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
Stryphnus ariena
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 2
F, 7L–P, 8)
Asteropus simplex
(
Carter 1879
)
, Dendy (1924: 306).
Asteropus simplex
,
Bergquist, (1968
: 32–33, Pl. 4b, 11d).
Asteropus
sp.
nov.
4
Carvalho, 2008
: 199
–203, Fig. 37.
Material examined.
Holotype
―
NIWA
57285:
NIWA
Stn TAN0906/225, RV
Tanagaroa
, continental shelf off Doubtless Bay, Northland,
34.853° S
,
173.609° E
,
100 m
,
18 Jul 2009
. P
aratype
―
NIWA
62049:
2 miles
northwest of North Cape,
34.381° S
,
172.015° E
,
51–80 m
, RV
Kaharoa
,
18 Apr 1999
, additional vouchers of this
paratype
are in the
CRRF
reference collection (0
CDN
6657-U) and at the
USNM
(
USNM
1182998);
NIWA
44559:
NZOI
Stn W438, Mernoo Bank, Chatham Rise,
43.238° S
,
175.442° E
,
78–83 m
,
21 Feb 1995
;
NIWA
44459:
NZOI
Stn B93, Three Kings Islands,
34.000° S
,
172.500° E
,
55 m
,
22 Sep 1958
.
Other material.
NIWA
73688:
NIWA
Stn TAN1105/104, North Taranaki Bight,
38.294° S
,
173.454° E
, 187-
168 m
,
2 Apr 2011
;
Asteropus simplex sensu
Dendy (1924)
—
NHMUK
1923.10.1.237,
NHMUK
1923.10.1.238,
NHMUK
1923.10.1.239,
NHMUK
1923.10.1.240:
Terra
Nova
Stn 96, 7 miles east of North Cape,
128 m
, British
Antarctic
(
Terra
Nova
) Expedition,
1910, 16 Jul
–24 Sep 1911, microscope slides from R. N. XXXII.11.
Asteropus simplex
, Dendy
<
XREF
>(1916):
NHMUK
1920.12.9.162,
NHMUK
1925.11.1.147a, Okhamandal Sponges, Dendy Collection, microscope slides from R. N.
V. 2.
Type
locality.
North Cape,
New Zealand
.
Distribution.
Northern
New Zealand
, Three Kings Islands, Chatham Rise.
Description.
Massive base,
80 x
130 mm
, giving rise to tall stout curved digits with rounded ends, about
130 mm
high and
50 mm
diameter (
Fig. 2
F). Small oscules,
5–8 mm
diameter, are situated at the apex of each digit. Surface almost completely invested with a
1 mm
thick layer of
Desmacella dendyi
, except around the apex of the digits, which are bare. Texture compressible, surface smooth, granular to the touch, interior is very harsh. Colour in life grey, interior cream to tan, colour in ethanol dark brown.
Skeleton.
Ectosome 1000–1250 µm deep, translucent, cavernous, very lightly permeated with fibrillar collagen, with numerous darkly pigmented cells that give the ectosome a spotted appearance. Amphisanidasters and sanidasters are common throughout the ectosome but are not sufficiently dense at the surface to be called a ‘crust’. The choanosome is uniformly pigmented and denser than the ectosome, with oxyasters and other microscleres scattered in moderate abundance. Oxeas are abundant and without orientation in the choanosome, extending into the ectosome and beyond. Dichotriaenes are very rare; only one was found in the ectosome, in a histological section of the
holotype
, and only seven were found in the spicule preparation of this specimen.
Spicules.
Megascleres (
Fig. 7
L–M) are
oxeas
(
Fig. 7
L), large, stout, fusiform, slightly curved with sharply pointed tips, 1873 (
1290–2542
)
x 46
(30–64) µm, with many smaller and thinner growth stages present;
plagiotriaenes
(
Fig. 7
M), small and slender with gently recurved clads that project forward at an angle of 45°, rhabdome 344 (285–445) µm long, clads 153 (128–173) µm long, cladome width 275 (200–330) µm (n=9), rare.
Microscleres (
Fig. 7
N–P) are
oxyasters
(
Fig. 7
N), large with numerous long, slender, smooth rays, 28 (16–40) µm diameter;
amphisanidasters
and
sanidasters
(
Fig. 7
O, P), moderately densely acanthose spicules with relatively long, blunt spines, 13 (10–17) µm.
Substrate, depth range, and ecology.
Attached to rocky substrate, collected between
51–
128 m
.
Etymology.
Named for banana-shaped morphology of the curved tapering digits (
ariena
= banana in Latin).
Remarks.
Dendy (1924) identified a specimen from the vicinity of North Cape as
Asteropus simplex
, a species originally described from Western
Australia
, and subsequently recorded from the Indian Ocean (
Pulitzer-Finali 1993
) and
Hong Kong
(
Uriz 2002
; van
Soest 1982
).
Bergquist (1968)
followed Dendy in also placing her Three Kings specimens in
Asteropus
, due to the apparent lack of triaenes, a characteristic of the genus
Asteropus
. While Bergquist did not record any triaenes, Dendy (1924) did, commenting on the presence of “a very few triaenes and triaene-derivatives, viz. one plagiotriaenes, one mesotriaene, and one curious hexact form, all seem to belong to the sponge, but they cannot be regarded as normal constituents of the spiculation”. In revising the genus
Asteropus
in her PhD thesis,
Carvalho (2008)
, also failed to find triaenes in Bergquist’s (1968) specimen of
Asteropus simplex
, renaming the Three Kings species
Asteropus
sp.
nov.
4. While they are very rare, the plagiotriaenes examined in this work are clearly natural, as they have the same morphology and dimensions in all specimens. Moreover, the skeletal architecture is quite characteristic of other species of
New Zealand
Stryphnus
.
There are a number of differences between Dendy’s specimen and the
type
specimen of
A. simplex
, a massive, convex, lobate sponge with no discernible ectosome and moderately sized oxeas (
1316 x 28
µm). Dendy described his specimen as consisting of “two, stout, digitiform sponges, united below and torn off from at the base”. He also noted a “strongly developed”
1 mm
thick ectosome, “very numerous, large, oval, vesicular cells containing a dark pigment in the form of well defined, coarse granules,” exactly as in the
holotype
of
S. ariena
sp. nov.
and other specimens examined here. The oxeas in all
New Zealand
specimens are at least twice the length of those of
A
.
simplex
(2500
x 68
µm). We consider the Dendy and Bergquist specimens to be one and the same
S
.
ariena
sp. nov.
While
S
.
ariena
sp. nov.
and
S
.
levis
sp. nov.
have a similar form, the lobes of the latter species are broader, shorter and uncurved. The spicule complements separate the two species quite clearly;
S
.
levis
sp. nov.
has dichotriaenes rather than plagiotriaenes, albeit, both are quite rare in the specimens, and
S
.
levis
sp. nov.
lacks amphisanidasters.