New species of Haliclona (Demospongiae: Haplosclerida: Chalinidae) from Western Australia
Author
Fromont, Jane
Aquatic Zoology Department, Western Australian Museum, Locked Bag 49, Welshpool DC, Western Australia 6986, Australia. E-mail: jane. fromont @ museum. wa. gov. au
Author
Abdo, David A.
Marine Ecology and Monitoring Section, Department of Fisheries, Government of Western Australia, PO Box 20, North Beach, Western Australia 6920, Australia.
text
Zootaxa
2014
2014-07-09
3835
1
97
109
journal article
5287
10.11646/zootaxa.3835.1.5
d897e6d8-2a1f-4e96-b575-4c4010bb9b56
1175-5326
4921547
1DF6EE71-B841-414B-8AF4-44F1AEB8E7F0
Haliclona durdong
sp.
nov.
(
Figs. 1–3
)
Holotype
.
Australia
,
Western Australia
,
Hamelin Bay
(
34°13.603'S
,
115°00.842'E
),
7m
,
D. Abdo
,
SCUBA
,
23/02/ 2005
(
WAM
Z28838).
Paratypes
.
Australia
:
Western Australia
:
1 specimen
,
Roe Reef
(
31°58.430'S
,
115°32.213'E
),
13m
,
J. Fromont
,
SCUBA
,
8/11/2013
(
WAM
Z68530)
;
1 specimen
,
Abraham Point
,
Rottnest Island
(
32°00.25'S
,
115° 28.02'S
),
15 m
, AIMS divers,
SCUBA
,
14/03/1989
,
NCI specimen Q66C 2670 S (
WAM
Z28841)
;
1 specimen
,
Cosy Corner
,
Hamelin Bay
(
34°15.540’S
,
115°01.467’E
),
5m
,
R
.
Capon
,
SCUBA
,
09/1980 (
WAM
Z13491
)
;
1 specimen
,
Point Henry
,
Bremer Bay
(
34°27.395’S
,
119°25.175’E
),
13m
,
D. Abdo
,
SCUBA
,
24/06/2005
(
WAM
Z37499)
;
2 specimens
,
Hamelin Bay
(
34°12.958'S
,
115°00.553'E
),
7m
,
D. Abdo
,
SCUBA
,
24/02/2001
(
NMV
F200910
exWAM Z68511 and
SAM
S1191
exWAM Z68512)
;
1 specimen
,
Horseshoe Reef
,
Rottnest Island
(
32°01.550'S
,
115°32.700'E
),
15m
,
C. Battershill
,
SCUBA
,
26/1/2001
(
WAM
Z68513)
.
Other material.
Australia
:
Western Australia
:
2 specimens
,
Favourite Island
,
Jurien Bay
(
30°16.516’S
,
114°58.062’E
),
7m
,
D. Abdo
,
SCUBA
,
28/02/2006
(
WAM
Z37486 and
WAM
Z37487)
;
1 specimen
,
Point Henry
,
Bremer Bay
(
34°27.395’S
,
119°25.175’E
),
12m
,
D. Abdo
,
SCUBA
,
24/06/2005
(
WAM
Z37498)
,
1 specimen
,
Hamelin Island
,
Hamelin Bay
(
34°13.603’S
,
115°00.842’E
),
7m
,
D. Abdo
,
SCUBA
,
24/02/2005
(
WAM
Z37492)
;
1 specimen
,
Crystal Palace
,
Rottnest Island
(
32°01.550’S
,
115°32.700’E
),
9m
,
D. Abdo
,
SCUBA
,
25/01/2006
(
WAM
Z37490)
;
1 specimen
,
Roe Reef
,
Rottnest Island
(
31°58.420’S
,
115°32.210’E
),
11m
,
D. Abdo
,
SCUBA
,
25/ 01/2006
(
WAM
Z37491)
;
1 specimen
,
Cosy Corner
,
Hamelin Bay
(
34°15.540’S
,
115°01.467’E
),
4m
,
D. Abdo
,
SCUBA
,
23/02/2005
(
WAM
Z37495)
.
Diagnosis.
Haliclona durdong
sp. nov.
is characterised by being erect or massive with wide apical oscules and well developed canals, compressible consistency but tearing and fragmenting easily, green throughout alive; no microscleres, slender oxeas as megascleres (mean 152.6 x
6.9 µm
, n =280). Skeleton regular multispicular, isodictyal reticulation, spongin at nodes, spicules extend beyond surface to
80 µm
. Ectosomal skeleton isodictyal, uni- or bispicular, spongin at nodes.
Description.
Habit as in
Figure 2
(b). Erect or massive sponges with wide funnel-like oscules and 1 to 3 basal attachment points. Dimensions of specimen (WAM Z28838): height ~
100 mm
, width ~
130 mm
, breadth ~
90 mm
. Oscules apical, wide, ~
25 mm
across and common. Surface smooth, with velvet appearance. Texture compressible, easily damaged, sponge pulls apart with minimal force.
Colour
(
Figure 2
(b)): in the live state, green (Munsell 3.61 GY 1.94/3.54) throughout, in ethanol medium brown throughout.
General organization
(
Figure 3
(b, d)): A thin outer ectosomal region (~
50 µm
wide) consists of compact mesohyl. Ectosomal skeleton isodictyal, uni- or bispicular, spongin at nodes, undifferentiated from choanosomal skeleton. Primary spicules extend beyond the surface to
80 µm
. Subdermal spaces ~
150 µm
wide. Primary tracts multispicular cored by 2–5 spicules (≤
30 µm
wide) with spongin at nodes, tracts without fibre sheath, mesh spaces ~
150 µm
across (one spicule length). Secondary tracts isodictyal, unispicular, rarely bispicular, ≤
15 µm
wide, more commonly ≤
10 µm
wide. Skeleton a regular isodictyal reticulation, occasionally irregular and squaremeshed. Choanosome cavernous with large canals and numerous internal pores of various sizes
1–3 mm
wide.
Spicules
(
Figure 3
(f),
Figure 4
): Megascleres: oxeas slender, straight or slightly curved with hastate tips (152.6 x
6.9 µm
, range 106–185 x
5–10 µm
Table 1
), thin, developmental forms present (~138 x
4 µm
). No microscleres.
Larvae
: Parenchymellae, cylindrical in form, tapering to the anterior and posterior, with a ciliated body and posterior flagellated band. Larvae first observed annually in March (Abdo
et al.
2008a). The
holotype
specimen, WAM Z28838, is a reproductive female containing embryos.
FIGURE 2.
Underwater images of (a)
Haliclona djeedara
sp. nov.
(WAM Z28839), and (b)
Haliclona durdong
sp. nov.
(WAM Z28838). Images taken by D. Abdo at Hamelin Bay, 7m on 23/02/2005.
FIGURE 3.
Light micrographs of the choanosomal skeleton (a, b), ectosomal skeleton (c, d), and spicules (e, f) of
Haliclona djeedara
sp. nov.
(a—WAM Z37484, c and e—WAM Z28839) and
Haliclona durdong
sp. nov.
(b and f—WAM Z37495, d—WAM Z28838). Light micrographs taken by O. Gomez.
Remarks.
We compared this species to descriptions of all
Haliclona
species
listed as present in
Australia
(http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/abrs/online-resources/fauna/afd/taxa/CERACTINOMORPHA/names) as well as additional species from southern
Indonesia
and the Western Indian Ocean, and examined the type material of closely related species. The
holotype
of
Chalinula camerata
(
Ridley 1884
)
(BMNH1882.10.17.117), is a tiny, encrusting specimen with a very irregular skeleton, occasional multispicular tracts of loosely aggregated spicules parallel to the surface, no fibre development at the nodes of the reticulation, and the spicules are longer and thinner than in
Haliclona durdong
.
We examined specimens from the Houtman Abrolhos identified by Dendy and Frederick (1924) as
Reniera cribricutis
(BMNH1925.11.1.194), now
Haliclona (Reniera) cribicutis
(
Ridley and Dendy 1886
)
, and
Reniera permollis
(BMNH1925.11.1.200), now a synonym of
Haliclona (R.) cinerea
,
respectively (Dendy and Frederick 1924). These specimens were very similar to each other and were not the same species as
Haliclona durdong
. Both these specimens were small, soft and porous, with small apical oscules (
4 mm
wide), and minimum fibre development around the spicules. The specimen identified as
H. (R.) cribricutis
has similar sized oxeas to
Haliclona durdong
but with mucronate tips, while in the specimen of
H. (R.) permollis
the spicules were smaller (120 x
3 µm
).
Dendy & Frederick (1924) also recorded
R. aquaeductus
(BMNH1925.11.1.195), now
Haliclona (Reniera) aquaeductus
,
from the Houtman Abrolhos, but this was a smooth, slender branching specimen without the wide funnels characteristic of
Haliclona durdong
. Specimens of
R. aquaeductus
(BMNH1882.2.23.284; 238-9; 297) identified by
Ridley (1884)
were also not the same as
Haliclona durdong
. These specimens were firm, incompressible and brittle in contrast to the compressible texture of
Haliclona durdong
. In contrast, the specimens of
R. aquaeductus
var.
infundibularis
(BMNH1887.5.2.228; 219) had a similar morphology to
H. durdong
forming wide, open tubes but these are very porous, soft and fragile, and the specimens lacked nodal fibre development, as well as being from Patagonia, a disjunct distribution to
H. durdong
. The
type
of
Haliclona (Rhizoniera) australis
(
Lendenfeld 1888
) (AM Z2017)
is an encrusting specimen
1 cm
thick with much smaller skeletal mesh spaces and spicule sizes than
H. durdong
, as well as being red in colour alive. The above comparisons clearly demonstrate the morphological and skeletal differences that distinguish
H. durdong
from these similar species from nearby regions.
No
Haliclona
species
described from
Australia
have the wide apical, flared oscules in conjunction with the compressible texture, development of fibre only at the nodes of the reticulation, and spicule sizes and morphology of
Haliclona durdong
sp. nov.
We could find no described species of
Haliclona
with the unique characters of this species.
Haliclona durdong
sp. nov.
is viviparous, with both gonochoric and hermaphroditic individuals, and reproduces in the Austral summer (Abdo
et al.
2008a). It is characterized by wide apical, funnel-like oscules and large internal canals, green colour, compressible texture, fibre only at the nodes of the skeletal reticulation, never forming sheaths, and ready fragmentation. The species is much more porous and softer than
Haliclona djeedara
and its skeleton is isodictyal rather than square-meshed. It consistently has longer spicules, up to
20 µm
in maximum length than
H. djeedara
, which has shorter, thicker oxeas (
Figure 4
).
This species conforms to the subgenus
Haliclona
based on the regular isodictyal reticulation, and the consistent spongin at the nodes of the reticulation. The consistent multispicular nature of the primary lines is less usual for the subgenus and future molecular characterization of the species would support or refute this subgenus assignment.
Distribution and habitat.
Haliclona durdong
sp. nov.
is found in temperate rocky reef habitats in south
Western Australia
from Jurien Bay in the north to Bremer Bay in the south. This is apparently an Australian west coast endemic species occurring in shallow water from
3 to 45 m
depth on limestone rock and south of 30º latitude.
Etymology.
This species name is a Nyoongar word meaning green. The specific name is a noun in apposition describing the colour of the species. The Nyoongar peoples are the traditional owners of the south
Western Australia
where this species occurs.