Errinopora Fisher 1931

Genus Errinopora Fisher, 1931 Type species. Errina pourtalesii Dall, 1884 Included species. Errinopora cestoporina Cairns; E. dichotoma Lindner & Cairns; E. disticha Lindner & Cairns; E. fisheri Lindner & Cairns; E. nanneca Fisher; E. porifera (Naumov); E. pourtalesii (Dall); E. stylifer...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bernal, M. C., Cairns, S. D., Penchaszadeh, P. E., Lauretta, D.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/4792477
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4792477
Description
Summary:Genus Errinopora Fisher, 1931 Type species. Errina pourtalesii Dall, 1884 Included species. Errinopora cestoporina Cairns; E. dichotoma Lindner & Cairns; E. disticha Lindner & Cairns; E. fisheri Lindner & Cairns; E. nanneca Fisher; E. porifera (Naumov); E. pourtalesii (Dall); E. stylifera (Broch); E. undulata Lindner & Cairns; E. zarhyncha Fisher Distribution. Central California, 49–183 m; Aleutian Islands, 40–658 m; Okhotsk Sea, 190–250 m; Patagonia, 42° S to 48° S; Tierra del Fuego, 359–384 m (see Cairns & Lindner 2011). New record off Mar del Plata, 819 m. Diagnosis (from Cairns & Lindner 2011, changes in bold). Colonies uniplanar to slightly bushy; branches round, elliptical, or lamellar in cross section, often robust with blunt tips. Coenosteal texture reticulate-spinose (with wide slits resulting in a spongy texture) or reticulate-granular; exterior surface of dactylopore spines usually inconspicuously longitudinally ridged; coenosteum orange, pink, and white. One species, Errinopora cestoporina, bears numerous perforated mounds on surface. Dactylopores dimorphic, either with a U-shaped spine or without spine, i.e. flush. The most common, termed the primary dactylopore spine,is U-shaped and usually robust (thick-walled),occurring randomly, in pseudocyclosystems, or often laterally fusing to form rows or taller terraces that flank rows of gastropores. When dactylopore spines flank both sides of a gastropore row and their dactylotomes are directed toward the gastropores it is termed bilateral or distichoporine; if only one row of spines flank a row of gastropores, then unilateral. If isolated, dactylotomes usually abcauline in orientation. Much smaller flush dactylopores, termed secondary dactylopores, which in general lack dactylostyles, commonly scattered over coenosteum of many species. Dactylostyles usually well developed, easily seen from external view. Gastropores also dimorphic, the primary gastropores being circular in outline, flush with coenosteum (having no lip), and ...