Dragmaxia anomala, Carvalho & Hajdu, 2004
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.400.1.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5227557 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B687F7-4D0A-FFFB-BE42-0697FEC4FD4A |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Dragmaxia anomala |
status |
sp. nov. |
Dragmaxia anomala sp.n.
( Fig. 2A–F View FIGURE 2 ; Tab. I)
Holotype. Ilhabela: MNRJ 122 View Materials , Saco da Serraria (23º48.344’S – 45º14.401’W), Ilhabela , São Sebastião , São Paulo State, 13m depth, col. E. Hajdu, 11/i/1996. GoogleMaps
Paratypes. Ilhabela: MNRJ 124 View Materials , Saco da Serraria , Ilhabela , São Sebastião, São Paulo State, 13m depth, col. E. Hajdu, 11/i/1996 ; MNRJ 500 View Materials , Codo Islet (23º55.206’S – 45º17.936’W), Saco das Anchovas, Ilhabela, São Sebastião, São Paulo State, 15–17m, col. E. Hajdu, 22/vi/1997 GoogleMaps ; MNRJ 788 View Materials , Ilha da Serraria (23º48.758’S – 45º13.812’W), Ilhabela, São Sebastião, São Paulo State, 20m, col. E. Hajdu, 11/i/1996 GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis. Dragmaxia anomala sp.n. is set apart from the other species of the genus by its encrusting shape with digitated projections and its yellowishorange colour alive. Megascleres are a single category of styles and subtylostyles. Raphides ornamented are absent.
Description. Encrusting with digitated projections, up to 2cm high, compressible with an hispid surface ( Fig. 2A View FIGURE 2 ). The projections can be forked ( Fig. 2B View FIGURE 2 ). Colour alive is yellow to yellowishorange, the surface can be white, and specimens become whitish in alcohol.
Skeleton. No specialized ectosomal skeleton. Choanosomal skeleton plumose ( Fig. 2C View FIGURE 2 ) with spicular axes ascending to the surface, usually dendritically. Figure 2C View FIGURE 2 shows a vestige of axial condensation.
Spicules ( Fig. 2D–F View FIGURE 2 ; Tab. I). Megascleres are styles slightly curved with 180–730µm in length and 7–20µm thick. (Subtylo)styles slightly curved, nearly straight, with 140– 470µm in length and 10–20µm thick. Microscleres are rare smooth raphides with 72–384 µm in length.
Distribution and ecology. Known only from Ilhabela, São Sebastião, São Paulo State. The species is rare. The specimens were collected at 13–20m depth. MNRJ 500 was found on top or a large rock, semicovered by sediment.
Etymology. The species is named after its seemingly uncommon characteristic of possessing raphides which are unornamented, a character so far judged decisive diagnostically.
Remarks. An alternative identification for the new species would be in Monanchora Carter, 1883 ( Crambeidae , Poecilosclerida , Demospongiae) due to the form of its megascleres, similar to those observed in this genus, which can also present a plumose skeleton (in encrusting forms). However, Monanchora has conspicuous spongin and functional specialization of its megascleres, two characters not observed in Dragmaxia anomala sp.n. Monanchora usually presents chelas or derived microscleres, but these can be rare (Van Soest et al. 1996).
Only two species of Dragmaxia were known until now, D. variabilis (Whitelegge, 1907) , from the east coast of Australia, and D. undata Alvarez et al., 1998 , from Dutch Antilles and Colombia, Caribbean. Both possess ornamented raphides as microscleres, a morphologic trait not matched by the studied material. Dragmaxia anomala sp.n. is nevertheless considered to belong to the genus in view of its styles forming ascending, dendritic tracts (plumose choanosomal skeleton), a decision corroborated by Rob van Soest and Belinda Alvarez (in litt.). This pattern is similar to that seen in the type species, D. variabilis , despite less dense ( Alvarez & Hooper 2002). The specimens´ shape recall the “irregular thin projections, sometimes dichotomously branched” reported by Alvarez et al. (1998). The occurrence of rare smooth raphides in the Brazilian material is considered unimportant here, and could be interpreted as a plesiomorphic trait retained in the new species.
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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