Latrunculia (Latrunculia) fiordensis Alvarez et al., 2002

Samaai, Toufiek, Gibbons, Mark J. & Kelly, Michelle, 2006, Revision of the genus Latrunculia du Bocage, 1869 Porifera: Demospongiae: Latrunculiidae) with descriptions of new species from New Caledonia and the Northeastern Pacific (, Zootaxa 1127 (1), pp. 1-71 : 44-45

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1127.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E3B8BACE-1E5B-4E07-AB94-A4947F966483

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038D1B08-1375-FF95-FED7-FD12356BF88C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Latrunculia (Latrunculia) fiordensis Alvarez et al., 2002
status

 

Latrunculia (Latrunculia) fiordensis Alvarez et al., 2002 View in CoL

( Figs 1M, 2 View FIGURE 2 , 3G; Tables 2 & 3)

Latrunculia fiordensis Alvarez et al., 2002 View in CoL , PG. 172, FIG. 3E, 10 View FIGURE 10

Holotype material. Not examined, NZOI H 800 View Materials , Niwa collection.

Additional paratype material. Not examined, NZOI P­1271; NZOI 1272 View Materials ; Niwa Collection .

Other material examined. NZOI stn A521 (Ts 51), New Zealand, 73 54.0–52.0'S, 177 44.0–46.0'W, depth 569– 547 m, NIWA collection

Diagnosis. Massive, semispherical sponge with cylindrical­shaped oscules and numerous sub­globular, short, thin lipped crater­like areolate porefields, without a membranous cover ( Fig. 3G). Colour in life is green; in preservative, dark brown.

Spicules. Styles are fusiform and often polytylote, 375 (317–453) x 6 (4–8) m, n=20. Anisodiscorhabds ( Fig. 1M) with a simple manubrium and heavily spined basal, median, subsidiary and apical whorls, with spines projecting on several planes. The median whorl is larger in diameter than the subsidiary and apical whorls. The subsidiary whorl is slanted upwards and the whorls are notched along the rim and divided into four segments, each segment possessing denticulate margins of 6–7 spines. The apical whorl is also separate from the subsidiary whorl by a short shaft. Acanthodiscorhabd length 39 (34–45) x 4 (3–6) m, n=20. The choanosomal skeleton consists of a firm and well developed but irregular polygonal­meshed reticulation and the surface of the ectosome is lined with an erect layer of non­interlocking anisodiscorhabds (see Fig. 10B View FIGURE 10 in Alvarez et al. 2002). The ectosome of consists of a clear, thick band of collagenous mesohyal, 200–450 µm thick, at the base of which is a thin band of paratangential styles. This layer is present in the fistulae with styles disposed in a compact, regular vertical to oblique arrangement supporting the mammiform areolate structures (after Alvarez et al. 2002).

Off the New Zealand coastline the species are found in a calm, low light and salinity environment, typically that of fiords areas. It is attached to vertical rock walls, and not confined to shaded areas as other coastal species. Depth range 5–569 m depth.

Geographic distribution ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). New Zealand (Fiordlands)

Remarks. Latrunculia (Latrunculia) fiordensis is separated from other species on the elaborate spinose nature of the whorls on the anisodiscorhabd (see Alvarez et al. 2002 for comparison to other New Zealand species).

NZOI

New Zealand Oceanographic Institute

NIWA

National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Poecilosclerida

Family

Latrunculiidae

Genus

Latrunculia

Loc

Latrunculia (Latrunculia) fiordensis Alvarez et al., 2002

Samaai, Toufiek, Gibbons, Mark J. & Kelly, Michelle 2006
2006
Loc

Latrunculia fiordensis

Alvarez 2002
2002
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