Demosponges from the sublittoral and shallow-circalittoral (<24 m depth) Antarctic Peninsula with a description of four new species and notes on in situ identification characteristics
Author
Goodwin, Claire E.
Author
Berman, Jade
Author
Hendry, Katharine R.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-08-23
4658
3
461
508
journal article
25927
10.11646/zootaxa.4658.3.3
c807f833-9fe4-45ec-b5d6-62c6b88979b3
1175-5326
3376028
D926CCEC-56EF-4E9A-98BE-CEB4D4D3D60A
Tedania
(
Tedaniopsis
)
tantula
(
Kirkpatrick, 1907
)
(
Figure 21
)
Synonomy:
Tedania tantula
(
Kirkpatrick, 1907
)
,
Oceanapia tantula
Kirkpatrick, 1907
.
Specimens.
BELUM
.
Mc
2015.600
Grotto Island
,
Verdansky Base
(
Site
1) (
65°14.615’S
,
64° 15.019’W
), depth
14–24 m
;
16/02/2015
.
BELUM
.
Mc
2015.619
Grotto Island
,
Verdansky Base
(
Site
2) (
65°14.529’S
,
64° 15.451’W
), depth
6–18 m
;
16/02/2015
.
BELUM
.
Mc
2015.686
Rocks
NW of Laktionov Island
(
65°45.536’S
,
65° 47.319’W
), depth
6–23 m
;
22/02/2015
.
BELUM
.
Mc
2015.738
Port Charcot
,
Booth Island
(
65°03.853’S
,
64° 01.868’W
), depth
6–16 m
;
23/02/2015
.
BELUM
.
Mc
2015.778
Under Spiggot Peak
,
Orne Harbour
(
64°37.755’S
,
62° 33.018’W
), depth
5–21 m
; collected by
C. Goodwin
and
E. Priestley
,
25/02/2015
.
BELUM
.
Mc
2015.809
Neptune’s Bellows
,
Deception Island
(
62°59.607’S
,
60° 33.601’W
), depth
7–18 m
; collected by
C. Goodwin
and
E. Priestley
,
26/02/2015
.
BELUM
.
Mc
2015.840
Diomedea Island
(
62°12.185’S
,
58° 56.760’W
), depth
10–18 m
; collected by C. Goodwin and E. Priestley,
01/03/2015
.
Comparative material examined.
BMNH 1908.2
.5.198
Oceanapia tantula
Kirkpatrick, 1907
Holotype
. Slides a–k (spicule preparations and tissue sections).
External morphology.
In situ appearance
(
Figure 21A
): Yellow orange tubular sponge which may be branched. Up to
10 cm
in length. The oval tubes taper out to a pore sieve structure at their end. In all of our specimens the majority of the tube was covered in encrusting epiphytes and epizooids (algae, bryozoans, other sponges) and only the terminal pore sieve structures were visible and immediately apparent. The texture of the tubes is very chitinous and most un sponge-like—resembling a worm tube.
Preserved appearance.
Tapered tube with smooth surface. Texture very firm. Alcohol coloured bright yellow.
Skeleton
: The main choanosomal skeleton (
Figure 21B
) is formed of ascending columns of up to 20 styles mixed with onychaetes with some smaller intercrossing columns and many free styles. The outer ectosomal chitinous layer (
Figure 21C
) is formed of an ectosomal tangential layer of tornotes.
Spicules:
Measurements from
BELUM
.Mc2015.600.
Styles (
Figure 21D
): 393(445)512 by 16(20)
22 µm
abruptly pointed and usually curved.
Tornotes (
Figure 21E,F
): 404(438)452 by 7(12)
15 µm
ends usually symmetrical.
Onychaetes 1 (
Figure 21G
): length 76(88)
103 µm
.
Onychaetes 2 (
Figure 21H,I
): length 416(510)
694 µm
.
Remarks.
The spicule size ranges and external form of our specimen closely match those of the type (from our measurements of the
Holotype
(styles 460–550 by
18–22 µm
; tornotes 320–390 by
10 µm
; onychaetes
550–670 µm
and
80–110 µm
). The form of the styles differs slightly in that the majority of those in the
holotype
are modified into strongyles, where strongyle modifications were hardly ever found in our specimens.
Rios (2006)
also notes the presence of strongyle modifications in some of her specimens.
Paratedania
Burton 1929
was erected for this species because of its densely packed layer of tangential megascleres as opposed to the bouquet-type arrangement found in other
Tedania
. However,
Burton (1932)
withdrew the genus and synonomised the species with
Tedania
(
Tedaniopsis
)
massa
Ridley & Dendy, 1886
as he noted that some
T. massa
specimens had patches of chitinous ectosome which had a similar arrangement of spicules, even though in the rest of the specimen the arrangement was normal. Whilst he notes a variety of forms, some with cuticle and some without, in
T. massa
and
T. tantula
he considered, given the similarities in spiculation and embryology, that they were not valid species.
Koltun (1964)
states that while
T. tantula
is similar to
T. massa
in terms of skeletal arrangement its external form is more like that of
T. actiniformis
Ridley & Dendy, 1886
and recommended that, pending a revision of all Antarctic
Tedania
species, they be maintained as separate species.
Desqueyroux-Faúndez & Van Soest (1996)
and
Van Soest (2002b)
followed
Burton (1932)
in considering
T. tantula
as a junior synonym of
T. massa
Ridley & Dendy 1886
.
Van Soest (2002c)
re-examined the
type
specimen of
T. tantula
and noted that the tangential arrangement of spicules at the surface was probably induced by the shells of molluscs to which they were attached. Whilst he noted some differences in the tornote ending between
T. tantula
and
T. massa
he considered that, as this character is variable, conspecificity was still possible.
Rios (2006)
collected several specimens of
T. tantula
from the Antarctic Peninsula and notes that the tangential arrangement of spicules is present in the ectosomal layer even when the specimens are not attached to mollusc shells, therefore she maintains it as a valid species. We support this here and the
in situ
appearance also differs significantly from
T. massa
:
the
type
specimen of
T. massa
is described as ‘massive, cake-like, attaining enormous dimensions’ whereas, as in our specimens the
type
of
T. tantula
is a thin-walled tube.
Distribution.
This species is very abundant in the Antarctic and sub-Antarctic (
Koltun 1964
,
1976
). Records include the
type
location, Winter Quarters Ross Sea, (
Kirkpatrick 1907
); McMurdo Sound (
Burton 1929
); Ross Sea (
Pansini
et al.
1994
), Weddell Sea (
Gutt & Koltun 1995
,
Göcke & Janussen 2013
). Antarctic Peninsula and Bellinghausen Sea (
Rios 2006
).