Revision of the genus Latrunculia du Bocage, 1869 Porifera: Demospongiae: Latrunculiidae) with descriptions of new species from New Caledonia and the Northeastern Pacific (
Author
Samaai, Toufiek
Author
Gibbons, Mark J.
Author
Kelly, Michelle
text
Zootaxa
2006
2006-02-14
1127
1
1
71
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.1127.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.1127.1.1
11755334
5057828
E3B8BACE-1E5B-4E07-AB94-A4947F966483
Latrunculia
(
Biannulata
)
kaakaariki
Alvarez
et al
., 2002
(Figs 6B, 7, 8G, 9D;
Tables 2
&
3
)
Latrunculia kaakaariki
Alvarez
et al
., 2002
, pg. 157,
Fig. 2
,
3A
Holotype
material.
Not examined,
NZOI
H793 (99
TKI 15
)
NIWA
collection.
Additional material.
NZOI
P1258 (99
TKI
26),
NZOI
P1259 (99
TKI
213), 99
TKI
(11, 1 2, 13, 14, 22, 23, 24, 2.5). [
NIWA
collectionstation and locality data details are outlined in Appendix 1, Alvarez
et al
., (2002)].
Other material examined.
NZNM
POR 618
(
Ts
107)
,
SE of
Three Kings Islands
,
New Zealand
,
34º 16.6'S
,
172º 15.7'E
, depth
133 m
, collected by
R
.
V
.
Tangaroa
, 1981.
Ts
9 (
MKB 721
),
Poor Knight Islands
,
New Zealand
, depth unknown
.
NZNM
POR 605
(TS 104)
,
Great Island
,
Three Kings Islands
,
New Zealand
,
34º 14.8'S
,
172º 13.6'E
, depth
173–178 m
, collected by
R
.
V
.
Tangaroa
,
February 1981
.
NZOI
stn Z9243 (cross ref.
Ts
58) unidentified sponge in
NIWA
collection,
34º 22.6'S
;
172º 46.5'E
, depth
44 m
,
Stn
BG9701/64, collected by
F
.
V
.
Ben Gunn
, on the
28/02/1997
.
NZNM
Por
572 (cross ref.
Ts
98) unidentified sponge in
NZNM
collection,
Ranfurly Bank
,
East Cape
,
New Zealand
,
37º 34.05'S
,
178º 53.5'E
, depth
39–50 m
, collected
17/01/1970
by
R
.
V
.
Tangaroa
(
NZOI
stn
R 38
)
.
NZNM
Por
576 (cross ref.
Ts
101) unidentified sponge in NZM collection,
Ranfurly Bank
,
East Cape
,
New Zealand
,
37º 35.01'S
,
178º 51.6'E
, depth
39–50 m
, collected
17/01/1970
by
R
.
V
.
Tangaroa
(
NZOI
stn
R36
)
.
NZNM
Por
601 (cross ref.
Ts
102) unidentified sponge in
NZNM
collection, off
Three Kings Islands
,
New Zealand
,
34º 13.0'S
,
172º 14.2'E
, depth
190–200 m
, collected
08
th
February 1984
by
F
.
R
.
V
.
James Cook
.
Diagnosis.
Small to massive, semispherical sponges with flat, cylindrical oscules at the apex and no mammiform areolate porefields present (
Fig. 8G
). Sand particles present on smaller specimens but absent on larger specimens. Ectosome thin, not easily separable from the underlying choanosome. Colour in life is dark green; in preservative, choanosome dark brown and ectosome brown. Styles are smooth, centrally thickened, fusiform and slightly sinuous, 382 (355–410) x 12 (12) m, n=20. Anisodiscorhabds (Fig. 6B) having a manubrium where the spines are often dichotomous and vertically arranged. There is also no basal whorl of spines present above the manubrium as characteristic for this subgenus. Median whorl midway between manubrium and apical whorl and larger than both the subsidiary and apical whorls. The subsidiary whorl is more or less perpendicular to the shaft and directly above median whorl. The whorls are deeply notched along the rim and divided into segments, each segment possessing denticulate margins of 5–7 spines. The denticulate margins of the subsidiary and median whorls are microspined, and the apical whorl and manubrium are smooth, 38(35–39) x 5 (5) m, n=20. The choanosomal skeleton is a firm, dense, irregular polygonalmeshed reticulation and the surface of the ectosome is lined with an erect layer of single noninterlocking anisodiscorhabds (
Fig. 9D
). The sponge whose habitat in shallow waters are rocky substrata found on vertical to steeply sloping rock faces always in shade and associated with algae and other sponges in coastal waters at
2–20 m
depth. This species is also very abundant between
5–7 m
in strong surge areas in coastal waters. The deep water samples were dredge of the coastline and they were found to occur on sandy substrata at a depth of
200 m
(after
Alvarez
et al
. 2002
).
Geographic distribution
(
Fig. 7
).
New Zealand
(North Island)
Remark.
In 1924, Brøndsted described the first species of
Latrunculia
from
New Zealand
, naming it
Latrunculia spinispiraefera
. Almost 40 years after that,
Bergquist (1961
b;
1968
), described a species collected off the
Chatham Islands
as
L. spinispiraefera
, currently considered a specimen of
L. triverticillata
Alvarez
et al.
(2002)
. In 1968 Bergquist, described some additional specimens from Three Kings Islands, Cape Brett, the Champbell Plateau, and
Chatham Islands
as
L. brevis
, all of which are know considered either specimens of
L. kaakaariki
Alvarez
et al
.
,
L. duckworthi
Alvarez
et al
.
,
L. procumbens
Alvarez
et al
.
,
L. spinispiraefera
Brøndsted
,
L. triverticillata
Alvarez
et al
.
, or
L. millerae
Alvarez
et al
. This
is based on the recent discovery using a combination of genetic, chemical and morphological data (
Miller
et al
. 2001
;
Alvarez
et al
. 2002
), that the
New Zealand
Latrunculia
complex are represented by at least eight cryptic species, non of them belonging to the
L. brevis
complex (
Table 2
).
Based on a combination of different techniques,
Miller
et al
. (2001)
first suggested that the two colour morphs occurring off the Three Kings Islands are actually two different species.
Alvarez
et al
. (2002)
named the ‘Three Kings’ green specimens
as
L. Kaakaariki
and the ‘Three Kings’ brown as
L. duckworthi
.
L. kaakaariki
seems to be closely related to
L spinispiraefera
based on the structure of the anisodiscorhabd.