Smittoidea spinigera (Liu, 1990) (Figs 30–32) Smittina spinigera Liu, 1990: 122, fig. 2a–d. Smittoidea spinigera: Liu, Yin & Ma 2001: 614, pl. 53, figs 1–3; McCuller & Carlton 2018: 155, fig. S23; Liuzzi et al. 2018: 218; Schwindt et al. 2020: 15. Smittoidea sp.: Schwindt et al. 2014: Table S1. Material examined. MACN-In 43883, San Antonio Este harbour, October 10, 2005, collected by Evangelina Schwindt. MACN-In 43882, Ingeniero White harbour, June 22, 2016, collected by Sandra Fiori. Description. Colony encrusting, unilaminar, multiserial, whitish.Autozooids subhexagonal, 232–368 × 171–277 µm, disposed quincuncially, separated by distinct sutures. Frontal shield convex, rugose, rising to a high peristome and a suboral avicularian umbo, with one series of 9–14 large marginal areolae separated by ridges. Primary orifice deep, obscured by the peristome, with 2–3 distal oral spines, only their bases persisting in ovicelled zooids; a pair of conspicuous, acute condyles pointing proximally and a lyrule ending laterally in two sharp points. Peristome with raised ridges and a proximal U-shaped sinus. A suboral avicularium directed proximally and obliquely upwards on the distal side of the umbo; rostrum blunt, crossbar complete, with a conspicuous ligula. A small rounded pore on each side of the suboral avicularium connects with the avicularian chamber. Ovicell hyperstomial, spherical, wider than long (144–175 × 166–198 µm), somewhat flattened frontally, not closed by the operculum, with a peripheral band of smooth ectooecium; entooecium pierced by 26–32 rounded or irregular pores with raised edges. Ancestrula tatiform, with proximal cryptocyst and nine delicate spines. Embryos orange. Remarks. Several authors have recorded Smittoidea prolifica Osburn (see original description in Osburn 1952) as introduced in The Netherlands (De Blauwe & Faasse 2004) and the German North Sea (Markert et al. 2016; Kind & Kuhlenkamp 2018). Thanks to the courtesy of Hans De Blauwe, we were able to compare our material with SEM images of S. prolifica from the Netherlands. Our material differs from S. prolifica in the ligula of the suboral avicularium (present in S. spinigera, absent in S. prolifica), in the orientation of the suboral avicularium (perpendicular to the frontal shield in S. prolifica, oblique in S. spinigera), and also in the pores of the ovicell (with raised margins in S. spinigera, with smooth margins in S. prolifica). Smittoidea sp. of Schwindt et al. (2014) is the specimen of San Antonio Este stored at MACN-In 43883. Smittoidea spinigera was not found again at this harbour in 2018, whose pilings are now heavily populated by the introduced solitary ascidian Styela clava (Herdman) (Pereyra et al. 2017; Castro et al. 2021). Distribution. China (Liu 1990; Liu et al. 2001 and references therein), Buenos Aires and Río Negro provinces (this study, and previous reports in Schwindt et al. 2014, 2020; Liuzzi et al. 2018). Although it was found on marine debris transported to the Hawaiian Islands and the NE Pacific by the 2011 tsunami that was generated by the Great East Japan Earthquake (McCuller & Carlton 2018), this is the first record of S. spinigera established in coastal areas beyond its area of origin., Published as part of López-Gappa, Juan, Liuzzi, María G., Castro, Karen L., Bobinac, Magalí & Schwindt, Evangelina, 2022, Fouling bryozoans in Argentine harbours (Southwest Atlantic): new records and the description of a new species, pp. 374-400 in Zootaxa 5205 (4) on page 389, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5205.4.4, http://zenodo.org/record/7307128, {"references":["Liu, X. (1990) Three new cheilostome bryozoans from the coasts of Shandong and Zhejiang provinces. Studia Marina Sinica, 31, 121 - 128.","Liu, X., Yin, X. & Ma, J. (2001) Biology of marine-fouling bryozoans in the coastal waters of China. Science Press, Beijing, 860 pp.","McCuller, M. I. & Carlton, J. T. (2018) Transoceanic rafting of Bryozoa (Cyclostomata, Cheilostomata, and Ctenostomata) across the North Pacific Ocean on Japanese tsunami marine debris. Aquatic Invasions, 13, 137 - 162. https: // doi. org / 10.3391 / ai. 2018.13.1.11","Liuzzi, M. G., Lopez Gappa, J. & Schwindt, E. (2018) Hallazgo de una especie exotica del genero Smittoidea (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) en dos puertos argentinos. In: Libro de Resumenes X Jornadas Nacionales de Ciencias del Mar. FCEyN- UBA, Buenos Aires, pp. 218.","Schwindt, S., Carlton, J. T., Orensanz, J. M., Scarabino, F. & Bortolus, A. (2020) Past and future of the marine bioinvasions along the Southwestern Atlantic. Aquatic Invasions, 15, 11 - 29. https: // doi. org / 10.3391 / ai. 2020.15.1.02","Schwindt, E., Lopez Gappa, J., Raffo, M. P., Tatian, M., Bortolus, A., Orensanz, J. M., Alonso, G., Diez, M. E., Doti, B., Genzano, G., Lagger, C., Lovrich, G., Piriz, M. L., Mendez, M. M., Savoya, V. & Sueiro, M. C. (2014) Marine fouling invasions in ports of Patagonia (Argentina) with implications for legislation and monitoring programs. Marine Environmental Research, 99, 60 - 68. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / j. marenvres. 2014.06.006","Osburn, R. C. (1952) Bryozoa of the Pacific coast of America, part 2, Cheilostomata-Ascophora. Report of the Allan Hancock Pacific Expeditions, 14, 271 - 611.","De Blauwe, H. & Faasse, M. (2004) Smittoidea prolifica Osburn, 1952 (Bryozoa, Cheilostomatida), a Pacific bryozoan introduced to The Netherlands (Northeast Atlantic). Bulletin de l'Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique, Biologie, 74, 33 - 39.","Markert, A., Matsuyama, K., Rohde, S., Schupp, P. & Wehrmann, A. (2016) First record of the non-native Pacific bryozoan Smittoidea prolifica Osburn, 1952 at the German North Sea coast. Marine Biodiversity, 46, 717 - 723. https: // doi. org / 10.1007 / s 12526 - 015 - 0415 - 8","Kind, B. & Kuhlenkamp, R. (2018) Discovery of the non-indigenous bryozoan Smittoidea prolifica Osburn, 1952 near Helgoland: first record in 2011 for the German North Sea. Marine Biodiversity, 48, 1237 - 1240. https: // doi. org / 10.1007 / s 12526 - 016 - 0544 - 8","Pereyra, P. J., de la Barra, P., Gastaldi, M., Saad, J. F., Firstater, F. N. & Narvarte, M. A. (2017) When the tiny help the mighty: facilitation between two introduced species, a solitary ascidian and a macroalga in northern Patagonia, Argentina. Marine Biology, 164, 185. https: // doi. org / 10.1007 / s 00227 - 017 - 3202 - 1","Castro, K. L., Battini, N., Giachetti, C. B., Trovant, B., Abelando, M., Basso, N. G. & Schwindt, E. (2021) Early detection of marine invasive species following the deployment of an artificial reef: Integrating tools to assist the decision-making process. Journal of Environmental Management, 297, 113333. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / j. jenvman. 2021.113333"]}