Australian Biological Resources Study

Australian Faunal Directory

Museums

Regional Maps

Family PASYTHEIDAE Davis, 1934


Compiler and date details

July 2001 - Dr Philip Bock

Introduction

The small family Pasytheidae Davis, 1934 is largely characterised by species with a porous, gymnocystal frontal shield, whose colonies begin growth by ramifying in thin uniserial chains of stolonate zooids across the substratum. Erect zooidal stems arise from some of the encrusting zooids. Additional branches of zooids may arise from the erect stems, sometimes showing a reduction in size. The type species of Pasythea, P. tulipifera (Ellis & Solander) has been described in detail by Marcus (1938; 1939) and Cook (1985). The erect zooids are grouped in triads. The type species of Gemellipora, G. eburnea Smitt, has zooids in opposed pairs, as does the fossil genus Dittosaria. The zooids of the Mexican genus Tecatia Morris (1980) are all encrusting, and uniserial, whereas those of Eutaleia Marcus (1938) are multiserial. All genera have thinly calcified zooids, slightly sinuate orifices, and occasional lateral mucrones (orificial horns). Ovicells, spines, and avicularia are unknown.

Pasythea, Tecatia, and Eutaleia are shallow-water forms, often encrusting algae, but Gemellipora is found in deep to abyssal waters (over 3300 m). Although most records of all genera are from the Atlantic and eastern Pacific, and no pasytheid has been formally recorded from Australian waters, Gemellipora eburnea, which has been recorded from the Kei Islands, Indonesia, and from the Kermadec Ridge, New Zealand (Lagaaij & Cook, 1973; Gordon, 1984), is, however, likely to be encountered in deep water. An undescribed genus occurs epizootically on hydroids and bushy bryozoans in the Darwin area. It is uniserial, with small zooids and relatively large gymnocystal pores. It also has distinctive orificial horns. Erect branches and ovicells have not been encountered in the few specimens seen.

Dating from the Lower Eocene (Taylor 1993), the origins of the Pasytheidae may nevertheless be sought among the encrusting, porous-shielded Cretaceous hippothoids, some of which have been attributed to Tecatia, but are here regarded as distinct from that genus (Voigt, 1981, 1991; Gordon & Voigt, 1996) (see Family Hippothoidae).

 

Diagnosis

Colony thinly calcified, formed by uniserial chains of creeping, stolonate zooids, which give rise to erect, sometimes nodal stems. Zooids in triads or pairs, elongated with an almost terminal orifice, frontal gymnocystal. Avicularia, spines and ovicells absent.

 

General References

Cook, P.L. 1985. Bryozoa from Ghana. A preliminary survey.Bryozoa from Ghana. A preliminary survey. Annales du Musée Royal de l'Afrique Centrale. Série in Octavo. Sciences Zoologiques 238: 1-315

Gordon, D.P. 1984. The marine fauna of New Zealand: Bryozoa: Gymnolaemata from the Kermadec Ridge. New Zealand Oceanographic Institute Memoir 91: 1-198

Gordon, D.P. & Voigt, E. 1996. The kenozooidal origin of the ascophorine hypostegal coelom and associated frontal shield. pp. 89-107 in Gordon, D.P., Smith, A.M., & Grant-Mackie, J.A. (eds). Bryozoans in Space and Time. Wellington : NIWA.

Lagaaij, R., & Cook, P.L. 1973. Some Tertiary to Recent Bryozoa. pp. 489-498 in Hallam, A. (ed.). Atlas of Palaeobiogeography. Amsterdam : Elsevier.

Marcus, E. 1938. Bryozoarios marinhos brasileiros II. Boletim da Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras da Universidade de São Paulo, Zoologia 2: 1-137

Marcus, E. 1939. Bryozoarios marinhos brasileiros III. Boletim da Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras da Universidade de São Paulo, Zoologia 3: 113-299

Morris, P.A. 1980. The bryozoan family Hippothoidae (Cheilostomata-Ascophora) with emphasis on the genus Hippothoa. Allan Hancock Monographs in Marine Biology 10: 1-115

Taylor, P.D. 1993. Bryozoa. pp. 465-489 in Benton, M.J. (ed.). The Fossil Record 2. London & New York : Chapman & Hall 845 pp.

Voigt, E. 1981. Upper Cretaceous Bryozoan-seagrass association in the Maastrichtian of the Netherlands. pp. 281-298 in Larwood, G.P. & Nielsen, C. (eds). Recent and Fossil Bryozoa. Fredensborg : Olsen & Olsen.

Voigt, E. 1991. Mono- or polyphyletic evolution of cheilostomatous bryozoan divisions? In: Bigey, F.P., & d'Hondt, J.-L., (editors), Bryozoaires Actuels et Fossiles: Bryozoa Living and Fossil. Bulletin de la Société des Sciences Naturelles de l'Ouest de la France Memoire HS1: 505-522

 

History of changes

Note that this list may be incomplete for dates prior to September 2013.
Published As part of group Action Date Action Type Compiler(s)
25-Mar-2014 BRYOZOA Ehrenberg, 1831 25-Mar-2014 MODIFIED Dr Robin Wilson (NMV) Elizabeth Greaves (NMV)
12-Feb-2010 (import)