First Lanuginellinae (Porifera, Hexactinellida, Rossellidae) from the NE Pacific and first species of Doconesthes from the Pacific Ocean Author Reiswig, Henry M. text Zootaxa 2015 3920 4 572 578 journal article 10.11646/zootaxa.3920.4.6 86f7a8c5-3b01-468a-902f-c6fd20678e9f 1175-5326 243663 E945E455-0C4E-459C-9F61-443D800643B2 Doconesthes dustinchiversi n. sp. ( Figs. 1 & 2 , Table 1 ) Material examined. Holotype : RBCM 014-00412-01, FV ‘Pacific Viking', set 0 18, 0 6 May 2014 , Bowie Seamount, 53 E22.1 ’N, 135 E34.6 ’W, 562–1061 m . Description. The single specimen ( Fig 2 B–C) is a slightly flattened sac 65.4 x 50.8 x 22.8 mm with a single large osculum 19.6 x 13.7 mm opening to a deep atrium. The body wall is thick, to 8.0 mm on the flattened sides and 9.2 mm on the more abruptly curved sides. Large prostal diactins project singly ( 2.7 mm apart) or in small groups of 2 or 3 ( 0.4 mm apart within groups) obliquely upwards, 7.0 (3.1–13.3; 35) mm, from the upper half of the nearly smooth body or low-lumpy surface; prostalia project from margins of low inflations of the body surface, not from the prominences. The sponge is very firm and almost incompressible. The attachment base is missing so it remains uncertain if a basidictyonal mass was present or if the sponge attached to hard substrate with grappling spicules. The dermal surface has an irregular, transparent, thin lattice formed mostly by diactine dermalia supported on a coarser lattice of pentactine and diactine hypodermalia ( Figs 2 D–F). The atrial surface has a regular transparent lattice formed by pinular hexactins ( Figs 2 G–I) oriented long ray out; the lattice covers the entire surface including the apertures of the exhalant canals; hypoatrialia are absent. Body color is light tan with a pink tinge. Megascleres are diactine prostalia, diactine dermalia (some as monactins to hexactins), hexactine atrialia (some as pentactins), pentactine hypodermalia (some as diactins), and choanosomal diactins. Diactine prostalia are straight or slightly curved, 62% of the spicule exposed and 38% embedded in the body wall; most prostalia have broken outer ends and all are covered by a final shagreen layer of silica ( Fig. 3 A). Dermalia are predominately rough diactins ( Fig. 3 B) with rounded tips; of 300 counted, 90.7% are diactins, 5.7% are triactins, 3% are stauractins and 1% are hexactins. Variants with only 1 ray developed but the one opposite longer than the tubercles of cross rays ( Fig. 3 B bottom) may be classed as either diactins or monactins. Atrialia are predominately pinular hexactins ( Fig 3 C) with the distal ray longest and bearing densely packed proclined thorns; ray tips are sharp. A few (~ 5%) are not pinulate while fewer are pentactins and rarely they are comparatively spiny. Pentactine hypodermalia are large spicules with smooth rays with rough rounded ends; they are the second thickest spicule type after only the prostalia. They range widely in length of proximal ray, categorized as being “very short” (less than half of tangential ray length, Fig 3 D upper) in 38% of hypodermalia, “short” (one-half to the same length as its tangential ray) in 44% of them, and “long” (longer than tangential rays, Fig. 3 D lower) in 18%. Some diactins ( Fig. 3 E) occurring in the hypodermal position with size similar to hypodermal pentactins are considered to also be hypodermalia. Choanosomal diactins ( Fig. 3 F) are long, thin spicules, often broken and difficult to obtain whole; they are lightly curved and generally smooth with rough parabolic tips and insignificant central swellings. They occur in crossing bundles throughout the choanosome. Microscleres are strobiloplumicomes and oxyhexactins with variants. Strobiloplumicomes ( Fig. 3 G) have a small spherical centrum from which extend the six primary rays, each proximally almost smooth but with a few small lumps and subapically inflated as a sphere which bears the terminal ray bases; the end of the primary ray projects beyond the inflation to end in a bare round-tipped peg 2.5–3.0 µm long. The terminal rays number about 40 per primary ray and originate in 3–5 offset whorls (strobiloid pattern) from the primary ray inflation; they project as overlapping sigmoid curves around the 6 primary axes. They end in a single terminal spine and bear round-tipped spinelets on the inner sides of the strongly curved distal halves; the proximal halves are bare. The oxy-tipped microscleres are mostly (93%) oxyhexactins ( Fig. 3 H) with a few oxypentactins (5%, Fig. 3 I), hemioxyhexasters (2.3%, Fig. 3 J) and paratetractins (0.3%, not figured). The rays bear very fine recurved spines and usually end in straight pointed tips, but hooked tips ( Fig. 3 J upper left) are not uncommon. Individual spicules also may have a mixture of both oxyoid and onychoid tips but these are very rare. Etymology. The species name, dustinchiversi , commemorates the life of Mr. Dustin Chivers, an outstanding marine biologist who spent most of his career with the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, California and died in 1995. He was both my friend and colleague. He introduced me to the beauty and diversity of marine organisms during our high school days and, most important for me, saved my life in a 1962 diving accident. I owe my success and accomplishments to Dusty's presence and strength of character that day; everyday I thank him for my life. FIGURE 2. Doconesthes dustinchiversi n. sp. A. Detailed location of collection on Bowie Seamount off Haida Gwai (HG). B. Holotype, front and back of slightly flattened specimen. C. Oscular area in oblique view. D. Dermal surface with hypodermal lattice visible. E. Closer view of the dermal surface showing fine network of dermalia. F. Slide preparation of dermal surface lattice. G. Atrial surface. H. Closer view of atrial surface showing atrialia with longer ray projecting and no hint of hypoatrialia. I. Slide preparation of atrial lattice. Remarks and discussion. The new species differs from the three descriptions of the North Atlantic Doconesthes sessilis in having diactins as long prostalia lateralia. In other respects, the three descriptions of D. sessilis (here Topsent 1928 as 1, Tabachnick and Collins 2008 as 2, Tabachnick & Menshenina 2013 as 3) differ quite significantly from each other. Prostalia were entirely absent in 1 and 3 but projecting hypodermal pentactins were present in 2. Hypodermal pentactins with short proximal rays were reported in 1 but not 2 or 3. Hypoatrialia were absent in 1 and 2 but differentiated from atrialia in 3. Dermal diactin lengths do not overlap at all as given in the three reports: longest in 1 (320–390 µm), shorter in 2 (156–280 µm) and shortest in 3 (23–68 µm). For oxytipped microscleres, none of the three reports are sufficiently quantitative to allow comparisons between them or with the new Pacific specimen, e.g. in 1 and 2 they are reported as “most are hemioxyhexasters”, in 3 as “oxyhexactins, hemioxyhexasters and oxyhexasters” but without relative abundances. Some of these and other differences between specimen descriptions could be attributed to condition and size (maturity) of the specimens, but it is extremely unlikely that dermalia would differ significantly in size. Authors of the latest report (3) have been conservative in interpreting the two later specimens as belonging to D. sessilis but with limited specimens of very different size, their conclusions were reasonable. However, with addition of the nearly complete specimen of a new Northeast Pacific species, a re-evaluation of the differences between the North Atlantic specimens appears warranted. FIGURE 3. Spicules of Doconesthes dustinchiversi n. sp. A. Diactine lateral prostalium with magnified shagreen surface. B. Dermalia of various forms with magnified ray tip of diactin. C. Atrialia with magnified pinular ray tip. D. Pentactine hypodermalia with very short and longer proximal ray, with magnified tangential ray tip. E. Diactine hypodermalium with magnified ray end. F. Choanosomal diactin with magnified ray tip. G. Strobiloplumicome with magnified primary ray tuft and secondary ray tips. H. Oxyhexactin. I. Oxypentactin. J. Hemioxyhexaster with magnified ray tips. TABLE 1. Spicule dimensions of Doconesthes dustinchiversi , RBCM 014-00412-01, from British Columbia, Canada (dimensions in µm unless otherwise indicated).
parameter mean st. dev. range number
Prostal diactin length (mm) 14.67 5.47 7.59–21.31 6
width 112 21 85–146 6
Dermal diactin length 273 33 224–353 50
width 8.3 2.0 5.0–13.3 50
triactin axial length 233 49 133–360 50
stauractin axial length 208 52 126–353 50
pentactin axial length 245 30 225–266 2
hexactin axial length 177 23 142–208 6
Atrial pinular hexactin
distal ray length 472 123 89–733 50
distal ray width 15.5 3.7 7.8–28.3 50
tangential ray length 288 69 159–431 50
tangential ray width 14.5 3.4 7.5–25.4 50
proximal ray length 144 44 82–284 50
proximal ray width 14.1 3.1 8.0–23.8 50
Hypodermal pentactin
tangential ray length 599 91 382–782 50
width 27.4 2.9 21.0–33.8 50
proximal ray length 395 196 144–841 50
width 25.6 3.1 20.0–31.7 50
Hypodermal diactin length 1142 370 501–1601 18
width 16.1 3.4 10.0–21.2 18
Choanosomal diactin length 4066 1331 1473–7155 50
width 19.8 3.9 9.0–28.6 50
Strobiloplumicome diameter 43.5 4.1 33.1–52.6 63
primary ray length 9.0 1.2 5.9–14.1 63
secondary ray length 15.2 1.7 11.7–18.8 63
Oxyhexactin diameter 141 19 70–183 50
Hemioxyhexaster diameter 152 11.1 140–180 15
primary ray length 7.4 1.8 5.2–10.3 15
secondary ray length 69.4 4.6 62.6–80.1 15
Acknowledgements
I thank Melissa Frey, Curator of Invertebrates at RBCM, for bringing the specimen to my attention and to Archipelago Marine Research, Victoria, BC, for providing commercial fishery bycatch to RBCM. SEM work was carried out with assistance of Brent Gowan at the Department of Biology Advanced Imaging Laboratory and Elaine Humphrey, Department of Mechanical Engineering Advanced Microscopy Facility, both at University of Victoria. Funding for the SEM work was provided by the Royal British Columbia Museum.