Ridleia echidna, Ekins & Erpenbeck & Wörheide & Hooper, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5369.1.3 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F906AFDC-DA4E-4ADB-9835-BC4B7692F1FD |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10247565 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A767CF2D-6D25-4945-B238-FE3BDD174D82 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:A767CF2D-6D25-4945-B238-FE3BDD174D82 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Ridleia echidna |
status |
sp. nov. |
Ridleia echidna sp. nov. Ekins, Erpenbeck & Hooper
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:A767CF2D-6D25-4945-B238-FE3BDD174D82
Figures 1 View FIGURE 1 & 8 View FIGURE 8
Part Radiella sp. QM 4942 sensu O’Hara et al. 2020: 4
Material examined: Holotype QM G337550 , Coral Sea Commonwealth Marine Reserve, Queensland, Australia, - 23.587, 154.194 to -23.617, 154.1947, 1013–1093 m, Beam Trawl, Coll. Merrick Ekins on RV Investigator, Cruise IN2017_ V03 , sample 121-149, 13/VI/2017. GoogleMaps
Etymology: named for its spiky surface and its egg-like morphology reminiscent of the egg laying monotreme Echidna spp, L. ekinos, ‘sea urchin’.
Diagnosis: Egg shaped Ridleia with a dense palisade of very thin, long tylostyles making up more than 2/3 of the sponge thickness, embedded in the collagenous layer and a cavernous interior.
Morphology: Growth form of the single known specimen so far is flattened egg-shaped, 12 mm in length, 9 mm in width, and 5 mm in height ( Fig. 8 A View FIGURE 8 ). Papillae were not found and presumably were lost during collection. The sponge is firm but compressible with a fine hispid layer.
Skeleton: This species is characterised by the massive palisade of large principal tylostyles almost 2 mm thick that makes up two thirds of the whole sponge body width ( Fig. 8 A–C View FIGURE 8 ). These large ectosomal tylostyles are embedded in the collagenous layer. The small tylostyles also emerge from the collagenous layer and are orientated radially as the large tylostyles ( Fig. 8 C, D View FIGURE 8 ). The lowest portion of the collagenous layer is characterised by the reduced and concentrated layer of tangential intermediate tylostyles. The inner choanosome has a cavernous interior with some residual tylostyle tracts ( Fig. 8 B, C View FIGURE 8 ).
Spicules: The ectosome is composed mainly of the long thin tylostyles that characterise this new species (994– (1907)–3200 × 9.9–(15.6)–24.2 μm (n=54) ( Fig. 8 E,F View FIGURE 8 ). The small tylostyles also make up the base of the ectosome (156–(296)–426 × 3.4–(7.5)–10.4 μm (n=36) ( Fig. 8 H View FIGURE 8 ). The intermediate tylostyles make up the tangential outermost layer of the choanosome (448–(662)–1000 × 6.5–(10.5)–13.8 μm (n=22) ( Fig. 8 G View FIGURE 8 ).
Distribution: Coral Sea, bathyal depths.
Ecology: Mud substrate.
Molecular data: no unambiguous 28S-C region barcode could be generated from this species.
Remarks: The holotype of Ridleia echidna sp. nov., QM G337550, is very different from the only two species remaining in this genus, i.e. R. oviformis Dendy, 1888 and R. dendyi de Laubenfels, 1934 . It differs from both other known species by its massive ectosomal palisade of tylostyles and the very reduced and concentrated layer of paratangential tylostyles. The choanosome has a cavernous interior with some residual tylostyle tracts. It is assigned to Polymastiidae based on the possession of several sizes of tylostyles, a distinct cortex, ectosome and internal spicule free choanosome. But it differs sensu stricto due to its primary styles being radial and the secondary styles are tangentially distributed. Ridleia is the closest genus we consider to allocate this new species, requiring confirmation based on molecular data from other species presently allocated to this genus.
QM |
Queensland Museum |
RV |
Collection of Leptospira Strains |
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 |
Ridleia echidna
Ekins, Merrick, Erpenbeck, Dirk, Wörheide, Gert & Hooper, John N. A. 2023 |
Radiella sp.
O'Hara, T. D. & Williams, A. & Ahyong, S. T. & Alderslade, P. & Alvestad, T. & Bray, D. & Burghardt, I. & Budaeva, N. & Criscione, F. & Crowther, A. L. & Ekins, M. & Eleaume, M. & Farrelly, C. A. & Finn, J. K. & Georgieva, M. N. & Graham, A. & Gomon, M. & Gowlett-Holmes, K. & Gunton, L. M. & Hallan, A & Hosie, A. M. & Hutchings, P. & Kise, H. & Konsgrud, J. A. & Kupriyanova, E. & Lu, C. C. & Mackenzie, M. & Mah, C. & MacIntosh, H. & Merrin, K. L. & Miskelly, A. & Mitchell, M. L. & Moore, K. & Murray, A. & O'Loughlin, P. M. & Paxton, H. & Pogonoski, J. J. & Staples, D. & Watson, J. E. & Wilson, R. S. & Zhang, J. & Bax, N. J. 2020: 4 |