Plumatella (Afrindella) persica : Annandale 1919

Plumatella (Afrindella) persica Annandale, 1919 (Fig. 7) Original description. Plumatella (Afrindella) persica: Annandale 1919, p. 92, 93. Type material. ZEV 3637 (lectotype, chosen here) collected November, 1918 at the Randa stream, 4 miles NW Jellalabad, Seistan (now Afghanistan) by Nelson Annanda...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wood, Timothy S.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Zev
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/7270879
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7270879
Description
Summary:Plumatella (Afrindella) persica Annandale, 1919 (Fig. 7) Original description. Plumatella (Afrindella) persica: Annandale 1919, p. 92, 93. Type material. ZEV 3637 (lectotype, chosen here) collected November, 1918 at the Randa stream, 4 miles NW Jellalabad, Seistan (now Afghanistan) by Nelson Annandale and Stanley Wells Kemp. Characterization. Colony flat and compact, with zooids radiating in all directions, older zooids appearing to rest obliquely upon the more distal younger ones; floatoblasts elongate with nearly parallel sides, both dorsal and ventral fenestra assuming an elongate shape (Fig. 7a, b); sessoblasts arranged contiguously in rows, each with a smooth frontal valve and narrow lamella. Measurements of five whole floatoblasts show length 371– 463 µm, mean = 411 µm; width 276–366 µm, mean = 323 µm. Status. The specimen is Plumatella casmiana Oka, 1907. Additional material. ZEV 3339 collected at Belgachia, Kolkata by Nelson Annandale, originally labeled Plumatella allmani diffusa, (dated 1 January 1894 almost certainly in error). Distribution. This species is known from every continent except Antarctica. Remarks. The lectotype colony appears as a flat patch on a 2-cm diameter stem. Both floatoblasts and sessoblasts are abundant; the ectocyst is intact but there are no preserved polypides. There is no indication that Annandale was aware of Plumatella casmiana, a species known only from Japan at the time P. persica was described. One specimen of P. casmiana that he collected in Kolkata (ZEV 3339) was attributed to Plumatella allmani diffusa (Fig. 7b). In general, Plumatella casmiana can be recognized by the flat, compact colony structure and the oblong fenestrae on both valves of the capsuled floatoblast. The sessoblast frontal valves often show low tubercles but can also be almost featureless; the annulus is notably narrow. The contiguous arrangement of sessoblasts, a typical feature of this species, is shown in Annandale’s 1919 illustration (Fig. 7c) and in my own more recent collection from Thailand ...