identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
7D5BA03CFFC49049FF5CFB685767FA7D.text	7D5BA03CFFC49049FF5CFB685767FA7D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tubastraea Lesson 1830	<div><p>Genus Tubastraea Lesson, 1830</p> <p>Diagnosis of genus Tubastraea (emended after Cairns 2001 and Cairns &amp; Kitahara 2012)</p> <p>Colonial coralla firmly attached and encrusting; septa cycles hexamerally arranged and typically inserted with spongy columella; septa arranged /not arranged in a Pourtalès plan; corallum with a rough texture; colony developing from a common basal coenosteum by budding, with clear connection among polyps; columella small to moderate in size and lacks an epitheca.</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7D5BA03CFFC49049FF5CFB685767FA7D	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Yiu, Sam King Fung;Chung, Sheena Suet-Wah;Qiu, Jian-Wen	Yiu, Sam King Fung, Chung, Sheena Suet-Wah, Qiu, Jian-Wen (2021): A new species of the sun coral genus Tubastraea (Scleractinia: Dendrophylliidae) from Hong Kong. Zootaxa 5047 (1): 1-16, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5047.1.1
7D5BA03CFFC49043FF5CF9AC5199FE11.text	7D5BA03CFFC49043FF5CF9AC5199FE11.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tubastraea megacorallita Yiu & Chung & Qiu 2021	<div><p>Tubastraea megacorallita sp. nov.</p> <p>http://zoobank.org/NomenclaturalActs/fdcf7eaf-110d-40f6-b042-d39037e883d2</p> <p>Synonymy</p> <p>Tubastraea coccinea — Scott 1984:40, fig.48.</p> <p>Balanophyllia ponderosa — Lam et al. 2008:735, figs. 1C-D.</p> <p>Tubastraea sp. 3 — Arrigoni et al. 2014:678, figs. 11M-O.</p> <p>Tubastraea tenuilamellosa — Rowlett 2020:508.</p> <p>Materials examined. Holotype: TMBC030850, colony with 14 corallites, 62 mm in length and 25 mm in height. Paratypes: TMBC030851, colony with 11 corallites, 51 mm in length and 24 mm in height; TMBC030852, colony with 9 corallites, 42 mm in length and 23 mm in height; TMBC030853, colony with 4 corallites, 16 mm in length and 11 mm in height.</p> <p>Type locality. Breaker reef (22.461°N, 114.420°E), Hong Kong.</p> <p>Etymology. Tubastraea megacorallita sp. nov. has relatively large corallites when compared with its congeneric species. The species epithet reflects this morphological character.</p> <p>Geographical distribution. Currently only known in Hong Kong (this study) and Kii-Nagashima, Japan (Arrigoni et al. 2014).</p> <p>Habitat. Exposed sites with moderate current, rocky substrate, at 10–25 m water depth.</p> <p>Description. When alive (Fig 1a), the tissue outside epithecal wall is light orange or pink and corallite bright red, and the tentacles are yellow and translucent. The colonies are phaceloid with each of the long corallite having its own wall. The corallites are formed by extratentacular budding (Fig 1b), consisting of 3 to 14 corallites. They vary between 16–62 mm in length and 11–25 mm in height. The corallites are elliptical (8–25 mm in GCD and 6.5–19 mm in LCD) with a thick wall. The total number of septa varies from 34 to 92, with 10–16 of the septa fused with columella (Table 1). The number of septa increases as the corallites become bigger. The septa are hexamerously arranged, containing 5 cycles, the last cycle incomplete, with the sizes increasing from the inner to the outer as S 1 =S 2&gt;S 3&gt;S 4 =S 5. The septa are usually arranged in a Pourtalès plan with the axial edges of pairs of higher cycle septa bending in front of and uniting before their adjacent lower cycle septum (Fig. 1c). The septa extend from the edge, curving down to the columella. The columella (Fig.1d) consists of a spongy network (2–10 mm in GCD and 1–4 mm in LCD). The depth of the fossa ranges from 2.5 mm to 10 mm. The costae are granulated and the intercostal striae are porous (Fig.1e)</p> <p>Taxonomic remarks. Our specimens belong to the genus Tubastraea because it shares seven characters with congeneric species (Cairns &amp; Kitahara 2012): 1) corallum is colonial; 2), corallum is firmly attached; 3), corallum is encrusting; 4), multiple septa cycles are hexamerally arranged and spongy columella; 5), texture of corallum is rough; 6), number of coralla increases by budding from a common basal coenosteum, the connection among polyps is quite evident, and the septa are normally inserted; 7), columella is moderate to small in size and lacks epitheca. However, it is the only species of Tubastraea in which the septa are arranged in a Pourtalès plan.</p> <p>Morphologically, Tubastraea megacorallita sp. nov. can be easily distinguished from its congeneric species. It has five septal cycles and the septa are usually arranged in a Pourtalès plan, whereas the other seven species have only three to four septal cycles without a Pourtalès plan. Although T. megacorallita sp. nov. is most closely related to T. coccinea and T. micranthus in our molecular phylogenetic analysis, they differ substantially in corallite morphology (Table 1). The corallites of T. megacorallita sp. nov. are larger than those of T. coccinea and T. micranthus. Tubastraea coccinea and T. micranthus have four and three septal cycles, respectively but T. megacorallita sp. nov. has five.</p> <p>Molecular analysis. Three gene sequences were successfully obtained from each of the three specimens.Alignment and concatenation resulted in a dataset of 1.683 bp (COI: 601 bp, IGR: 450 bp, rDNA: 632 bp). Within the three partitions, only rDNA has adequate phylogenetic signal for species distinction. The uncorrected p -distances were 0% for all the three genes among the three individuals of T. megacoralllia sp. nov. collected from Hong Kong in this study (Table 2). With a p -distance of only 0 for COI, 0 for IGR, and 0.21 or 0.41% for rDNA (KI2, KI3 respectively), Tubastraea sp. 3. – an undescribed species collected from Kii-Nagashima, Japan (Arrigoni et al. 2014) – is considered to be conspecific to T. megacorallita sp. nov. This new species exhibits 0–0.83%, 0–0.67% and 2.45–6.91% p -distance with other congeneric species in the COI, IGR and rDNA genes, respectively. These distances were equivalent or larger than the interspecific distances among T. coccinea, T. micranthus and Tubstreaea sp. 2, which supports the recognition of T. megacorallita as a new species.</p> <p>.......continued on the next page</p> <p>aSong (1982), bScott (1984), cWells (1983), dCairns (1991), eCairns &amp; Zibrowius (1997), fCairns (1994), hLam et al. (2008), iWells (1982), jNemenzo (1960), kOgawa &amp; Takahashi</p> <p>(1993)</p> <p>The ML and BI trees exhibited a very similar topology. Both the ML and BI trees showed that the genus Tubastraea formed a monophyletic clade within Dendrophylliidae (Fig. 2). Among the seven species of Tubastraea used in this analysis, T. megacoralllia sp. nov. was nested among the other species and was sister to Tubastraea sp. 3 K12, an undescribed species from Kii-Nagashima, Japan (Arrigoni et al. 2014). Together, they formed a clade that was sister to a clade containing T. coccinea, T. micranthus and Tubatraea sp. 2. However, it was not possible to determine which of these species is most closely related to the clade consisting of T. megacorallita sp. nov. and Tubastraea sp. 3. Other species of Tubastraea are more distantly related to T. megacorallita sp. nov.</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7D5BA03CFFC49043FF5CF9AC5199FE11	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Yiu, Sam King Fung;Chung, Sheena Suet-Wah;Qiu, Jian-Wen	Yiu, Sam King Fung, Chung, Sheena Suet-Wah, Qiu, Jian-Wen (2021): A new species of the sun coral genus Tubastraea (Scleractinia: Dendrophylliidae) from Hong Kong. Zootaxa 5047 (1): 1-16, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5047.1.1
7D5BA03CFFCF9042FF5CFA3350FEF819.text	7D5BA03CFFCF9042FF5CFA3350FEF819.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tubastraea Lesson 1830	<div><p>Key to species of Tubastraea</p> <p>1a. Colony branching uniplanar................................................................... T. micranthus</p> <p>1b. Colony not branching uniplanar.......................................................................... 2</p> <p>2a. Colony plocoid....................................................................................... 3</p> <p>2b. Colony non-plocoid................................................................................... 4</p> <p>3a. Corallite elliptical................................................................................ T. aurea</p> <p>3b. Corallite non-elliptical................................................................................. 5</p> <p>4a. Corallite phaceloid.................................................................................... 6</p> <p>4b. Corallite non-phaceloid........................................................................ T. diaphana</p> <p>5a. Corallite with moderately deep fossa and up to 48 septa............................................... T. coccinea</p> <p>5b. Corallite with deep and spongy/shallow fossa and more than 48 septa.................................... T. faulkneri</p> <p>6a. Septal arranged in a Pourtalès plan.................................................... T. megacorallita sp. nov.</p> <p>6b. Septa arranged normally................................................................................ 7</p> <p>7a. Corallite with moderately deep fossa and 3 septal cycles.............................................. T. floreana</p> <p>7b. Corallite with deep fossa and 3 or 4 septal cycles................................................... T. tagusensis</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7D5BA03CFFCF9042FF5CFA3350FEF819	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Yiu, Sam King Fung;Chung, Sheena Suet-Wah;Qiu, Jian-Wen	Yiu, Sam King Fung, Chung, Sheena Suet-Wah, Qiu, Jian-Wen (2021): A new species of the sun coral genus Tubastraea (Scleractinia: Dendrophylliidae) from Hong Kong. Zootaxa 5047 (1): 1-16, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5047.1.1
