Radiella sol Schmidt, 1870

Van, Rob W. M., 2017, Sponges of the Guyana Shelf, Zootaxa 1, pp. 1-225 : 123-125

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.272951

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6D68A019-6F63-4AA4-A8B3-92D351F1F69B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5698676

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A80010-772D-FFD0-FF14-A4189281FB72

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Radiella sol Schmidt, 1870
status

 

Radiella sol Schmidt, 1870

Figures 76 View FIGURE 76 a–e

Restricted synonymy: Radiella sol Schmidt, 1870: 48 , pl. IV fig. 6; De Laubenfels 1936: 150, pl. 2 fig. 2; Boury-Esnault 2002: 213, fig. 10. Polymastia sol ; Van Soest & Stentoft 1988: 75, fig. 36.

Material examined. RMNH Por. 9364, Guyana, ‘Luymes’ Guyana Shelf Expedition, station 80, 7.9333°N 57.2°W, depth 618 m, Van Veen grab, muddy bottom, 1 September 1970 GoogleMaps .

Description. Four circular flattened hemispherical sponges each with a fringe of long spicules. The largest individual is shown in Fig. 76 View FIGURE 76 a. Upper surface provided with a few low papillae arranged around a slightly larger central papilla, hispid inbetween the papillae and covered with a thin layer of sediment. Undersurface conical, smooth. Sizes vary from 11–18 mm in diameter, 3–5 mm in thickness. Color pale beige in alcohol. Consistency tough.

Skeleton. ( Fig. 76 View FIGURE 76 b) In cross section, from lower to upper parts the skeleton consist of a bed with thickness approximately 400–500 µm of long subtylostyles protruding far beyond the central disk as a fringe. Above this, there is a 1 mm thick confused mass of criss crossed tylostyles, on top of which there are tracts of longer and smaller tylostyles approximately 2 mm long, radiating towards the surface. Small tylostyles are concentrated at the surface but are also scattered in the tracts.

Spicules. ( Figs 76 View FIGURE 76 c–e) Subtylostyles, tylostyles.

Subtylostyles ( Figs 76 View FIGURE 76 c,c1), longest of the monactinal spicules, from the bottom parts of the skeleton, elongately fusiform, with style-like head (tyles not visible), mostly broken in the slides, unbroken spicules from 1.5–2.1 mm, but presumably considerably longer up to 4 mm or more, thickness 12–36 µm.

Intermediate tylostyles ( Figs 76 View FIGURE 76 d,d1), from the confused and subectosomal region, fusiform with clearly visible but faint terminal tyles, 744– 859 – 1212 x 6 – 14.2 –19 µm.

Small tylostyles of the ectosomal region ( Figs 76 View FIGURE 76 e,e1), with prominent terminal tyles, shaft often curved, usual fusiform, 195– 335 –468 x 7 – 11.1 –13 µm.

Distribution and ecology. Guyana shelf, Florida, Gulf of Mexico ( Cuba), also reported from the Arctic but this needs verification; depth range 200–1176 m ( Guyana Shelf 618 m).

Remarks. The specimens from the Guyana shelf are slightly smaller in diameter than Schmidt’s specimen from 1176 m depth off Cuba (2 cm, cf. Boury-Esnault 2002 (p. 213), and the upper surface is more flattened (cf. Boury-Esnault 2002 (fig. 10C). Schmidt’s drawing has a less convex flattened upper surface than shown by Boury- Esnault. In other aspects the Guyana specimens are closely similar to the type . There is also considerable similarity (perhaps more so than with the type specimen of Radiella sol ) with specimens of Trichostemma sarsii Ridley & Dendy, 1886 (= Radiella sarsii ), described from the Azores at 1800 m depth. Possibly, this is a junior synonym of Radiella sol .

Recently, Plotkin et al. (2016b) sequenced a representative set of polymastiid species and found that the genus Radiella was not monophyletic: Radiella hemisphaerica ( Sars, 1872) clustered with Polymastia species, while Radiella sarsii was in the same strongly supported clade with Spinularia spinularia ( Bowerbank, 1866) , the type species of the genus Spinularia Gray, 1867 . Since Spinularia is an older name than Radiella, Plotkin et al. (2016b) concluded that Radiella is a junior synonym of Spinularia . However, this conclusion is premature because the properties of Radiella are determined by the type species, Radiella sol , which has not been included in the molecular study. Even though it is likely that Radiella sol —because it is quite similar morphologicallly to R. sarsii —is indeed close to Spinularia , I refrain from reassigning the present species to that genus until reliably identified material of Radiella sol has been sequenced.

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

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