Deep-sea “ lithistid ” assemblages from the Norfolk Ridge (New Caledonia), with description of seven new species and a new genus (Porifera, Demospongiae)
Author
Schlacher-Hoenlinger, Monika A.
Queensland Museum, PO Box 3300, South Brisbane 4101 (Australia) monikas @ qm. qld. gov. au
Author
Pisera, Andrzej
Polska Akademia Nauk, ul. Twarda 51 / 55, 00 - 818 Warszawa (Poland) apis @ twarda. pan. pl
Author
Hooper, John N. A.
Queensland Museum, PO Box 3300, South Brisbane 4101 (Australia) johnh @ qm. qld. gov. au
text
Zoosystema
2005
27
4
649
698
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5393958
1638-9387
5393958
Neoschrammeniella castrum
n. sp.
(
Figs 3D
;
15
;
29
)
HOLOTYPE
. —
Épo
nge seamount,
Norfolk Ridge
, 24°54’72”S, 168°21’87”E,
508-541 m
,
RV
Alis
,
23.VI.2001
,
Warén
dredge, coll.
T. Schlacher
(
MNHN
DCL 3905
, a fragment of the
holotype
in QM [G318564s).
ETYMOLOGY. — Named for the massive and thick walled gross morphology (
castrum
, Latin
for fort, walled town, stronghold).
OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED (see
Table 1
). — Épo nge,
539-545 m
(QM G318586).
DESCRIPTION
Growth form
Massive, short, cup-shaped sponges with a broad base, thick walls and round cup openings and rounded margins. Specimens are approximately
3 cm
high and
3 cm
wide with an approximately
2.5 cm
broad simple base.
Colour
Beige to light brown in etoh.
Oscules
Not visible.
Texture
Hard, stony.
Surface ornamentation
Smooth.
Ectosomal skeleton
Ectosomal skeleton contains smooth dichotriaenes perpendicular to the surface and abundant microscleres. Microscleres at the surface are numerous forming a crust and consist of microspinose spirasters with short, blunt rays.
Choanosomal skeleton
Choanosomal structure composed of strongly tuberculated, irregular dicranoclones, resulting in a very dense skeleton. Choanosomal microscleres are streptasters/spirasters with long pointed rays.
Megascleres
Dicranoclone desmas are very thick, and are densely covered with mushroom-shaped tubercles, which are clearly subdivided into smaller callosities: 520-700 µm/70-85 µm.
Dichotriaenes smooth; conical, curved rhabdome and conical rays of cladome: 457-693 µm long × 293-350 µm diameter (cladome).
Microscleres
Streptasters (spirasters) with long pointed rays: 85.3-114 × 69.1-90.2 µm.
Massive spirasters with short blunt rays: 12.4- 14.6 × 6.95-8.57 µm.
REMARKS
As for the new
Neoschrammeniella
species
described above (
N. norfolkii
n. sp.
), this new species undoubtedly belongs to the genus
Neoschrammeniella
on the basis of its characteristic microscleres and desmas, but differs considerably in shape from the
type
species. The new species
N. castrum
n. sp.
is similar in shape to
N. norfokii
n. sp.
but differs in having only
two types
of microscleres instead of
three types
, and in having more massive but shorter spirasters with a blunt rays, which are much less regularly developed. It differs also in having tubercles on the desmas which are further subdivided into smaller callosities, while
N. norfolkii
n. sp.
has smooth tubercles.
Family
PLEROMIDAE Sollas, 1888 DEFINITION.
— Polymorphic lithistids with megaclone (usually smooth) choanosomal desmas and ectosomal dichotrianes; sometimes additionally anatriaenes; microscleres are spirasters or amphiasters, microxeas and/or styles (Pisera F Lévi 2002c).