Fig. 4 B–D
Gonaxia elegans Vervoort, 1993: 153, figs 19c, 21b–c, 22.
BATHUS 3: Stn. DW809, a 4.4 cm high colony devoid of hydrorhiza and bearing female gonothecae, as well as an originally 5.4 cm high colony (now broken into two parts) bearing male gonothecae and several broken cladia originating from both colonies (MNHN-IK- 2012 -16533).
This species is immediately recognizable through the characteristic position and shape of its hydrothecae. The 5.4 cm high colony is evidently male when compared to the smaller one, which bears gonothecae possessing much wider apertures. Only the female gonothecae were described by Vervoort ( 1993) but, upon a careful inspection of the present material, it should be stated that they do not arise from the accessory tubes on the hydrocaulus, but from the main tube itself, as this is indisputably seen in the monosiphonic part of the stem. In addition, in this colony at least, nearly all accessory tubes are found on the “dorsal” aspect of the stem, while the row of gonothecae is situated on its “front”.
The male gonothecae, observed here for the first time, are similar in shape to the female ones, and also arise from the main tube of the stem, but in both the frontal and dorsal aspects of the colony. They are given off closely and in a single row ( Fig. 4D), are about half adnate, and their free parts are shifted alternately left and right; their bases are obscured by the numerous accessory tubes running up the stem. They are long ( 1.5–2 mm), tubular ( 480–520 µm wide), with small, circular apertures ( 100–120 µm wide) mounted on the summit of a conical, distal neck region.
New Caledonia ( Vervoort 1993; present study), Norfolk Ridge ( Vervoort 1993).