A new species of Lophophysema (Porifera, Hexactinellida, Hyalonematidae) from the South China Sea
Author
Gong, Lin
Author
Li, Xinzheng
Author
Qiu, Jian-Wen
text
Zootaxa
2014
3884
6
553
560
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3884.6.3
114c1f88-f9e3-483f-a9c9-2f719bc0768a
1175-5326
226024
9302CD89-CF83-4762-A534-86A50B596832
Genus
Lophophysema
Schulze, 1900
Diagnosis (here emended from
Tabachnick & Menshenina 2002
).
Body is composed of two surfaces, usually in radially symmetrical forms with a larger, upper, everted, conical atrial surface and lower, smaller, conical dermal surface, but one species is vertically bilateral with expanded atrial surface on one side and restricted dermal surface opposite and closely adherant to the internal root bundle. The atrial surface is tight-meshed while the dermal surface is sieve-like with large openings into an extensive inhalant system of wide branching canals oriented either vertically or horizontally. The apical cone protrudes over the apex in all body forms. Basalia are twisted in a single narrow tuft. Choanosomal skeleton consists of diactines, sometimes with hexactines. Prostalia marginalia (corresponding to oscularia) are pinular diactines or absent. Dermalia, atrialia and canalaria are usually pinular pentactines, rarely hexactines. Hypodermalia are pentactines, hypoatrialia may be absent or are also pentactines. Microscleres are amphidiscs (macramphidisc and mesamphidiscs may be absent or rare, micramphidiscs are always present) and spiny microhexactines or rough monactines.