Polyaxone monaxonids: revision of raspailiid sponges with polyactine megascleres (Cyamon and Trikentrion)
Author
Soest, Rob van
Author
Carballo, Jose Luis
Author
Hooper, John
text
ZooKeys
2012
239
1
70
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.239.3734
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.239.3734
1313-2970-239-1
Trikentrion flabelliforme Hentschel, 1912
Figs 22
A-D
, 23
A-E
Trikentrion laeve
sensu
Carter 1882
: 294 (West Australia) (not:
Carter 1879
)
Trikentrion flabelliforme
Hentschel 1912
: 373, pl. 13 fig. 9, pl. 20 fig. 32 (Aru Islands, Indonesia);
Capon et al. 1986
: 6545;
Hooper 1991
: 1298, Figs 61-62, 109h-I (North and West Australia);
Hooper 2002
: Figs 18
H-J
.
Material examined.
Holotype missing from SMF, but a paralectotype fragment is present in the Natural History Museum, BMNH 1931.8.4.57, which was examined by JH in 2000, type locality: Indonesia, Aru Islands, 4-15 m depth.
ZMA Por. 02426, preserved in alcohol, Siboga Exped. Stat. 273, Aru Islands, Indonesia, pearl banks off Pulau Jedan,
5.4134°S
,
134.6677°E
, depth 13 m, 23
-12-
1899.
RMNH Por. 978, preserved in alcohol, Siboga Exped. Stat. 273, same data;
ZMA Por. 14022 and 14023, preserved in alcohol, East Point, Darwin, Northern Territories, Australia, 10 m, 29
-11-
1987, coll. J.N.A. Hooper nrs 8 and 9;
ZMA Por. 16049, dry old collection material without data.
Description.
Two distinct shapes, flabelliform (Fig. 22A), 6-26
x
4-19 cm high and wide, 0.2-1.4 cm thick) and digitate (Fig. 22B), up to 15 cm high, with
flattened
branches of up to 1.5 cm thickness (summary of many specimens described in Hooper, 1991). Flabelliform specimens may have blades at right angles (see Fig 22A). Frequently, the digitate specimens are infested with zoanthids (Fig. 22B). Surface optically smooth, microhispid, with characteristic pattern of fine meandering grooves. Texture firm. Colour orange-red, blood-red (shallow water) to beige (deep water).
Skeleton
(Figs 22
C-D
): reticulated, square meshed or polyangular (Fig. 22D), with loose extra-axial and spongin-rich axial spicule tracts cored by oxeas, echinated by triactine polyactines; at the surface protruding long thin styles are surrounded by bouquets of short thin styles (Fig. 22C).
Spicules (Figs 23): Long thin styles, short thin styles, oxeas, polyactines, trichodragmas.
Long thin styles (Fig. 23A), curved, slim, 405
-870.3-
1034
x
3
-7.3-
9µm.
Short thin styles (Fig. 23B), thinly fusiform, 182
-334.7-
392
x
0.5
-1.8-
4
µm
.
Choanosomal genuine oxeas (Figs 23C, C1), not to be confused with diactinal polyactines, evenly or more angularly curved, apices mucronate and many have minute spines visible under SEM (Fig. 23C1), sizes 135
-287.7-
340
x
5
-16.8-
22
µm
.
Polyactines (Figs 23D, D1), rare in some specimens, predominantly three-claded, with prominent spines on the basal ray, and minute apical spines on the lateral rays (Fig. 23D1) visible only under SEM, occasionally strongly curved diactines or - often smaller - tetractines, basal cladi 96
-109.5-
123
x
10
-13.1-
17
µm
, lateral cladi 51
-70.0-
84
x
9
-12.6-
17
µm
.
Trichodragmas (Figs 23E, E1) with individual raphides showing rugose surface (Fig. 23E1), sizes 35
-59.6-
88
x
6
-8.6-
12
µm
.
Figure 22.
Trikentrion flabelliforme
Hentschel, 1912, A flabellate specimen ZMA Por. 14023 from Darwin, North Australia (scale bar = 1 cm) B branching-digitate specimen RMNH Por. 978 infested with zoanthids from Aru Islands Indonesia (scale bar = 1 cm) C peripheral skeleton of ZMA Por. 14023 showing raspailiid character of long thin style sheathed in a bouquet of short thin styles D thick section of choanosomal skeleton of ZMA Por. 14023.
Figure 23.
Trikentrion flabelliforme
Hentschel, 1912, spicules of ZMA Por. 14023, A detail of rounded end of long thin style B details of short thin style C oxea C1 details of apices of oxeas showing minute spines D three- and four claded polyactines D1 detail of apex of lateral clade of polyactine showing minute spines E microphoto of trichodragmas E1 individual raphide dissociated trichodragma showing rugosities.
Distribution.
Arafura Sea, N and W Australia.
Ecology.
Shallow subtidal to offshore deeper water.
Discussion.
The species was erroneously attributed to
Carter 1882
: 294, allegedly as
Trikentrion laeve
var. flabelliforme, by
Hooper (1991)
. This is a manuscript name because Carter did not name his Australian flabellate specimen, merely referring it to
Trikentrion laeve
. That species is West African and described above as a distinct new species.
The two 'growth
forms'
are rather distinct, but distribution, skeleton, and spicules are similar and overlapping enitirely, making it impossible to separate the forms further. The digitate form is often overgrown with a zoanthid species, both in Australian (Hooper, 1991) and Indonesian (RMNH Por. 978) specimens. The shape of
Trikentrion flabelliforme
reminds of Californian
Trikentrion catalina
and
Trikentrion helium
, but spiculation in these species differs substantially by their lack of proper choanosomal oxeas. Comparative variation in shape is also recorded for
Trikentrion helium
(see below).
The apices of the oxeas and the polyactines show minute spines, which is here interpreted as a unique feature. It violates the rule that in
Trikentrion
only the basal, not the lateral cladi of the polyactines have spines, but there is little correspondence with the lateral cladus spination in
Cyamon
.
This is the only
Trikentrion
species that appears to be widespread and common. Chemistry of
Trikentrion flabelliforme
includes unique indoles (
Capon et al. 1986
).
We studied an Indonesian specimen from the ZMA collection labeled
Trikentrion elegans
Lendenfeld identified by Burton (ZMA Por. 02402, Siboga Exped. Stat. 303, Timor, Samau Island, Haingsisi,
10.2050S
,
123.4591E
, 23 m), which has the shape and skeletal structure of a small digitate
Trikentrion flabelliforme
, including ectosomal long thin styles (up to 1350
x
12
µm
), short thin styles (300-400
x
1-3
µm
), a choanosomal reticulation of robust oxeas (300-400
x
15-20
µm
) and large amounts of trichodragmas
(
60-110
x
5-15
µm
), but lacking polyactine spicules entirely. In view of the occasional rarity of these spicules observed in some specimens of
Trikentrion flabelliforme
, it is likely that it is a
'deficient'
specimen of this species. Anecdotal records of
Trikentrion flabelliforme
from northern Australia have also occasionally encountered similarly deficient specimens (B. Alvarez, pers.comm.). The locality of the Siboga specimen is neatly inbetween the type locality and the North and West Australian localities.