Genus Verrucella Milne-Edwards and Haime, 1857
Verrucella spp.
Figures 22B, 22C, 24
MATERIAL EXAMINED.— CASIZG 197809; Philippines, Batangas Province, Caban Island (13.69°N 120.84°E); 40 m depth; 16 December 2013; coll. Sonia Rowley; one partial colony wet-preserved in 95% ethanol. CASIZG 197824; Philippines, Batangas Province, Caban Island (13.69°N 120.84°E); 27 m depth; 16 December 2013; coll. Sonia Rowley; one partial colony wet-preserved in 95% ethanol.
REMARKS.— The genus Verrucella is related to Heliania, but does not have any club-shaped sclerites. The sclerites in Verrucella are double heads (dumbbell-shaped) with a smooth narrow middle or waist. Spindles are also present. Both the double heads and spindles have oval-shaped tubercles with many acute triangular teeth. Verrucella has relatively short side branches, which are often more-or-less perpendicular to the main branches. The contracted polyps form low rounded mounds on the branches and are more sparsely distributed — not as highly congested as in Heliania .
SPECIES.— There are twenty six described species in the genus.
OCCURRENCE AND DISTRIBUTION.–Several species of Verrucella may be present in the central Philippines, occasionally encountered at mesophotic depths (usually below 30 m). The genus has a wide-ranging Indo-Pacific distribution.
REFERENCES.— Fabricius and Alderslade (2001); Grasshoff (1999); Grasshoff (2000); Grasshoff and Bargibant (2001).