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Family

Gorgoniidae

Common Name(s)

Angular sea whip, Purple sea blade, Purple ribbon

Colony Form

Large, bushy and often highly branched; usually to 60 cm tall, sometimes to 1 m.

Axis

Black, slightly compressed.

Branches

Flat, with 3-4 flaps or flanges producing a “Y” or “X” cross section. Branch width 3-6 cm; tapered from the base and often twisted; tips long and thin, pointed or flattened.

Apertures

Polyps emerge from a common groove along branch edges.

Mucus

None

Color

Dark purple, purple or with purplish tints; occasionally olive brown, gray, yellow or a combination of yellow and purple. Purple, dark pink, yellow, or a combination when dried.

Sclerites

Polyp armature: small, blunt rods with few weak bumps or thorns, to 0.08 mm long, the largest often with slightly swollen ends. Body wall: stout spindles with large simple to complex tubercles, to 0.18 mm long; scaphoids (curved sclerites) often with blunt, finely tuberculate ends, to 0.14 mm long; ornamentation of scattered simple to complex tubercles and almost smooth convex surface.

Habitat

Back reefs with wide range of water qualities; hard substrates, often arising from buried hard substrates; 1-20 m depth.

Distribution

South Florida, Bahamas, Caribbean Sea.

Notes

The largest species in Pterogorgia. Although the 3-4 blades on any given branch generally distinguish P. anceps from P. guadalupensis, which has flat blades up to 10 mm across near the base and tends to branch in a single plane, recent molecular evidence suggests that a continuum exists between these two species. All Pterogorgia spp. shed the outer layer of their rind if it becomes overgrown by algae (Collin et al. 2005).

Similar Species

Pterogorgia citrina

Date Taken

4-11-2016

 
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