AnimaliaNot EvaluatedacceptedspeciesAccepted
Myriopathes ulex

Myriopathes ulex

(Ellis & Solander, 1786) Inv.

GBIF:177006770

0year

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Descriptions(4)

Description. The colony is branched and measures about 50 cm in height (Fig. 26, a). The individual fronds of the colony are planar and flabellate, and the colony appears dark brown (Fig. 26, a, b). The primary pinnules measure up to 1 cm, after which they become incipient branches, and are regularly inclined 30 – 45 ° to the branch; they are mainly biserial alternate (Fig. 26, b, c). In each row the primary pinnules are 1.0 – 2.0 mm apart, with an average of 1.5 mm. There are generally 10 – 12 primary pinnules occurring along one cm of branch, counting those in both lateral rows. Up to four secondary pinnules can be found but not on all primary pinnules. Secondary pinnules are usually uniserial but a biserial arrangement is sometimes found (Fig. 25, c). They measure 1.5 – 4.0 mm long and are inclined 30 – 45 ° with respect to the primary pinnule bearing them. Tertiary pinnules are usually not present, but one can be rarely found. The polyps are located on a single side of the pinnules, but on thicker branches they can be spaced irregularly all around the axis. Polyps are slightly elongated in transversal direction and measure 0.4 – 0.9 mm in transverse diameter. Polyps are spaced 0.08 – 0.44 mm apart for about 10 – 12 per cm. The tentacles are short, thick and rounded at the apex. The spines on the pinnules are conical to horn-shaped, slightly papillose with the papillae elongated towards the tip of the spine (Fig. 26, d – f). They are longer on the polypar side although it is not always the case on small subpinnules. On a secondary pinnule measuring 0.12 mm in diameter, 3 – 4 longitudinal rows of spines are seen (Fig. 26, d). The polypar and abpolypar spines are not differing in size on such pinnules (Fig. 26, h), both measuring up to 0.17 mm in height with mutual distances of 0.1 – 0.19 mm and 0.1 – 0.22 mm, respectively. On a primary pinnule measuring 0.14 mm (Fig. 26, e), 4 – 5 longitudinal rows are seen where the polypar spines measure up to 0.17 mm (Fig. 26, i) and the abpolypar spines up to 0.16 mm, with mutual distances of 0.1 – 0.19 mm and 0.1 – 0.26 mm, respectively. All these spines are inclined upwards. The spines become more numerous and cylindrical as the axis gets thicker, with the longitudinal rows being lost (Fig. 26, f, g, j). They tend to become perpendicular to the corallum. On branches with diameters of 0.34 – 1.8 mm the spines are needle-like and slightly papillose, with the papillae elongated towards the tip of the spine (Fig. 26, j). Bifid or antler-shaped spines are also found (Fig. 26, k). On these branches there is no distinction between polypar and abpolypar spines. They measure 0.1 – 0.26 mm in height, and the mutual distance cannot be calculated as the arrangement in longitudinal rows is lost. Taxonomic remarks. The type specimen originally described by Ellis & Sollander (1786) is lost. It was very succinctly described as being “ very much branched, with loose, spread, very rough and pointed branches ”. The drawings show small primary pinnules, with sparse small single secondaries pinnules. Later descriptions were made by Brook (1889) and van Pesch (1914). Brook (1889) stated that the pinnules were subalternate, directed anteriorly, occasionally simple but usually alternately pinnate or bipinnate, and measuring 1.8 to 2.5 cm in length. Van Pesch (1914) reported branches from 0.5 to 2.5 cm long inserted with an angle of 60 °. Tertiary pinnules are absent and fusions do not occur. Based on the recent revision of Opresko (2001), this species groups in the flabellate Myriopathes, together with M. ulex, M. panamensis, M. stechowi, M. spinosa, M. rugosa and M. myriophylla. It can be provisionally separated from the other species, based on a less dense pinnulation due to a lower number of subpinnules with a more planar arrangement. In the typical M. ulex, secondary pinnules are rather sparse and usually only one is found per primary pinnule, while there are usually no tertiaries. Due to the differences in the number of secondaries, the name M. cf. ulex is attributed here.
Terrana, Lucas, Bo, Marzia, Opresko, Dennis M., Eeckhaut, Igor (2020): Shallow-water black corals (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Hexacorallia: Antipatharia) from SW Madagascar. Zootaxa 4826 (1): 1-62, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4826.1.1
Fig. 26
Terrana, Lucas, Bo, Marzia, Opresko, Dennis M., Eeckhaut, Igor (2020): Shallow-water black corals (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Hexacorallia: Antipatharia) from SW Madagascar. Zootaxa 4826 (1): 1-62, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4826.1.1
Distribution. Indonesia (type locality, Ellis & Solander 1786), Indian Ocean (Lamouroux 1816), Philippines (Gray 1857), Korea (Moon & Song 2008), Hawaii (Wagner 2015 a), Madagascar (present study).
Terrana, Lucas, Bo, Marzia, Opresko, Dennis M., Eeckhaut, Igor (2020): Shallow-water black corals (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Hexacorallia: Antipatharia) from SW Madagascar. Zootaxa 4826 (1): 1-62, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4826.1.1
Material examined. Toliara, 19 m. Distal branches, specimen INV. 131356. Depth range. 15 – 30 m.
Terrana, Lucas, Bo, Marzia, Opresko, Dennis M., Eeckhaut, Igor (2020): Shallow-water black corals (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Hexacorallia: Antipatharia) from SW Madagascar. Zootaxa 4826 (1): 1-62, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4826.1.1

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FIGURE 25. Myriopathes cf. stechowi (Pax, 1932) INV.131335. (a) Entire colony in situ. (b) Close-up view of the branching pattern in situ. (c) Detailed view of the pinnulation. (d) Section of subpinnule 0.1 mm in diameter, polypar side is on the right. (e) Section of primary pinnule 0.14 mm in diameter, polypar side is on the right. (f) Section of a branch 1.1 mm in diameter, showing numerous antler-shaped spines. (g) Polypar spine on primary pinnule. (h) Abpolypar spine on primary pinnule. (i) Antler-shaped spine on a branch. (j) Detailed view of the numerous bifid and antler-spines of a branch.

Imageimage/png© Terrana, Lucas;Bo, Marzia;Opresko, Dennis M.;Eeckhaut, IgorTerrana, Lucas;Bo, Marzia;Opresko, Dennis M.;Eeckhaut, Igor

FIGURE 26. Myriopathes cf. ulex (Ellis & Solander, 1786) INV.131356. (a) In situ picture of the entire colony. (b) In situ close-up view of a branch and the primary pinnules. (c) Close-up view showing the pinnulation in details. (d) Section of secondary pinnule 0.12 mm in diameter. The polypar side is on the right. (e) Section of primary pinnule 0.14 mm in diameter. The polypar side is on the right. (f) Section of distal fragment of the main branch bearing primary pinnules and measuring 0.25 mm in diameter. (g) Section of thicker branch 0.34 mm in diameter and bearing primary pinnules. (h) Polypar spine from secondary pinnule. (i) Polypar spine from primary pinnule. (j) Tall, needle-like spine of a branch. (k) Branched, bifid or antler-like spines occurring on a branch measuring 1.8 mm in diameter.

Imageimage/png© Terrana, Lucas;Bo, Marzia;Opresko, Dennis M.;Eeckhaut, IgorTerrana, Lucas;Bo, Marzia;Opresko, Dennis M.;Eeckhaut, Igor

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Shallow-water black corals (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Hexacorallia: Antipatharia) from SW Madagascar

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Terrana, Lucas, Bo, Marzia, Opresko, Dennis M., Eeckhaut, Igor (2020): Shallow-water black corals (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Hexacorallia: Antipatharia) from SW Madagascar. Zootaxa 4826 (1): 1-62, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4826.1.1

Abstract

Antipatharians, also known as black corals, represent a small group of anthozoan hexacorallians found in all oceans of the world. They are generally considered a deep-water taxon; however, some of the most diverse communities are known from tropical shallow waters. With a few poorly detailed exceptions, shallow-water black corals from the Indian Ocean and especially those from Madagascar are mostly unknown. In this study, we report for the first time a highly diverse black coral assemblage of the Western Indian Ocean thriving in shallow waters and upper mesophotic depths (10–52 m depth) along the SW coast of Madagascar. A total of 22 species belonging to six genera (Antipathes, Arachnopathes, Cirrhipathes, Cupressopathes, Myriopathes and Stichopathes) and two families (Antipathidae and Myriopathidae) are described, of which 20 are found in the northern pass of the Great Reef of Toliara, thus representing the most diverse site of the areas investigated. Most of the shallow-water species from the Indian Ocean were originally described more than a century ago, sometimes without being reported again until now. All the descriptions herein rely solely on morphology and include detailed in situ pictures and scanning electron microscope images, in addition to range expansions for many species.

Terrana L, Bo M, Opresko D M, Eeckhaut I, plazi (2020). Shallow-water black corals (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Hexacorallia: Antipatharia) from SW Madagascar. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4826.1.1 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-18.

CC0Published 8/10/2020View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
177006770
Dataset Key
2bf4f379-5024-4616-b7b7-a48103cb63bf
Origin
source
Backbone Key
2258409
Taxon ID
F5768787934F4241FF4CFA94FB02FB9D.taxon
Last Crawled
6/10/2026
Last Interpreted
6/10/2026