A review of Ancorina, Stryphnus, and Ecionemia (Demospongiae, Astrophorida, Ancorinidae), with descriptions of new species from New Zealand waters
Author
Kelly, Michelle
Author
Sim-Smith, Carina
text
Zootaxa
2012
3480
1
47
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.282353
675807a8-0007-438c-99e0-282827c51474
1175-5326
282353
Ancorina stalagmoides
(Dendy 1924)
(
Fig. 1
B, 4D–H, 8)
Ancorina stalagmoides
Dendy, 1924: 297
, pl. III,
Fig. 4
, pl. VII, Fig. 12–15.
Ancorina stalagmoides
,
Bergquist (1968: 40)
.
Material examined.
NIWA
49896: 3 nautical miles east of North Cape,
34.412° S
,
173.150° E
,
133 m
,
19 Apr 1999
, additional vouchers are in the
CRRF
reference collection (0
CDN
6697-O) and at the
USNM
(
USNM
1182985);
NIWA
49897: TAN9915-AA, Stn 3B, Ngunguru Bay, Tutukaka,
35.697° S
,
174.648° E
,
80 m
,
13 Dec 1999
;
NIWA
62162: TAN0413/138, Mahia Knoll, Bay of Plenty,
37.316° S
,
177.075° E
,
466–495 m
,
14 Nov 2004
;
NIWA
44455: Stn E848, north of the Three Kings Islands,
33.983° S
,
171.667° E
,
17 Mar
1968
, 250 m;
NIWA
75683: TAN1108/275, Ranfurly Bank, northeast of East Cape,
37.316° S
,
178.943° W
,
145–155 m
, 0
3 Jun 2011
.
FIGURE 4.
Megascleres and microscleres of New Zealand species of
Ancorina
:
Ancorina diplococcus
,
NIWA 62048: A. dichotriaene, scale = 500 µm; B.
oxyaster
I, scale = 10 µm; C. dumbbell-shaped sanidasterhabds, scale = 5 µm.
Ancorina stalagmoides
, NIWA 49896: D. protriaene, scale = 500 µm; E. prodichotriaene, scale = 500 µm; F.
oxyaster
I, scale = 10 µm;
G. oxyaster
II, scale = 5 µm; H. dumbbell-shaped sanidasterhabds, scale = 5 µm.
Ancorina bellae
sp. nov.
, NIWA 62005: I. prodichotriaene, scale = 500 µm; J. anatriaene, scale = 200 µm; K.
oxyaster
I, scale = 20 µm; L.
oxyaster
II, scale = 10 µm; M. cruciform sanidasterhabds, scale = 5 µm.
Ancorina globosa
sp. nov.
, NIWA 76782: N. dichotriaene, scale = 500 µm; O.
oxyaster
I, scale = 20 µm; P. spheraster-shaped
oxyaster
II, scale = 4 µm; Q. dumbbell-shaped sanidasterhabds, scale = 6 µm.
Other material.
Ancorina stalagmoides
:
NHMUK
1923.10.1.24 (
syntype
), dry subsample from R. N. XXXIII. 1;
NHMUK
1923.10.1.23 (
syntype
), dry subsample from R. N. XXXIII. 6;
NHMUK
1923.10.1.220,
NHMUK
1923.10.1.402,
NHMUK
1923.10.1.115, microscope slides from R. N. XXXIII. 1, 6: unidentified
Terra
Nova
Stn, off Three Kings Islands, British
Antarctic
(
Terra
Nova
) Expedition,
1910, 16 Jul
–24 Sep 1911.
Type
locality.
Three Kings Islands.
Distribution.
Three Kings Islands, North Cape, Tutukaka, Bay of Plenty.
Description.
Massive, sculpted sponge, 190 x
170 mm
with an apical depression and deeply corrugated/ sculpted growths projecting outwards and downwards (
Fig. 1
B). Small oscules are scattered in the apical and lateral depressions, about
2–3 mm
diameter. Texture compressible, velvety to the touch and hispid in places, interior is very harsh and siliceous. Entire surface is encrusted with
Desmacella dendyi
de Laubenfels (
Poecilosclerida
:
Desmacellidae
), up to
3 mm
thick. Colour in life is orange owing to the encrusting
D. dendyi
, interior is tan, which changes rapidly to pink upon exposure to air. Colour in ethanol is dark tan, interior is medium brown.
Skeleton.
Ectosome about 1200 µm thick, cavernous with aquiferous canals, with a thick band of dark granular ‘fibrous’ collagen, along the ectosome/choanosome boundary. Sanidasterhabds are moderately dense at the surface of the sponge and scattered below. Dense bundles of large oxeas and triaenes radiate out from the centre of the sponge towards the surface. Triaenes are abundant at the surface of the sponge, arranged in tight brushes, with their cladomes uppermost. The pitchfork-like cladomes of the protriaenes and dichotriaenes extend beyond the ectosome and encrustation of
D
.
dendyi
, rendering the surface particularly harsh and scratchy. The choanosome is more heavily pigmented than the ectosome and densely packed with oxyasters. Oxyasters and smaller microscleres are scattered throughout the ectosome.
Spicules.
Megascleres (
Fig. 4
D–E) are
oxeas
, large, stout, fusiform, very slightly curved with sharply pointed ends, 3576 (2941–4114)
x 86
(58–109) µm;
protriaenes
(
Fig. 4
D), large, stout spicules with a pitch-fork shape, rhadome length 3043 (2421–3924) µm, clad length 315 (213–430) µm, cladome width 290 (241–361) µm;
prodichotriaenes
(
Fig. 4
E), large, stout spicules with a long, gradually tapering rhabdome, 3015 (2486–3592) µm, and forward arching clads. Cladi are short and stout, protoclads are 141 (87–203) µm long and protrude at an approximately 45° angle from the shaft, deutroclads are 116 (67–139) µm long and protrude at 60–70° from the shaft, cladome is 433 (301–570) µm wide.
Microscleres (
Fig. 4
F–H) are
oxyasters I
(
Fig. 4
F) with around 7–10 slender rays that are sharply pointed at the ends, and lightly spined, 15 (12–18) µm diameter;
oxyasters II,
smaller than
oxyaster
I and with more rays, 6 (4–9) µm diameter (
Fig. 4
G);
sanidasterhabds
(
Fig. 4
H), with acanthose irregular spines, frequently with a central restriction, producing a dumbbell-like shape, 5 (4–6) µm long.
Substrate, depth range, and ecology.
Coral rubble and rocky substrate; found between
80–
495 m
.
Remarks.
Ancorina stalagmoides
is distinctive in morphology, forming a sculpted mass, and in the form of the prodichotriaenes and dichotriaenes which resemble pitch-forks. The thick ectosome with fibrous granular collagen at the lower boundary is characteristic of
Ancorina
and similar to that of both
A
.
diplococcus
and
A
.
bellae
sp. nov.
The sanidasterhabds are similar in form to those of
A
.
diplococcus
in that they are dumbbell-shaped, but the acanthose spines are less densely packed. Under light microscopy these are easily mistaken for the acanthomicrorhabds of
Ecionemia
, but careful observation reveals the inherent irregularity and spininess of these microscleres. The choanosomal oxyasters are common, but are much smaller and less abundant than those in
A
.
diplococcus
and
A. bellae
sp. nov.