Hyalonema (Cyliconema) aff. conqueror Tabachnick, Menshenina, Lopes & Hajdu, 2009
Van, Rob W. M., 2017, Sponges of the Guyana Shelf, Zootaxa 1, pp. 1-225 : 195
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.5698764 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A80010-7795-FF6E-FF14-A3F394FAF8DF |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Hyalonema (Cyliconema) aff. conqueror Tabachnick, Menshenina, Lopes & Hajdu, 2009 |
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Hyalonema (Cyliconema) aff. conqueror Tabachnick, Menshenina, Lopes & Hajdu, 2009 View in CoL
Figures 123 View FIGURE 123 a–k
Hyalonema (Cyliconema) conqueror Tabachnick et al., 2009: 1244 View in CoL , figs 1–2 (affinity).
Material examined. RMNH Por. 9355, 9828, 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. ( Fig. 123 View FIGURE 123 a) Small thin body tapering to an apical point, length 2 cm, diameter 0.5 cm. No atrial cavity. Tuft twice as long and almost as thick as the body, upper part of tuft provided with a few zoanthids.
Skeleton. Predominantly consisting of diactins of various lengths and shapes, arranged lengthwise, with scattered (hypo-)dermal pentacins and hexactins. A few dermal pinular pentactins are present, but these are rare. Microscleres predominantly consisting of mesamphidiscs and micramphidiscs, few macramphidiscs, no micropentactins or microhexactins.
Spicules. ( Figs 123 View FIGURE 123 b–k) Diactins, hexactins, pentactins, pinular pentactins, macr-, mes- and micramphidiscs. Diactins ( Fig. 123 View FIGURE 123 a) of the basal tuft at least 4 cm long, 180 µm thick.
Diactins of the body ( Figs 123 View FIGURE 123 b,b1), symmetrical, thinly tapering to sharp ends, with a vague centrotylote swelling, 1300– 2400 x 9–23 µm.
Choanosomal asymmetrical diactins, usually curved, with opposed swollen and more tapering ends, with a centrotylote swelling, divisible in two distinct types, (1) entirely smooth, sometimes stylote ( Figs. 123 View FIGURE 123 c,c1), 700– 1200 x 6–10 µm and (2) spined at both ends ( Figs 123 View FIGURE 123 d,d1), 528– 1100 x 5–10 µm; overall asymmetrical diactins 528– 941 – 1200 x 5 – 7.7 –10 µm.
Hypodermal pentactins ( Figs 123 View FIGURE 123 e–f), in a large size range, with usually smooth, often slightly curved rays with lengths 174– 415 –760 x 5 – 17.3 –37 µm.
Hypodermal hexactins ( Fig. 123 View FIGURE 123 g), in a large size range, usually with smooth rays, but the smaller ones may have spined rays, with lengths 243– 544 –910 x 10 – 19.1 –38 µm.
Dermal pinular pentactins ( Figs 123 View FIGURE 123 h,h1), rare, pinular ray with longest spines halfway, ending in short spines, tangential rays lightly and sparingly spined, only a few were found in the slides (n=7), pinular rays 110–177 x 6–8 µm, tangential rays 54– 96 x 5–10 µm.
Macramphidiscs ( Fig. 123 View FIGURE 123 i), shaft provided with about 10–15 spined warts distributed evenly along it, teeth of umbel smooth-rimmed and slim, (n=8), length x width 145–305 x 60 –125 µm, length of umbels 60–100 µm.
Mesamphidiscs ( Fig. 123 View FIGURE 123 j), umbels together occupying ¾ of the length leaving only a short open shaft, umbels with densely arranged somewhat squarish teeth, shaft provided with spined warts which are often distributed rather irregularly, length 46– 66 –87 µm.
Micramphidiscs ( Fig. 123 View FIGURE 123 k), umbels with ‘flattened’ top, occupying 4/5 of of the length, shaft with several spines or high warts, length 15– 22 –31 µm.
Distribution and ecology. Guyana Shelf, muddy bottom at 618 m.
Remarks. No clearly matching descriptions were found for this hyalonematid. Using the key in Tabachnick & Menshenina (2002) the overall features appear closest to those of the subgenus Cyliconema (macramphidisc umbels wider than high, no sieve plates as in subgenus Coscinonema ). Apart from the intact (?) specimen RMNH Por. 9355, there is a basalia-only fragment RMNH Por. 9828 from the same station, assumed to be the same species. There is a certain similarity in spiculation with the Brazilian Hyalonema (Cyliconema) conqueror Tabachnick et al., 2009 , but this has cup-shaped habitus, and possesses microhexactins and –pentactins, and pinular diactins, all lacking in the present specimen. Ornamented asymmetrical diactins such as found in the present specimen have not been reported in H. (C.) conqueror , unless these were considered ‘pinular diactins’. Similarly, there are similarities with Caribbean H. (Coscinonema) schmidti Schulze, 1899 and H. (Coscinonema) toxeres Schulze, 1887 , but these do not match the full set of characters. I refrain from erecting a new species for this material, because I suspect that dermalia have been damaged and I am not confident that the specimen has a complete spiculation. Possibly, this is a juvenile, damaged specimen of H. (C.) conqueror .
RMNH |
National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis |
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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Hyalonema (Cyliconema) aff. conqueror Tabachnick, Menshenina, Lopes & Hajdu, 2009
Van, Rob W. M. 2017 |
Hyalonema (Cyliconema) conqueror Tabachnick et al., 2009 : 1244
Tabachnick 2009: 1244 |