Euplectella aspergillum australicum, Tabachnick & Menschenina, 2008
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1866.1.3 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0398E958-4872-157E-FF41-0C8213EDF8F2 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Euplectella aspergillum australicum |
status |
subsp. nov. |
Euplectella aspergillum australicum View in CoL ssp. nov. ( Fig. 27 View FIGURE 27 ; Tab. 23, 24)
Etymology. Subspecies name reflects the region of type locality.
Material. Holotype: WAM Z 545 About WAM — RV Soela , sta. SO 2/82/ 44, 124 miles NW of Port Headland 18 o 54’– 55’ S 117 o 2’ –0’E, depth 300–306 m.
Paratypes: WAM Z 546 About WAM (4 specimens)—together with the holotype . WAM Z 551 About WAM (3 specimens) — RV Soela , sta. SO 4/82/08 C, N of Port Headland, 18 o 43’S 117 o 12’E, depth 368 m. GoogleMaps WAM Z 643 About WAM — RV Soela , sta. SO 2/82/18, 56 miles of Imperieuse Reef, 18 o 8’–9’ S 118 o 6’ –4.60’E, depth 404 m. WAM Z 552 About WAM — RV Soela , sta. SO 2/82/ 37, 124 miles NNW of Port Headland, 18 o 26’–19’ S 118 o 0’ –1’E . WAM Z 592 About WAM — RV Soela , sta. SO 2/82/ 42, 119 miles NW of Port Headland, 18 o 44’S 117 o 20’–19’E, depth 326– 360 m. WAM Z 653 About WAM —sta. 008, SW of Imperieuse Reef Rowley Shoals , 17 o 42’S 118 o 38’E GoogleMaps . WAM Z 553 About WAM —SW of Imperieuse Reef Rowley Shoals , 17 o 37’S 118 o 46’E GoogleMaps . WAM 7291 About WAM — RV Courageous , sta. 013, NE of Mermaid Reef, Rowley Shoals, 16 o 49’S 119 o 59’E GoogleMaps . NTM Z 0001154 View Materials (2 specimens) — RV Soela , sta. NWS0005, W off port Headland, Northweste Shelf, 18 o 42’S 117 o 18’E, depth 360 m. GoogleMaps NTM Z 0002568 View Materials —sta. NWS0040, off Rowley Shoals , Northwest Shelf, Scampi trawl Grounds, 17 o 23’S 118 o 57’E, depth 430 m. GoogleMaps NTM Z 0002575 View Materials (2 specimens)—sta. NWS0042, off Rowley Shoals , Northwest Shelf, Scampi trawl Grounds, 17 o 24’S 118 o 52’E, depth 445 m. GoogleMaps
Other materials ( Euplectella aff. aspergillum australicum ): WAM Z 569 About WAM — RV Soela, SO 1/84/067, NW of Bathurst Island , 14 o 21.50–22.30’ S 122 o 2.40 –1’E, depth 348–350 m. NTM Z 0002586 View Materials —location unknown .
Description. Body: The body shape is similar to that of E. aspergillum aspergillum , parietal ledges are found in both spiral and circular arrangements. The holotype is 150 mm in length, oval in section 23x 27 mm, the tuft of basalia is about 50 mm in length. The other complete sponge is WAM Z 546, it is 110 mm in length, 23 mm in diameter with basalia up to 50 mm in length, the other numerous paratypes are mostly fragments of the upper part of the body, one fragment reaches 260 mm in length, the diameter of these fragments is 22–35 mm. The parietal ledges of these sponges are up to 1–2 mm high, the rigid walls are 2–3 mm in thickness, the lateral osula are 0.5–1.5 mm in diameter, the sieveplate is colanderlike with meshes mostly triangular, 1–2 mm in diameter.
Spicules: Principalia are stauractins with rays about 12/ 0.11–0.16 mm. Other choanosomal spicules are tauactins with rays several mm in length and 0.01–0.06 mm in diameter. Basalia are anchors with spiny shafts 0.1–0.13 mm in diameter and 6 teeth. Spicules of the sieveplate are diactins, some tauactins, small hexactins and pentactins. The diactins are 0.46–several mm long and 0.004–0.05 mm in diameter, they are usually slightly curved and have a widening in the middle, their outer ends are conically pointed or rounded, smooth or rarely rough. The small and rare hexactins and pentactins have conically pointed outer ends, usually rough. All these spicules show notable fusions, which makes their measurements rather difficult. Dermalia are hexactins with distal ray rough, other rays are smooth, conically pointed with rough distal ends. The distal ray of dermal hexactins is 0.066 –0.179 mm long, tangential rays are 0.087 –0.204 mm, the proximal ray is 0.194 – 0.944 mm, their diameter is about 0.007 mm. Atrialia are pentactins with rounded and rough outer ends, the tangential rays of atrial pentactins are 0.112–0.27 mm long, the distal ray is 0.306 –1.352 mm long; their diameter is about 0.01 mm.
The oscularia are mainly diactins, some triactins, rarely tetractins and other rarely found spicules, ranging from monactins to hexactins. Only one specimen, WAM Z 546, has a larger proportion of the triactins (see Tab. 24), but this may be a result of its poor condition. The rays of these spicules are smooth with conically pointed or sometimes rounded outer ends, they measure 0.076–0.608/ 0.002–0.046 mm.
Microscleres: floricomes, oxyhexasters, hemioxyhexasters and other oxyoidal abnormal forms, in some specimens oxyhexactins, graphiocomes and sigmatocomes. The floricomes are 0.067 –0.092 mm in diameter with the primary rosette 0.008 –0.019 mm in diameter. The oxyhexasters, oxyhemihexastrs and abnormal spicules with several primary rays reduced (observed in the specimenWAM Z 546) are 0.065 –0.113 mm in diameter with the primary rosette 0.006 –0.013 mm in diameter. The sigmatocomes (probably young floricomes) are very rare ( WAM Z 545 About WAM and WAM Z 546 About WAM ); they are 0.061 –0.063 mm in diameter with the primary rosette 0.013 –0.014 mm in diameter. Graphiocomes are equally rare and only represented by a few primary rosettes, 0.019 –0.021 mm in diameter GoogleMaps .
Remarks. E. aspergillum australicum has several peculiar features in comparison with the typical subspecies: it shows notable skeleton fusions and oscularia are mainly diactins (or diactins and triactins). Oxyhexasters have thin secondary rays (about 0.001 mm in diameter), they are often curved and many specimens have hemioxyhexasters, and sometimes even oxyhexactins are derived from the oxyhexasters.
Placopegma Schulze, 1895 View in CoL
Placopegma plumicomum Tabachnick and Levi, 2004 View in CoL ( Tab. 25)
Material. MNHN (p13; fr871)— Cidaris I , RV Franklin, sta. 13 1, 17 o 58.59’ S 148 o 38.40’ E, depth 1040–1059 m .
Description. Body: The specimen (or specimens?) is represented by small fragments.
Spicules: Choanosomal spicules are diactins and hexactins. The diactins are several mm in length and 0.006–0.05 mm in diameter with conically pointed outer ends, stout or rarely with a widening in the middle. The rare hexactins have rays about 2/ 0.05 mm. A unique anchorate spicule shows four short teeth and spiny shaft about 0.04 mm in diameter. Dermal spicules are hexactins with distal ray almost spiny and other rays rough, they are 0.01–0.025 mm in diameter and have conically pointed or rounded outer ends. The atrialia, and probably also a portion of the dermalia, are pentactins with rough rays, their outer ends similar to those of dermal spicules, the diameter of their rays is 0.008 mm.
Microsleres are spherical discohexasters with 4 (rarely 2) secondary rays, plumicomes and a unique hemidiscohexaster (0.084 mm in diameter).
Remarks. The sponge is attributed to P. plumicomum described from off New Caledonia ( Tabachnick and Lévi 2004) with very large probability. The only notable differences are not significant and are considered to be intraspecific variation: Length of distal ray of dermal hexactins and diameter of plumicomes ( Tab. 25); the latter is a result of different lengths of the sigmalike secondary rays, while the primary rosettes are nearly equal.
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.
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Genus |
Euplectella aspergillum australicum
Tabachnick, Konstantin R. & Menschenina, Dorte Janussen And Larisa L. 2008 |
Placopegma plumicomum
Tabachnick and Levi 2004 |
Placopegma
Schulze 1895 |