Corbulella boninensis
Authors/Creators
Description
Corbulella boninensis (Silén, 1941)
(Fig. 5; Table 6)
Pyrulella boninensis Silén, 1941: 26, figs 21–24.
Crassimarginatella (Corbulella) boninensis: Gordon, 1984: 30.
Corbulella boninensis: Yang et al., 2018: 497, figs 6, 7.
Material examined. Lectotype (designated here) UPSZTY 2470 D, the best preserved specimen among the syntypes UPSZTY 2470 A–D, Bonin Islands (Ogasawara), east of Chichijima, Japan; depth 100–135 m. Leg. Prof. S. Bock 1914. Paralectotypes: the three remaining specimens.
Description. Colony encrusting, multiserial, unilaminar, fan-shaped (Fig. 5A).
Autozooids oval to club-shaped if with a proximal, extensive gymnocyst (Fig. 5A, B, D), longer than wide (mean L/ W 1.86), distinct, separated by deep grooves, alternating in radial series. Gymnocyst highly variable in width proximally (i.e. 40–170 µm), much narrower laterally and obscured by adjacent zooids, smooth; cryptocyst outlined by a raised beaded rim (Fig. 5E), sloping towards the opesia, more extensive proximally (40–115 µm), tapering laterally (20–35 µm), disappearing distally, coarsely granular with granules 8–12 µm in diameter (Fig. 5B, E).
Opesia oval, occupying two-thirds to half zooidal length (mean OpL/ZL 0.63) (Fig. 5B, D); eight lateral opesial spines (Fig. 5C, F), four per side, thin, 5–8 µm wide, 90–100 µm long, widely spaced, curved over the aperture but not meeting in the midline, indenting the cryptocyst at the base (Fig. 5E); 3–7 shorter spines placed distal and distolateral to the orifice, 50–70 µm long, 10–15 µm in diameter (Fig. 5B–D); orificial opening transversely Dshaped, 80–90 × 125–150 µm.
Avicularia vicarious, similar in size to autozooids, broadly figure-eight-shaped (Fig. 5A see arrow, G); rostrum spatulate with raised distal and finely denticulate distolateral margins; at least two pairs of opesial spines, two per side, placed at about mid-length immediately below the raised margin of the rostrum; at least two distolateral spines; mandible semielliptical.
Ovicells prominent, cap-like (Fig. 5C, F, G), resting on the proximal gymnocyst of the distal zooid; ectoooecium smooth, partially calcified, leaving an arc-shaped frontal fenestra exposing a smooth endooecium; the distal rim of the fenestra typically notched centrally forming a small umbo (Fig. 5D, F, G); only two distolateral oral spines visible in ovicellate zooids (Fig. 5F, G).
A single kenozooid observed, 205 × 130 µm, pear-shaped with smooth gymnocyst laterally and coarsely granular, depressed cryptocyst frontally, an elliptical opening 80 × 30 µm placed centrally (Fig. 5H).
Remarks. Over the years, following Hastings (1945), Brown (1952) and Harmelin (1973), species of the genus Pyrulella Harmer, 1926 were either included in Valdemunitella Canu, 1900 or in Crassimarginatella Canu, 1900. The genus Corbulella was first introduced as a subgenus of Crassimarginatella (Gordon 1984) and regarded as such until Tilbrook et al. (2001) recommended to treat it as a full genus owing to the high number of species attributed to it and its long Cenozoic range. Corbulella can be distinguished from Crassimarginatella by the presence of vicarious avicularia with toothed rostra and spines bordering the opesia (Gordon 1984).
Genus Cranosina Canu & Bassler, 1933
Notes
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Linked records
Additional details
Identifiers
Biodiversity
- Collection code
- UPSZTY
- Material sample ID
- UPSZTY 2470
- Scientific name authorship
- Silen
- Kingdom
- Animalia
- Phylum
- Bryozoa
- Order
- Cheilostomatida
- Family
- Calloporidae
- Genus
- Corbulella
- Species
- boninensis
- Taxon rank
- species
- Type status
- lectotype
- Taxonomic concept label
- Corbulella boninensis (Silen, 1941) sec. Martino, 2023
References
- Silen, L. (1941) Cheilostomata Anasca (Bryozoa) collected by Prof. Dr. Sixten Bock's expedition to Japan and the Bonin Islands 1914. Arkiv for zoologi, 33 A, 1 - 130.
- Gordon, D. P. (1984) The marine fauna of New Zealand: Bryozoa: Gymnolaemata from the Kermadec Ridge. New Zealand Oceanographic Institute Memoir, 91, 1 - 198.
- Yang, H. J., Seo, J. E & Gordon, D. P. (2018) Sixteen new generic records of Korean bryozoan from southern coastal waters and Jeju Island, East China Sea: evidence of tropical affinities. Zootaxa, 4422 (4), 493 - 518. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4422.4.3
- Hastings, A. B. (1945) Notes on Polyzoa (Bryozoa). 2. Membranipora crassimarginata auctt, with remarks on some genera. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Series 11, 12 (86), 69 - 103. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222934508527490
- Brown, D. A. (1952) The Tertiary cheilostomatous Polyzoa of New Zealand. Trustees of the British Museum (Natural History), London, 455 pp. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 118779
- Harmelin, J. - G. (1973) Les Bryozoaires des peuplements sciaphiles de Mediterranee: le genre Crassimarginatella Canu (Chilostomes Anasca). Cahiers de Biologie Marine, 14, 471 - 492.
- Harmer, S. F. (1926) The Polyzoa of the Siboga Expedition, 2. Cheilostomata Anasca. Siboga Expedition Reports, 28 b, 183 - 501.
- Canu, F. (1900) Revision des Bryozoaires du Cretace figures par d'Orbigny. II, Cheilostomata. Bulletin de la Societe geologique de France, 28, 334 - 463.
- Tilbrook, K. J., Hayward, P. J. & Gordon, D. P. (2001) Cheilostomatous Bryozoa from Vanuatu. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 131, 35 - 109. https: // doi. org / 10.1006 / zjls. 2000.0249
- Canu, F. & Bassler, R. S. (1933) The bryozoan fauna of the Vincentown Limesand. United States National Museum Bulletin, 165, 1 - 108. https: // doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 03629236.165. i