Heterorotula caledonensis (Rützlerı 1968)

Pronzato, Roberto & Manconi, Renata, 2019, An overview on the freshwater sponge fauna (Demospongiae: Spongillida) of New Zealand and New Caledonia with new insights into Heterorotula from deep thermal vents of the Lake Taupo, Journal of Natural History 53 (35), pp. 2207-2229 : 2207-2229

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2019.1694716

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3664959

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039087DA-E760-8D13-CCBD-435F2811FF65

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Heterorotula caledonensis (Rützlerı 1968)
status

 

Heterorotula caledonensis (Rützlerı 1968)

( Figures 1 View Figure 1 (B)ı 4(A))

Ephydatia multidentata f. caledonensis Rützlerı 1968 (figs. 13 – 19ı p. 64); Heterorotula caledonensis Volkmer-Ribeiro and Rützlerı 1997 ; van Soest et al. ı 2018

Comparative materials

BMNH 1890.1.9.339ı holotypeı Heterorotula capewelli type species of the genus Heterorotula . WAM Z27997 View Materials ı FW-POR 881 ı Heterorotula multiformis . WAM Z98316ı FW- POR 883 ı Heterorotula cf . multidentata. USNM 23884 View Materials type material of Heterorotula caledonensis (3 specimens) not examined here .

Description (emended after Rützler 1968)

Growth form small irregular cushions (~ 1 cm 2) on dead plant stems or thin (2 mm) crusts (2 cm 2) on dead leaves. Consistency soft compressible. Scanty spongin. Colour in alcohol whitish in the macerated peripheral partsı greyish brown centrallyı where abundant gemmules accumulate in several layers. Oscula and inhalant apertures not detected. Skeleton as polygonal meshwork of primary spicuları ascendingı tracts sometimes branching to the surface (200 – 600 µm apart); secondary tracts from 2 – 3 oxeas horizontally placed to single spicules in the interior of the sponge. Megascleres entirely spiny (100 – 150 × 8 – 19 µm). Gemmuloscleres spiny oxeas and birotules (30 – 100 × 5 µm) with very irregular rotules (15 µm in diameter). Gemmules sphericalı brownish (450 – 600 µm in diameter) with gemmuloscleres arranged in a single layerı and single foraminal tube (40 µm).

Habitat

Sponges have been discovered in a well-shaded pond (0.5 m depth; water temperature 18.60 °C) along a stream bed growing on decaying woodı dead leaves and plant stems (Eichorniaı Lemnaı Characea and Potamogetonacea).

Geographic range

Heterorotula caledonensis is endemic to New Caledonia and exclusively known from the type locality an unnamed pond along a stream flowing towards La Foa ( Figure 1 View Figure 1 (B)ı South Western New Caledoniaı 25.VII. 1965ı coll. Dr. Ferdinand Starmuhlner from the Zoologisches Institut der Universität Wien).

Remarks

Heterorotula caledonensis was originally described as H. multidentata f. caledonensis by Rützler (1968) ı with few details. It was subsequently ranked to the species level and redescribed by Volkmer-Ribeiro and Rützler (1997 ı p. 495) with exhaustive illustrations of diagnostic morphotraits distinguishing the species: ‘ The great variations in the gemmoscleres of H. caledonensis could not be found in specimens of H. multidentata from either eastern Australia or New Caledonia and are now considered to be of such magnitude that they denote a new species ’. The present comparative analysis of morphology vs previous descriptions and illustrations of the two latter species shows that the shaft length range is almost identical (~ 30 – 80 µm)ı and both species also bear similar malformed gemmuloscleres. Consequentlyı it is very difficult to distinguish between the two species from the morphological point of view. Integrative taxonomy with also molecular analyses is necessary.

WAM

Western Australian Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Haplosclerida

Family

Spongillidae

Genus

Heterorotula

Loc

Heterorotula caledonensis (Rützlerı 1968)

Pronzato, Roberto & Manconi, Renata 2019
2019
Loc

Ephydatia multidentata

caledonensis Rützlerı 1968 (figs. 13 – 19ı p. 64)
Volkmer-Ribeiro and Rützlerı 1997
van Soest et al. ı 2018
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF