Leucetta purpurea, Leocorny, Pedro, Alencar, Aline, Fromont, Jane & Klautau, Michelle, 2016

Leocorny, Pedro, Alencar, Aline, Fromont, Jane & Klautau, Michelle, 2016, New Leucettidae de Laubenfels, 1936 (Porifera, Calcarea) from Western Australia, Zootaxa 4175 (4), pp. 319-334 : 324-326

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4175.4.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9052926E-1A4A-4CBC-B7FB-AA3B49577731

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5661782

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C06287E2-FFD3-FFA7-819C-873A15D7D4EE

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Leucetta purpurea
status

sp. nov.

Leucetta purpurea View in CoL sp. nov.

Etymology. From the Latin adjective purpureus, meaning purple, for the colour of the species in ethanol.

Diagnosis. Species with a reduced atrium and a conspicuous cortical reticulation of triactines. The skeleton is composed of tripods and one category each of triactine and tetractine.

Type material. Holotype, WAM Z31426; 30º20.36’S, 114º58.81’E Escape Island , Jurien Bay, Western Australia GoogleMaps ; station: JWAM06/T2; depth: 12–13 meters; collectors: Fromont, J.; Titelius, M. A.; Whisson, C. S. & Moore, G.I.; date: 01/May/2005. Fragment from Holotype deposited under UFRJPOR 7255.

Type locality. Escape Island , Jurien Bay, Western Australia, Australia.

Description. Sponge purple in ethanol with a massive form (1.9 cm x 1.8 cm) and a single osculum in the apical region (0.1 cm in diameter) ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 A). The surface is smooth but is rough to the touch. The atrial cavity is reduced to exhalant canals connected to the osculum. The aquiferous system is leuconoid.

The skeleton is disorganized and composed of tripods, triactines, and tetractines. The cortical skeleton has huge tripods arranged tangentially to the surface and triactines organised in a conspicuous reticulation ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 B, 3C). No subcortical lacunae were present. The choanosomal skeleton is composed of triactines and tetractines. The tetractines mainly surround the canals with their apical actines pointing inwards ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 D, 3E). Spicules. ( Table 3). Tripods ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 F): regular or subregular. Actines are conical and curved with blunt tips (625–785–1125 µm / 100–166–225 µm).

Triactines ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 G): regular, or sagittal when forming the cortical reticulation. Actines are conical with blunt tips (72–121–153 µm / 10–17–23 µm).

Length (µm) Width (µm)

Spicule Actine Min Mean sd Max Min Mean sd Max N Tripods 625.0 785.0 120.4 1125.0 100.0 166.3 28.7 225.0 20 Triactines 72.5 121.0 26.1 152.5 10.0 16.7 4.3 22.5 20 Tetractines Basal 100.0 131.4 18.5 160.0 12.5 16.8 2.4 20.0 20

Apical 40.0 51.8 10.8 77.5 5.0 7.2 2.0 11.2 20 Tetractines ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 H): regular. The apical and basal actines are conical or slightly conical with blunt tips (basal: 100–131–160µm / 13–17–20 µm; apical: 40–52–78 µm / 5–7–11 µm).

Remarks. Leucetta insignis Row & Hôzawa, 1931 , from Australia, is the only species within Leucetta that has the same spicule composition as L. purpurea sp. nov., however, the new species has longer and thicker tripods ( L. insignis : 200–260 µm / 30–60 µm versus L. purpurea sp. nov.: 625–1125 µm / 100–225 µm). Furthermore, L. purpurea sp. nov. is the only species in the genus with a purple colour in ethanol, although more specimens should be collected to confirm the constancy of this character.

WAM

Western Australian Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Calcarea

Order

Clathrinida

Family

Leucettidae

Genus

Leucetta

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