Revision of the genus Latrunculia du Bocage, 1869 Porifera: Demospongiae: Latrunculiidae) with descriptions of new species from New Caledonia and the Northeastern Pacific (
Author
Samaai, Toufiek
Author
Gibbons, Mark J.
Author
Kelly, Michelle
text
Zootaxa
2006
2006-02-14
1127
1
1
71
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.1127.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.1127.1.1
11755334
5057828
E3B8BACE-1E5B-4E07-AB94-A4947F966483
Latrunculia
(
Biannulata) procumbens
Alvarez
et al
., 2002
(Figs 6D, 7, 8H;
Tables 2
&
3
)
Latrunculia procumbens
Alvarez
et al
., 2002
, PG. 161,
FIGS 3B
,
5
Holotype
material.
Not examined,
NZOI
H795 (97
TUT129
)
NIWA
collection [
NIWA
collectionstation and locality data details are outlined in Appendix 1, Alvarez et al., (2002)].
Additional
Paratype
material.
Not examined,
NZOI
P1261 (97
TUT15
),
NZOI
P1262 (97
TUT126
)
NIWA
collection [
NIWA
collectionstation and locality data details are outlined in Appendix 1, Alvarez et al., (2002)]
.
Other material examined.
MKB 723
(cross ref. Ts 11 and
UAZA 6.3
)
Cape Brett
,
New Zealand
, depth unknown
.
QM
310718 (cross ref. Q66C2025
R
and Ts 119) labeled
Latrunculia brevis
identified by CNB,
Cape Brett
,
Northland
,
New Zealand
,
35º 11' 50"S
;
174º 20'40"E
, depth
12 m
, AIMS/NCI collection
.
QM
310735 (cross ref. Q66C2057A and Ts 120) labeled
Latrunculia
sp.
identified by CNB,
New Zealand
, depth
15–20 m
, AIMS/NCI collection
.
Diagnosis.
Thinly to thickly encrusting with cylindrical oscules at the apex, or as thin fistules and mammiform areolate porefields (
Fig. 8H
). Colour in life is dark green; in preservative, dark brown. Styles are fusiform and slightly sinuous, 369(311–437) x 7 (4–9) m, n=20. Anisodiscorhabds (Fig. 6D) have an expanded manubrium and the median whorl is midway between manubrium and apical whorl. The subsidiary whorl is more or less winglike, slanted slightly upwards and situated directly below and almost fused with the apical whorl. There is also no basal whorl of spines present above the manubrium as characteristic for this subgenus. The whorls are notched along the rim and divided into segments, each segment possessing denticulate margins of 5 spines. The denticulate margins of the subsidiary and median whorls are microspined, and the apical whorl and manubrium are smooth, 29 (21–35) x 5 (2–7) m, n=20. The choanosomal skeleton is often vaguely reticulate, but where reticulation is visible an irregular polygonalmeshed reticulation of wispy tracts of smooth styles makes it up (see
Fig. 5B
in
Alvarez
et al
. 2002
). There is no distinction between primary and secondary tracts. These tracts range in width from <
100 m
in thickness. Towards the surface the spicules tend to be vertically arranged and just below this triangular or oval meshes are visible. Interstitial megascleres and anisodiscorhabds scattered abundantly throughout choanosome. The surface of the ectosome is lined with an erect layer of single noninterlocking anisodiscorhabds. Beneath the discorhabds in the ectosome is a thick paratangentialtangential layer of densely interlocking megascleres,
100–300 m
deep. The sponge is found on vertical walls, in serge and shaded areas at a depth between
2–20 m
(after
Alvarez
et al
. 2002
).
Geographic distribution
(
Fig. 7
).
New Zealand
Remark.
As explained by
Alvarez et al. (2002)
,
L. procumbens
can clearly be differentiated from
L. kaakaariki
and
L. duckworthi
, only on genetic data, but not on the structure of the acanthodiscorhabd (
Table 2
), although on average
L. procumbens
have thinner microscleres (
Table 3
). However, this clearly does not the case between the three
New Zealand
species and structural differences are very apparent on the structure of the acanthodiscorhabds. For example,
L. duckworthi
have a very compact manubrium and apical whorl, whereas these structures are expanded in
L. procumbens
. The apical whorl of
L. duckworthi
is also not fused with the subsidiary whorl as in
L. procumbens
. Apart from this the medium and subsidiary whorls of the acanthodiscorhabd in
L. duckworthi
are microspined compared to being smooth as in
L. procumbens
.
Latrunculia procumbens
also differs in gross morphology and colouration from
L. duckworthi
and
L. kaakaariki
in that it is thinly encrusting, is green/khaki in life, as appose to being thickly encrusting to massive and either green or chocolate brown in colour as observed in
L. duckworthi
and
L. kaakaariki
respectively. The species seems to be close to
L. wellingtonensis
based on the structure of the acanthodiscorhabd.