A new integrated morpho- and molecular systematic classification of Cenozoic radiolarians (Class Polycystinea) - suprageneric taxonomy and logical nomenclatorial acts
Author
Suzuki, Noritoshi
Author
Caulet, Jean-Pierre
Author
Dumitrica, Paulian
text
Geodiversitas
2021
2021-07-08
43
15
405
573
journal article
5275
10.5252/geodiversitas2021v43a15
a8353504-9387-42cf-8d81-8ecacbe9bd90
1638-9395
5101757
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DC259A19-9B35-4B33-AD9F-44F4E1DA9983
Family
SPONGOSPHAERIDAE
Haeckel, 1862
Spongosphaerida
Haeckel, 1862: 239
, 452 [as a tribe]; 1882: 455 [as a subfamily]. —
Mivart 1878: 177
[as a subsection]. —
Stöhr 1880: 119
[as a family].
Spongosphaeria –
Dunikowski 1882: 187
[as a subfamily].
Spongosphaerinae –
Mast 1910: 177
. —
Popofsky 1912: 93
, 111. —
Hollande
& Enjumet 1960: 68
, 97. — Anderson 1983: 51, 57. —
Cachon & Cachon 1985: 287
[with wrong authors as
Hollande
& Enjumet].
Spongosphaera
–
Hertwig 1937: 22-25
[as a group].
Spongosphaeridae
–
Hollande
& Enjumet 1960: 68
, 95, 96. — Anderson 1983: 50, 57. —
Cachon & Cachon 1985: 286
. —
van de Paverd 1995: 104
[with wrong authors as
Hollande
& Enjumet].
TYPE
GENUS. —
Spongosphaera
Ehrenberg, 1847: 54
[
type
species by subsequent monotypy:
Spongosphaera polyacantha
Müller, 1856: 487
].
INCLUDED
GENERA. —
Diplospongus
Mast, 1910: 61
. —
Spongodendron
Hollande
& Enjumet, 1960: 99
. —
Spongosphaera
Ehrenberg, 1847: 54
(=
Hexadoridium
n. syn.
;
Spongosphaeromma
synonymized by
Kozur & Mostler 1979: 10
).
NOMEN DUBIUM. —
Spongioconcha
.
DIAGNOSIS. — Thick spongy spherical cortical skeleton with a single or double medullary shell and a variable number of threebladed radial spines.
Protoplasm is well observed in
Spongosphaera
. Endoplasm of brownish gray color, filling a spongy shell. Dark brownish red to reddish brown granular pigments surround the surface of the endoplasm. Axopodia radiate throughout the endoplasm. Algal symbionts are scattered on the endoplasm. Axopodial system of centroaxoplastidtype: the Axoplast is a very small fused point, located within the inner microsphere (inner double medullary shell). Nucleus is located inside the outer medullary shell or is found wrapping it. Significant bundles of axoneme are not present. Instead of bundles, axoneme radiate evenly throughout the intracapsular zone.
STRATIGRAPHIC OCCURRENCE. — early Middle Miocene-Living.
REMARKS
The genus
Spongosphaera
is characterized by a double medullary shell and straight three-bladed radial spines. We place the genera
Diplospongus
and
Spongodendron
into
Spongosphaeridae
based on the presence of three-bladed radial spines, although both genera seem to have a single medullary shell. As
Spongosphaera streptacantha
is typically found in plankton samples from tropical to subtropical oceans, many observations were related as well as personally observed.
S. streptacantha
is the only
Spumellaria
whose images can be captured in the ocean with an autonomous visual plankton recorder (A-VPR) (
Nakamura
et al.
2017
: fig. 2.C). Thus, its taxonomic stability and oceanographic response are important. The number of radial beams of this species is varies from six to twelve, its internal structure was also illustrated in detail (
Kurihara & Matsuoka 2004
). By referring to this case, other genera belonging to
Spongosphaeridae
presumably have significant variations. The fine protoplasmic structure was illustrated in
Diplospongus
(
Hollande
& Enjumet 1960
: pl. 6, figs 4-9),
Spongodendron
(
Hollande
& Enjumet 1960
: pl. 6, figs 1-3; pl. 7, fig. 5) and
Spongosphaera
(
Hollande
& Enjumet 1960
: pl. 9, figs 8-10; pl. 22, figs 8, 9; pl. 23, figs 1, 2; pl. 24, fig. 2; pl. 26, fig. 4). An image of living forms was illustrated for
Spongosphaera
(
Cachon
et al.
1989
: fig. 1;
Matsuoka 2007
: fig. 5.a; 2017: figs 6.1, 6.2;
Matsuoka
et al.
2017
: appendix A). According to
Cachon (1964)
, “
Spongosphaera
” is infected with
Hollandella myceloides
, but it is impossible to amend the taxonomic name for the host without having a more complete image.
Spongosphaera streptacantha
can exceptionally survive in high temperatures (> 30°C) in the
Malacca
Strait (
Zhang
et al.
2020
) and is also regularly found in 17.1-19.4°C in the
Japan
Sea (
Kurihara & Matsuoka 2010
). This is the only one species with this very wide range of survival sea water temperature.
VALIDITY OF GENERA
Spongosphaera
Morphological variation of
Spongosphaera
was well illustrated in many previous studies (
Kurihara & Matsuoka 2004
;
van de Paverd 1995
: pl. 28, figs 2, 5-7).
Hexadoridium
is characterized by two concentric medullary lattice shells and a spongy octahedral shell (
Campbell 1954
: D60). As the specimen identifiable as
Hexadoridium streptacanthum
is regarded as
Spongosphaera polyacantha
form
streptacantha
by
van de Paverd (1995
: pl. 2, fig. 2),
Hexadorium
is a synonym of
Spongosphaera
.
Spongosphaeromma
is characterized by two medullary lattice shells surrounded by a cortical shell bearing many radial spines (
Campbell 1954
: D68).
Nishimura & Yamauchi (1984: 33)
seems to be the first paper to illustrate the
type
species
Spongosphaeromma
as “
Spongosphaera helioides
” and this morphological character fits with not only the definition of
Spongosphaeromma
but also the variation in
Spongosphaera
.
Spongosphaera
is the oldest available name among them.