Ancorina bellae, Kelly, Michelle & Sim-Smith, Carina, 2012
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.282353 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6168605 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C987BF-FFFF-FFDA-09A4-89CCFEDA5EF1 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Ancorina bellae |
status |
sp. nov. |
Ancorina bellae sp. nov.
( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 C, 4I –M, 8)
Material examined. Holotype ― NIWA 62005: Princes Island, Three Kings Islands, 34.178° S, 172.046° E, 16 m, 15 Apr 1999, additional vouchers of the holotype are in the CRRF reference collection (0 CDN 6598-H) and at the USNM ( USNM 1182986). Paratype ― NIWA 62023: Great Island, Three Kings Island, 34.153° S, 172.134° E, 10 m, 14 Apr 1999, additional vouchers of the paratype are in the CRRF reference collection (0 CDN 6553-I) and at the USNM ( USNM 1182987). Other material. NIWA 62009: Princes Island, Three Kings Islands, 34.178° S, 172.046° E, 16 m, 20 Oct 2003; NIWA 52997, NIWA 52984: Northeast Island, Three Kings Islands, 34.165° S, 172.165° E, 10–20 m, 24 Nov 2002.
Type locality. Three Kings Islands.
Distribution. Only known from the type locality.
Description. Low, loaf-shaped sponge, 120 mm diameter x 50 mm thick, with a well-defined ectosome, 1–2 mm thick, and no visible oscules ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 C). Surface rough and sandpapery to the touch, internal texture fleshy, compressible, can be torn. Epiphytes often buried in surface of sponge. Interior has visible tracts of spicules, ostia visible as a tracery around the base of low mounds, colour in life cream to grey, interior beige to peach to tan, colour in ethanol beige throughout. The thick basal collagen layer of the ectosome has a heavy dark green pigment in life.
Skeleton. Ectosome is 1000–1900 µm thick and well differentiated from the underlying choanosome by a thick (250–400 µm) heavily pigmented, collagen-rich band above the ectosome/choanosome boundary. This collagen layer is permeated with cyanobacteria, conferring a dark green colour in life. The ectosome is translucent, and reinforced with radiating bunches of dichotriaenes, the end of the rhabdomes just entering the choanosome, the cladomes uppermost. A very dense crust of microscleres covers the surface, 70–140 µm thick, enveloping the cladomes of the dichotriaenes. Large oxeas radiate in tight bundles within the choanosome. Large and small oxyasters are packed in the choanosome.
Skeleton. Megascleres ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 I–J) are oxeas, very large, fusiform, 4418 (2574–5670) x 51 (29–75) µm; prodichotriaenes ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 I), very large with a long, gradually tapering rhabdome and a small, tulip-shaped cladome, the protorhabd facing well forward. Rhabdome length 3897 (3272–4811) µm, cladome width 224 (185– 291) µm, protoclad length 114 (79–150) µm, deutroclad length 61 (37–147) µm; anatriaenes ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 J), very long, slender, 3119 (2055–4217) µm long, with a small, flat cladome, 82 (57–117) µm wide (n=13).
Microscleres ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 K–M) are oxyasters I ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 K) with 6–12 smooth conical rays, 60 (39–72) µm diameter; oxyaster II ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 L), rays with several prominent spines, 15 (12–18) µm diameter; sanidasterhabds ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 M), cruciform to irregularly cruciform, with 4–6 short irregular bulbous rays emanating from an elongated centrum, acanthose, 5 (4–6) µm long.
Substrate, depth range, and ecology. Collected from walls, boulder slopes, archways, frequently partially encrusted by a variety of epiphytes, between 10– 20 m.
Etymology. Named after Lori J. Bell, co-founder of the Coral Reef Research Foundation, Palau, in recognition of the contribution she has made to our knowledge of Northland sponges through CRRF’s collections in 1999, and for her discovery of this new species.
Remarks. Ancorina bellae sp. nov. conforms to the general skeletal characteristics of the genus ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ), having a conspicuous 2 mm thick ectosome with a collagen-rich layer at the base of the ectosome, discrete brushes of triaenes with their rhabdomes in the ectosome and cladomes outermost, and oxeas that are not strictly radial in the choanosome. The microscleres are sanidasterhabds and two sizes of oxyasters.
A. bellae sp. nov. differs from A. diplococcus and A. stalagmoides in the following ways: A. bellae sp. nov. displays markedly different colouration of ectosome and choanosome, which is white with a peach-coloured interior, while A. diplococcus is magenta with a tan interior, and A. stalagmoides is tan. In terms of spiculation there are also large differences in the form of the triaene: protriaenes and prodichotriaenes in A. stalagmoides , and ‘ortho’ dichotriaenes in A. diplococcus . The prodichotriaenes and oxeas in A. bellae sp. nov. are enormous compared to those of A. diplococcus , and the former are prodichotriaenes, not the more typical plagiodichotriaenes as in A. diplococcus . Ancorina bellae sp. nov. also has anatriaenes, and is the only species of Ancorina to possess them amongst New Zealand species. The sanidasterhabds of A. bellae sp. nov. are much less regular than those in A. diplococcus and A. stalagmoides , they are cruciform to elongate cruciform with bulbous irregular rays, whereas those of A. diplococcus and A. stalagmoides are an irregular dumbbell shape. Finally, A. bellae sp. nov. has a small category of oxyasters that are abundant in the choanosome with the larger oxyasters; these are absent in A. diplococcus .
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |