islands . MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 412, 20°40.60'S, 167°03.75'E, 437 m, 15-II-1989: 100 mm high colony with two fragments of hydrocladia; no gonothecae. (MNHN; RMNH one slide). MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 421, 20°26.27'S, 166°40.17'E, 245 m, 16-II-1989: 80 mm high colony; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 449, 20°54.40'S, 167°17.75'E, 300 m, 20-II-1989: one colony 80 mm high in bad condition; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 457, 21°00.42'S, 167°28.71'E, 353 m, 20-II-1989: single colony 80 mm high and some fragments; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 6, stn CP 464, 21°02.30'S, 167°31.60'E, 430 m, 21-II-1989: single small colony c. 65 mm high with Kirchenpaueria bonnevieae (Billard, 1906) as epibiontic and a fragment; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 485, 21°23.48'S, 167°59.33'E, 350 m, 23-II-1989: top part of colony, 45 mm high, plus some detached branches up to 25 mm; no gonothecae. (MNHN). Norfolk Ridge . SMIB 4, stn DW 53, 23°40.1'‒23°39.5'S, 167°59.9'‒168°00.3'E, 250‒270 m, 09-III-1989: single c. 80 mm high spirally-built colony; no gonothecae. (MNHN; RMNH one slide). BATHUS 3, stn CP 804, 23º41'S, 168º00'E, 244‒278 m, 27-XI-1993: one colony 65 mm high; without gonothecae. (MNHN). North New Caledonia . BATHUS 4, stn CP 902, 19º01'S, 163º15'E, 341‒351 m, 04-VIII-1994: one colony 100 mm high; without gonothecae. (MNHN). BATHUS 4, stn CP 906, 19º01'S, 163º15'E, 339‒350 m, 04-VIII-1994: one colony 120 mm high; without gonothecae. (MNHN). Etymology. The specific name is the Latin adjective elegans , chosen to emphasize the elegant and graceful habitus of the colony. Distribution. Schizoplumularia elegans n. sp. was collected at several localities from New Caledonia, the Norfolk Ridge, and the Loyalty Islands, at depths from 160 to 450 m. Description. Hydrorhizae of colonies consisting of a mass of intertwining tubules adhering to sandy sediment, supporting a polysiphonic and forked main axis; main axis sinuous to geniculate in younger parts of colony. Hydrocauli given off from main axis, arranged alternately right and left in one plane. Main axis of colony having same structure as in Schizoplumularia vervoorti n. sp. and S. geniculata n. sp. : basal part with a primary axial tube curving away from main axis to form first hydrocaulus; this hydrocaulus with apophyses and hydrocladia disposed alternately left and right in the same plane; remaining hydrocauli originating from secondary axial tubes, given off to left and right of main axis, with apophyses and hydrocladia appearing only after tube curves away from main axis to form a typical hydrocaulus. In distal part of colony, a new secondary axial tube arising from axil of each hydrocaulus and adhering to old secondary axial tubes, these later giving off new hydrocauli as described for the other two species. Hydrocauli always monosiphonic, divided by transverse nodes visible only on apical parts; internodes with a varying number of apophyses, with as many as 10 basally and one or two distally; apophyses arranged alternately right and left in one plane, with one to three nematothecae between two consecutive apophyses on same side. Nematothecae on axis of hydrocauli arranged mostly in a row on one side, only rarely observed on other side. Each apophysis with two axillary nematothecae and one mamelon on upper surface. Hydrocladia heteromerous; basal internode ahydrothecate, bearing a nematotheca on a small proximal elevation and with two internal perisarcal rings near each end; remaining internodes alternately hydrothecate and ahydrothecate, separated by slightly oblique nodes. Ahydrothecate internodes weakly indicated on basal part of hydrocladia, with one nematotheca on a small elevation near basal node. Hydrothecate internodes each with one hydrotheca and three nematothecae: one mesial inferior and a pair of laterals. Hydrothecae situated on basal half of internode, very small, cup-shaped, adcauline wall fully adnate, abcauline wall straight; hydrothecal rim smooth, circular. Number and development of internal perisarcal rings in internodes varied, with up to five observed on hydrothecate internodes: three below, one just proximal to base and one distal to hydrotheca; ahydrothecate internodes with two perisarcal thickenings, one basal and one distal. All nematothecae conical, bithalamic, movable; mesial inferior nematothecae located on an elevation; lateral nematothecae large, mounted on a reduced apophysis. Gonothecae arising from apophyses; all of them tubular to pear-shaped, with a circular terminal aperture closed by an operculum. Variability. Lateral nematothecae were very large (fig. 9A‒B) in colonies from stations MUSORSTOM 6 DW 421 and DW 457, with their lengths varying even on the same hydrocladium. Nodes separating hydrothecate and ahydrothecate internodes were not easily visible on basal parts of some hydrocladia. In material from station DW 53, one hydrocauline internode was observed with a single apophysis as a result of regeneration after rupture. Also in material from stn DW 53, one hydrothecate internode at the proximalmost end of a hydrocladium had two mesial inferior nematothecae. BIOCAL 1 MUSORSTOM 6 SMIB 4 stn CP 110 stn DW 485 stn DW 53 First hydrocladial internode, length 110‒140 160‒200 130‒170 Length hydrothecate hydrocladial internodes 360‒440 430‒490 330‒360 Length ahydrothecate hydrocladial internodes 110‒180 180‒250 150‒190 Remarks. Material from the Loyalty Islands (MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 449), the Norfolk Ridge (SMIB 4, stn DW 53), and BATHUS 3 (stn CP 804) had slightly larger hydrothecae, but the remaining characters are similar to the other examined colonies and therefore we assign it to the same species. Examined material is characterized by large, branched, strongly polysiphonic colonies. Basal parts of the main axis are thick and straight, with long and curved hydrocauli arranged to right and left. In distal parts the main axis is geniculate, and hydrocauli originate from secondary axial tubes, similar to those described for Schizoplumularia vervoorti n. sp. This species nevertheless differs from S. vervoorti in the greater size and greater polysiphonic development of the colony, by the decidedly small size of the hydrothecae, by the position of the hydrothecae on the basal half of the internode, and by the existence of ahydrothecate internodes on the hydrocladia. Some characters of Schizoplumularia elegans n. sp. resemble those of Plumularia spiralis Billard, 1911, but in that species the colony has the normal morphology seen in species of Plumularia Lamarck, 1816, with hydrocauli arising from a hydrorhiza and not from a polysiphonic main axis. The hydrocaulus of S. spiralis is monosiphonic with a characteristic zig-zag shape, hydrocladia are homomerously segmented, and hydrothecae are larger. In the heteromerous segmentation of hydrocladia, in overall measurements, in disposition of hydrothecae and nematothecae on internodes, and in shape and small size of hydrothecae, colonies of this species come close to Plumularia tenuissima Totton, 1930, but there are important differences that separate the two species. Type material of P. tenuissima , a polysiphonic fragment 1 cm high that is branched and rebranched in one plane (Totton 1930), clearly differs from the ramification pattern of Schizoplumularia elegans , in which the main axis may be forked or unforked but the only lateral ramifications are represented by the typical lateral hydrocauli, always monosiphonic and unbranched. In addition, in P. tenuissima the hydrocladia are alternate on distal parts of branches but become sub-opposite and decussate in other parts and the basalmost ahydrothecate internode of hydrocladia is fused with the apophyses; both features of Totton’s species resemble the genus Nemertesia Lamouroux, 1812. The same opinion was already advanced by Vervoort & Watson (2003) when describing new material of P. tenuissima from New Zealand. Part of the material studied by Vervoort & Watson (2003) was also examined during this work (RMNH-Coel. slides 2100, 2195, 2196, 3030). These colonies are polysiphonic and bear hydrocladia on the main axis. Ramifications arise from apophyses on secondary tubes. They seem to conform with diagnoses of Plumularia rather than Schizoplumularia . While trophosomes of both species are similar, their gonothecae differ, with those of P. tenuissima having an oblique aperture while the aperture is terminal in Schizoplumularia . Moreover, ramification of their colonies is very different. Plumularia brachiata Totton, 1930 (= Plumularia mula Totton, 1936) also shows some similarities with S. elegans , but its ramification pattern is similar to that of P. tenuissima. : Published as part of Agís, José Ansín, Ramil, Fran & Calder, Dale R., 2016, One new genus and three new species of plumulariid hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa, Plumulariidae) from the western Pacific Ocean, with a re-examination of Plumularia insignis Allman, 1883 and related taxa, pp. 57-86 in Zootaxa 4169 (1) on pages 67-73, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4169.1.3, http://zenodo.org/record/263049 : {"references": ["Plumularia abietina: fragments of syntype material at the Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris; Challenger Expedition, Prince Edward Island (South Africa). MNHN-IK- 2012 - 16035, two slides:", "Totton, A. K. (1930) Coelenterata. Part V. - Hydroida. British Antarctic (\" Terra Nova \") Expedition, 1910. Natural History Report, Zoology, 5 (5), 131 - 252.", "Vervoort, W. & Watson, J. E. (2003) The marine fauna of New Zealand: Leptothecata (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) (Thecate Hydroids). NIWA Biodiversity Memoir, 119, 1 - 538."]}
format Text
author Agís, José Ansín
Ramil, Fran
Calder, Dale R.
author_facet Agís, José Ansín
Ramil, Fran
Calder, Dale R.
author_sort Agís, José Ansín
title Schizoplumularia elegans Agís, Ramil & Calder, 2016, n. sp.
title_short Schizoplumularia elegans Agís, Ramil & Calder, 2016, n. sp.
title_full Schizoplumularia elegans Agís, Ramil & Calder, 2016, n. sp.
title_fullStr Schizoplumularia elegans Agís, Ramil & Calder, 2016, n. sp.
title_full_unstemmed Schizoplumularia elegans Agís, Ramil & Calder, 2016, n. sp.
title_sort schizoplumularia elegans agís, ramil & calder, 2016, n. sp.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5684339
https://zenodo.org/record/5684339
long_lat ENVELOPE(140.027,140.027,-66.666,-66.666)
geographic Antarctic
Pacific
New Zealand
Lamarck
geographic_facet Antarctic
Pacific
New Zealand
Lamarck
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Prince Edward Island
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Prince Edward Island
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5684339 2023-05-15T13:58:35+02:00 Schizoplumularia elegans Agís, Ramil & Calder, 2016, n. sp. Agís, José Ansín Ramil, Fran Calder, Dale R. 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5684339 https://zenodo.org/record/5684339 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/263049 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFA1FFF5FF82FF80C7468430FFB8FFCA http://zoobank.org/05BDC917-2890-41BE-B371-5332DB5B7ED9 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4169.1.3 http://zenodo.org/record/263049 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFA1FFF5FF82FF80C7468430FFB8FFCA https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.263055 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.263056 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.263057 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.263058 http://zoobank.org/05BDC917-2890-41BE-B371-5332DB5B7ED9 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5684338 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Cnidaria Hydrozoa Leptothecata Plumulariidae Schizoplumularia Schizoplumularia elegans Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5684339 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4169.1.3 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.263055 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.263056 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.263057 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.263058 https://do 2022-02-08T13:42:09Z Schizoplumularia elegans n. sp. (Figs 6‒9; Table 4) Material examined. New Caledonia . BIOCAL 1, stn CP 110, 22°12.383'‒ 22°13.315'S, 167°06.434' ‒167°09.936'E, 275‒320 m, 09-IX-1985: five fragmented colonies to 60 mm high; two colonies with damaged gonothecae. One colony, 120 mm high in two fragments is the holotype (MNHN-IK-2012-16603); remaining colonies are paratypes (MNHN-IK-2012-16604; RMNH.Coel.42071). MUSORSTOM 4, stn CP 171, 18°57.8'S, 163°14.0'E, 435 m, 17-IX-1985: some badly damaged colonies up to 112 mm high; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 4, stn CP 172, 19°01.2'S, 163°16.0'E, 275‒330 m, 17-IX-1985: one mutilated colony of 70 mm with a few hydrocladia; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 4, stn CP 180, 18°56.8'S, 163°17.7'E, 450 m, 18-IX-1985: five fragmented colonies and a number of pieces, maximal height c. 60 mm; no gonothecae. (MNHN). CHALCAL 2, stn DW 80, 23°26.70'S, 168°01.80'E, 160 m, 31-X-1986: one fragment 15 mm high; with damaged gonothecae. (MNHN). Loyalty Islands . MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 412, 20°40.60'S, 167°03.75'E, 437 m, 15-II-1989: 100 mm high colony with two fragments of hydrocladia; no gonothecae. (MNHN; RMNH one slide). MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 421, 20°26.27'S, 166°40.17'E, 245 m, 16-II-1989: 80 mm high colony; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 449, 20°54.40'S, 167°17.75'E, 300 m, 20-II-1989: one colony 80 mm high in bad condition; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 457, 21°00.42'S, 167°28.71'E, 353 m, 20-II-1989: single colony 80 mm high and some fragments; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 6, stn CP 464, 21°02.30'S, 167°31.60'E, 430 m, 21-II-1989: single small colony c. 65 mm high with Kirchenpaueria bonnevieae (Billard, 1906) as epibiontic and a fragment; no gonothecae. (MNHN). MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 485, 21°23.48'S, 167°59.33'E, 350 m, 23-II-1989: top part of colony, 45 mm high, plus some detached branches up to 25 mm; no gonothecae. (MNHN). Norfolk Ridge . SMIB 4, stn DW 53, 23°40.1'‒23°39.5'S, 167°59.9'‒168°00.3'E, 250‒270 m, 09-III-1989: single c. 80 mm high spirally-built colony; no gonothecae. (MNHN; RMNH one slide). BATHUS 3, stn CP 804, 23º41'S, 168º00'E, 244‒278 m, 27-XI-1993: one colony 65 mm high; without gonothecae. (MNHN). North New Caledonia . BATHUS 4, stn CP 902, 19º01'S, 163º15'E, 341‒351 m, 04-VIII-1994: one colony 100 mm high; without gonothecae. (MNHN). BATHUS 4, stn CP 906, 19º01'S, 163º15'E, 339‒350 m, 04-VIII-1994: one colony 120 mm high; without gonothecae. (MNHN). Etymology. The specific name is the Latin adjective elegans , chosen to emphasize the elegant and graceful habitus of the colony. Distribution. Schizoplumularia elegans n. sp. was collected at several localities from New Caledonia, the Norfolk Ridge, and the Loyalty Islands, at depths from 160 to 450 m. Description. Hydrorhizae of colonies consisting of a mass of intertwining tubules adhering to sandy sediment, supporting a polysiphonic and forked main axis; main axis sinuous to geniculate in younger parts of colony. Hydrocauli given off from main axis, arranged alternately right and left in one plane. Main axis of colony having same structure as in Schizoplumularia vervoorti n. sp. and S. geniculata n. sp. : basal part with a primary axial tube curving away from main axis to form first hydrocaulus; this hydrocaulus with apophyses and hydrocladia disposed alternately left and right in the same plane; remaining hydrocauli originating from secondary axial tubes, given off to left and right of main axis, with apophyses and hydrocladia appearing only after tube curves away from main axis to form a typical hydrocaulus. In distal part of colony, a new secondary axial tube arising from axil of each hydrocaulus and adhering to old secondary axial tubes, these later giving off new hydrocauli as described for the other two species. Hydrocauli always monosiphonic, divided by transverse nodes visible only on apical parts; internodes with a varying number of apophyses, with as many as 10 basally and one or two distally; apophyses arranged alternately right and left in one plane, with one to three nematothecae between two consecutive apophyses on same side. Nematothecae on axis of hydrocauli arranged mostly in a row on one side, only rarely observed on other side. Each apophysis with two axillary nematothecae and one mamelon on upper surface. Hydrocladia heteromerous; basal internode ahydrothecate, bearing a nematotheca on a small proximal elevation and with two internal perisarcal rings near each end; remaining internodes alternately hydrothecate and ahydrothecate, separated by slightly oblique nodes. Ahydrothecate internodes weakly indicated on basal part of hydrocladia, with one nematotheca on a small elevation near basal node. Hydrothecate internodes each with one hydrotheca and three nematothecae: one mesial inferior and a pair of laterals. Hydrothecae situated on basal half of internode, very small, cup-shaped, adcauline wall fully adnate, abcauline wall straight; hydrothecal rim smooth, circular. Number and development of internal perisarcal rings in internodes varied, with up to five observed on hydrothecate internodes: three below, one just proximal to base and one distal to hydrotheca; ahydrothecate internodes with two perisarcal thickenings, one basal and one distal. All nematothecae conical, bithalamic, movable; mesial inferior nematothecae located on an elevation; lateral nematothecae large, mounted on a reduced apophysis. Gonothecae arising from apophyses; all of them tubular to pear-shaped, with a circular terminal aperture closed by an operculum. Variability. Lateral nematothecae were very large (fig. 9A‒B) in colonies from stations MUSORSTOM 6 DW 421 and DW 457, with their lengths varying even on the same hydrocladium. Nodes separating hydrothecate and ahydrothecate internodes were not easily visible on basal parts of some hydrocladia. In material from station DW 53, one hydrocauline internode was observed with a single apophysis as a result of regeneration after rupture. Also in material from stn DW 53, one hydrothecate internode at the proximalmost end of a hydrocladium had two mesial inferior nematothecae. BIOCAL 1 MUSORSTOM 6 SMIB 4 stn CP 110 stn DW 485 stn DW 53 First hydrocladial internode, length 110‒140 160‒200 130‒170 Length hydrothecate hydrocladial internodes 360‒440 430‒490 330‒360 Length ahydrothecate hydrocladial internodes 110‒180 180‒250 150‒190 Remarks. Material from the Loyalty Islands (MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW 449), the Norfolk Ridge (SMIB 4, stn DW 53), and BATHUS 3 (stn CP 804) had slightly larger hydrothecae, but the remaining characters are similar to the other examined colonies and therefore we assign it to the same species. Examined material is characterized by large, branched, strongly polysiphonic colonies. Basal parts of the main axis are thick and straight, with long and curved hydrocauli arranged to right and left. In distal parts the main axis is geniculate, and hydrocauli originate from secondary axial tubes, similar to those described for Schizoplumularia vervoorti n. sp. This species nevertheless differs from S. vervoorti in the greater size and greater polysiphonic development of the colony, by the decidedly small size of the hydrothecae, by the position of the hydrothecae on the basal half of the internode, and by the existence of ahydrothecate internodes on the hydrocladia. Some characters of Schizoplumularia elegans n. sp. resemble those of Plumularia spiralis Billard, 1911, but in that species the colony has the normal morphology seen in species of Plumularia Lamarck, 1816, with hydrocauli arising from a hydrorhiza and not from a polysiphonic main axis. The hydrocaulus of S. spiralis is monosiphonic with a characteristic zig-zag shape, hydrocladia are homomerously segmented, and hydrothecae are larger. In the heteromerous segmentation of hydrocladia, in overall measurements, in disposition of hydrothecae and nematothecae on internodes, and in shape and small size of hydrothecae, colonies of this species come close to Plumularia tenuissima Totton, 1930, but there are important differences that separate the two species. Type material of P. tenuissima , a polysiphonic fragment 1 cm high that is branched and rebranched in one plane (Totton 1930), clearly differs from the ramification pattern of Schizoplumularia elegans , in which the main axis may be forked or unforked but the only lateral ramifications are represented by the typical lateral hydrocauli, always monosiphonic and unbranched. In addition, in P. tenuissima the hydrocladia are alternate on distal parts of branches but become sub-opposite and decussate in other parts and the basalmost ahydrothecate internode of hydrocladia is fused with the apophyses; both features of Totton’s species resemble the genus Nemertesia Lamouroux, 1812. The same opinion was already advanced by Vervoort & Watson (2003) when describing new material of P. tenuissima from New Zealand. Part of the material studied by Vervoort & Watson (2003) was also examined during this work (RMNH-Coel. slides 2100, 2195, 2196, 3030). These colonies are polysiphonic and bear hydrocladia on the main axis. Ramifications arise from apophyses on secondary tubes. They seem to conform with diagnoses of Plumularia rather than Schizoplumularia . While trophosomes of both species are similar, their gonothecae differ, with those of P. tenuissima having an oblique aperture while the aperture is terminal in Schizoplumularia . Moreover, ramification of their colonies is very different. Plumularia brachiata Totton, 1930 (= Plumularia mula Totton, 1936) also shows some similarities with S. elegans , but its ramification pattern is similar to that of P. tenuissima. : Published as part of Agís, José Ansín, Ramil, Fran & Calder, Dale R., 2016, One new genus and three new species of plumulariid hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa, Plumulariidae) from the western Pacific Ocean, with a re-examination of Plumularia insignis Allman, 1883 and related taxa, pp. 57-86 in Zootaxa 4169 (1) on pages 67-73, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4169.1.3, http://zenodo.org/record/263049 : {"references": ["Plumularia abietina: fragments of syntype material at the Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris; Challenger Expedition, Prince Edward Island (South Africa). MNHN-IK- 2012 - 16035, two slides:", "Totton, A. K. (1930) Coelenterata. Part V. - Hydroida. British Antarctic (\" Terra Nova \") Expedition, 1910. Natural History Report, Zoology, 5 (5), 131 - 252.", "Vervoort, W. & Watson, J. E. (2003) The marine fauna of New Zealand: Leptothecata (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) (Thecate Hydroids). NIWA Biodiversity Memoir, 119, 1 - 538."]} Text Antarc* Antarctic Prince Edward Island DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Pacific New Zealand Lamarck ENVELOPE(140.027,140.027,-66.666,-66.666)