Latrunculia (Biannulata) citharistae Vacelet, 1969
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1127.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E3B8BACE-1E5B-4E07-AB94-A4947F966483 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038D1B08-136E-FF8A-FED7-FB323272FDFC |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Latrunculia (Biannulata) citharistae Vacelet, 1969 |
status |
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Latrunculia (Biannulata) citharistae Vacelet, 1969 View in CoL
( Figs 1Q, 5E View FIGURE 5 , 7 View FIGURE 7 , 8A; Tables 2 & 3)
Latrunculia citharistae Vacelet, 1969: 195 View in CoL
Holotype material. Holotype MNHNJV6814 Latrunculia citharistae ( Vacelet, 1969: 195) .
Other material examined. HBOM 10VI914007 (cross ref. TS 44), Canary Islands, Hierro; S. Coast, 3.75 NMI 120 DEG to Puerto Naos, depth 147 m, collected by HBOI. HBOM 13 VI914012 (TS 45), Canary Islands, Tenerife; W. coast, 2.03 NMI 120 Deg to San Juan, depth 477 fathoms, collected by HBOI. HBOM 2VI914007 (Ts 42), Ilheus Selvagem, Selvagem Penuena; S. coast, 1.32 NMI 350 Deg to Pt Sul, de Ilheu, depth 232 m, collected by Harbour Branch, 1996.
Description. Massive, spherical, 5 x 4 x 3 cm in diameter. Other specimens are small, semispherical, sponges up to 2 cm high and 2 cm wide ( Fig. 8A). Surface smooth with numerous cylindricalshaped oscules; some at the apex larger than the rest, 2 mm wide and 4 mm high. The remainder is volcanoshaped mammiform processes, each with a distinct small opening at the top, 2 mm high, 0.1 mm wide. Ectosome thin and easily separable from underlying choanosome. Texture firm, resilient, soft but leathery. Colour in life is dark green; colour in preservative, choanosome dark brown and ectosome light brown (from Vacelet, 1969). Vacelet (1969) described the fresh holotype to have a dark brown colour and also possessing osculae and mammiform areolate porefields. Additionally, Vacelet (1969) noted that the holotype contained reddish embryos, 500 µm diameter.
Skeleton. The choanosomal skeleton consists of a loose, illdefined irregular polygonalmeshed reticulation formed by wispy tracts of styles, with no distinction between the primary and secondary tracts ( Fig. 5E View FIGURE 5 ). The tracts range in width from 45–50 m in thickness, and may form meshes that are 200 m wide. Towards the surface the tracts become more vertically arranged. Interstitial spicules absent in choanosome. The surface of the ectosome is lined with an erect layer of noninterlocking anisodiscorhabds. Beneath the discorhabds in the ectosome is a thin tangentialparatangential layer of interlocking megascleres, approximately 75 m wide.
Spicules. Megascleres: styles are smooth, thin, centrally thickest, hastately pointed with a slight sinuous curve, 356 (345–382) x 5 (5) m, n=20; Holotype 310–460 x 4–6 m. Microscleres ( Fig. 1Q): anisodiscorhabds, possessing identical median and subsidiary whorls symmetrically arranged around the shaft. The manubrium is a minute spinose base consisting of two or three whorls of spines, followed immediately by a smooth slender cylindrical shaft 12 m long and 2.3 m wide. The median and subsidiary whorls are circular, flat, slanted slightly in opposite directions and similar in diameter, 19 m. Each whorl is deeply notched and composed of eight spines, divided amongst three groups, which give three sets for each of them. The spines of the apical whorl are slanted slightly upwards, and divided, ending in a crownlike tuft of dichotomous spines. Acanthodiscorhabd length, 45 (41–48) x 5 (5) m, n=20.
Substratum, depth range and ecology. Stalk of sea whip; dredge from slope/ rock rubble seems to very common; Specimen HBOM 2VI914007 was dredged from mud slopes and was associated with other sponges. Depth range: 147–232 m
Geographic distribution ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ). Canary Islands, Mediterranean Sea.
Remarks. Hinde and Holmes (1892) (P. 219, FIG. 39) recorded a fossil anisodiscorhabd structure from the Oamaru Diatomite, New Zealand of a species that occurred during the late Eoceneearly Oligocene era. These authors also suggested that this form was a modification of a common plane, which ultimately gave rise to the phyllamentoustype discorhabd. The discorhabd structure of the extant L. (B.) citharistae conforms very closely in detail to the illustration and description of the fossil spicule given by Hinde and Holmes (1892) and could be considered as a recent flesh spicule of this type. The discorhabd structure of the extant Latrunculia citharistae differs however from the fossil spicule in that the spines of the apical whorl are slanted slightly upwards, as appose to forming a distinctive crownlike structure as in the fossil species ( Hinde and Holmes 1892; Latrunculia sp. , PL. XI, FIGS 39, 40). Apart from this L. citharistae the spicule also differ in length, being much smaller in size than what is recorded for the fossil species (75 µm). It is difficult to say whether the fossil acanthodiscorhabds are homologous to that found in the extant species, but it does suggest that several species of “latrunculids” with this form must have coexisted at the source of this assemblage (See also Wiedenmayer 1994).
The occurrence of this species in both the North Atlantic and the Mediterranean Sea, and its affinities with New Zealand (same flesh spicular structure) probably suggest a Tethyan origin of this species complex. At present L. citharistae is here restricted to the deepwater North Atlantic and Mediterranean regions and has not been recorded in the southern hemisphere ( Table 2).
Structurally the anisodiscorhabd differs from the variety of forms presently found within the genus, in that it posses a slender cylindrical shaft with the two lobate whorls in the middle portion of the shaft. Its relationship to the other species with flesh spicules is one of assumption and could only be resolved with additional data.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Latrunculia (Biannulata) citharistae Vacelet, 1969
Samaai, Toufiek, Gibbons, Mark J. & Kelly, Michelle 2006 |
Latrunculia citharistae Vacelet, 1969: 195
Vacelet, J. 1969: 195 |