Lamellomorpha strongylata Bergquist, 1968

Kelly, Michelle, Cárdenas, Paco, Rush, Nicola, Sim-Smith, Carina, Macpherson, Diana, Page, Mike & Bell, Lori J., 2019, Molecular study supports the position of the New Zealand endemic genus Lamellomorpha in the family Vulcanellidae (Porifera, Demospongiae, Tetractinellida), with the description of three new species, European Journal of Taxonomy 506, pp. 1-25 : 5-10

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2019.506

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0D5F8DFB-C1AC-47F5-9129-C9241DF3DB04

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5619278

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A458FF36-FFC4-7C5B-6D15-63BF74C2FC9E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Lamellomorpha strongylata Bergquist, 1968
status

 

Lamellomorpha strongylata Bergquist, 1968 View in CoL

Figs 1–2 View Fig View Fig , 6 View Fig ; Tables 1–2 View Table 1 View Table 2

Lamellomorpha strongylata Bergquist, 1968 View in CoL (in part): 31–32, pls 4a, 11e–f, fig. 10.

Lamellomorpha strongylata View in CoL — Cryer et al. 2000: 21, appendix 8a–b. — Hooper & Maldonado 2002: 165 –167, fig. 1. — Hickford 2007: 40. — Kelly et al. 2009: 42. — NABIS 2017: 1 –4.

‘ Lamellomorpha n. sp. K & W’ in Cryer et al. 2000: 42 (NIWA 51169 leg.).

Type material

Holotype

NEW ZEALAND • Northeast of Three Kings Islands , NZOI Station B 93; 33.983° S, 172.350° E; depth 54–109 m; 22 Oct. 1958; NIWA 356 View Materials ( NZOI H–33) leg.; beam trawl; UPSZTY 178600 (a piece of the holotype preserved in 70% ethanol, as well as a spicule preparation), NIWA. GoogleMaps

Other material examined

NEW ZEALAND – Northeast of Three Kings Islands , NIWA Station Z 9678 ( KAH9901 /27); 34.360° S, 172.712° E; depth 48 m; 26 Jan. 1999; NIWA 51169 View Materials and 51172 leg.; UPSZMC 178601 (fragment of NIWA 51172 View Materials leg. preserved in 70% ethanol), NIWA GoogleMaps Northeast of Three Kings Islands , NIWA Station Z 9686 ( KAH9901 /43); 34.361° S, 172.686° E; depth 48 m; 27 Jan. 1999; NIWA 51267 View Materials leg.; UPSZMC 178603 (fragment preserved in 70% ethanol), NIWA GoogleMaps Northeast of Three Kings Islands , NIWA Station Z 9699 ( KAH9901 /67); 34.360° S, 172.673° E; depth 41 m; 28 Jan. 1999; NIWA 51438 View Materials leg.; NIWA GoogleMaps Northeast of Three Kings Islands , NIWA Station Z 9710 ( KAH9901 /85); 34.353° S, 172.765° E; depth 54 m; 28 Jan. 1999; NIWA 51582 View Materials leg.; dredge; NIWA GoogleMaps Three Kings Islands, 2.5 nm east of Great Island, NIWA Station Z15944 View Materials ; 34.170° S, 172.210° E; depth 200 m; 16 Apr. 1999; CRRF, NIWA 93474 View Materials leg.; dredge; NIWA GoogleMaps Spirits Bay, Northland, NIWA Station KAH0606/D3 ; 34.36° S, 172.847° E; 15 May 2005; NIWA 52375 leg.; dredge; NIWA. GoogleMaps Middlesex Bank, Three Kings Rise, NIWA Station TAN1105/43; 33.988° S, 171.751° E; depth 170–174 m; 28 Mar. 2011; NIWA 73243 View Materials , 73253 View Materials leg.; beam trawl; NIWA GoogleMaps Western Continental Slope , Northland, NZOI Station J 954 (I808); 34.633° S, 172.225° E; depth 204– 192 m; 18 Jun. 1981; collected by rock dredge; specimen now lost, donated by Dame P. R. Bergquist to Dr P. Karuso, Macquarie University, Sydney GoogleMaps .

Description

The holotype was described by Bergquist (1968) as a “massive, thick, sometimes folded and incurved lamellate sponge”, 130 mm high, 102 mm wide, and 18–22 mm thick, supported by a stout stalk 30 mm in diameter. The surface was described as smooth where the dermal membrane was intact, otherwise ragged due to projecting clumps of oxeas and strongyles. Oscules, 1–2.6 mm in diameter, were found on the convex surface of the lamella and lie flush with the surface ( Bergquist 1968). Examination of the numerous preserved specimens in NIC reveal occasional membranous oscules, but it is difficult to tell whether they are restricted to one side of the sponge. However, in the holotype, pores were observed on the opposite side to the oscules, in cribriporal areas, separated by small ridges, or with no boundaries, making a continuous pore surface; each pore is 40–80 µm in diameter. The texture was described as, “firm but compressible, crisp, easily broken”. The colour in life was described as “bright green” and the colour in spirit, “blue green or yellowish green” ( Bergquist 1968). The most recent collection was by the Coral Reef Research Foundation in 1999 (NIWA 93474 leg.; Fig. 2A View Fig ), who described a “dark, royal blue (not navy blue), (palmate) fan sponge with pointed tips, 20 cm high and about 1 cm thick, that tears easily, and which has a fleshy surface”.

Skeleton

The description by Bergquist (1968) of the choanosome as “lax and confused with slight traces of radiate construction discernible”, is accurate, but in NIWA 93474 leg. the contort strongyles strongly radiate through the plane of the fan. Bergquist described a “subectosomal region”, in which there were tracts of megascleres, variable in thickness, that curved outward and intersect with the surface at an acute angle; in NIWA 93474 leg. these are predominantly oxeas ( Fig. 6A View Fig ). The ectosome is densely packed with microstrongyles and streptasters, which also occur throughout the sponge, but in much less abundance.

Spicules

MEGASCLERES ( Table 1 View Table 1 ; Fig. 2D View Fig )

Bergquist (1968) considered the megascleres of L. strongylata (Bergquist 1968: 31, 32 (table of spicule dimensions)) to be “strongyles, oxeas and strongyloxeas”, all of similar range in length and width, varying only in relative frequency in the two specimens (presumably the Three Kings holotype and the NZOI Station B 176 specimen from Campbell Plateau), with oxeas being dominant in the latter. Re-examination of the holotype megascleres, and those of more recent collections, indicate that there are probably two forms of megascleres: 1) straight to slightly curved oxeas that are common in the subectosomal tracts, ranging from about 1500–1750 µm long and up to 25 µm thick; and 2) massive sinuous or contort oxeas that are usually very thick and frequently modified with one or both ends rounded as in strongyloxeas, rarely as in true strongyles, ranging from about 1600–2375 µm long and up to 40 µm thick. However, it is difficult to distinguish the various megascleres in some specimens, and in some the spicules are much less contort.

MICROSCLERES ( Table 2 View Table 2 ; Fig. 2 View Fig C–F)

Microstrongyles are “squat, evenly rounded spicules, slightly roughened and occasionally centrotylote” (Bergquist 1968: 31, 32 (table of spicule dimensions)) and range from about 21–34 µm long ( Table 2 View Table 2 ). Bergquist described the streptaster microscleres of L. strongylata (Bergquist 1968: 31, 32 (table of spicule dimensions)) as “plesiasters, small spicules with 3–12 smooth, sharply pointed rays”. A reexamination of the holotype ( Fig. 2 View Fig E–F) using scanning electron microscopy has revealed that the streptaster microscleres are metasters and occasionally amphiasters with relatively long microspined rays, all in one size category, following the definition of Sollas (1888), and as used in Cárdenas & Rapp (2012). We describe these spicules as metaster- to amphiaster-like streptasters with heavily spined, relatively long rays in one size category, ranging in length from about 7–15 µm long ( Table 2 View Table 2 ).

Distribution

Northeast of New Zealand.

Substrate, depth range and ecology

Attached to rocky reefs and sediment and rubble-covered rocky platforms, depth 41– 200 m.

DNA barcodes

COI. NIWA 51172 leg. (minibarcode, MK033624 View Materials ) and NIWA 51267 leg. ( MK033623 View Materials ): no bp differences. 28S (C1-C2). NIWA 51172 leg. ( MK 033143 View Materials ) and NIWA 51267 leg. ( MK 033142 View Materials ): no bp differences. We failed to get sequences from the holotype.

Remarks

Lamellomorpha strongylata was originally described in considerable detail by Bergquist (1968), and the holotype was redescribed without re-examination more recently by Hooper & Maldonado (2002). No further material was examined. Here, for the first time, we illustrate the sponge as it appears upon collection, showing the beautiful royal blue colouration ( Fig. 2A View Fig ), and illustrate the detail and ornamentation of the microscleres ( Fig. 2 View Fig C–F) using scanning electron microscopy. There is little to add to the original description, consequently the description and skeletal details are provided in comparative prose. Lamellomorpha strongylata is restricted to the northernmost tip of New Zealand and beyond to the Three Kings Rise, and is easily recognised in the field by the palmate, tree-like shape and the deep blue to green colouration.

Table 1. Megascleres and dimensions (µm) of Lamellomorpha strongylata Bergquist, 1968 and L. australis Kelly & Cárdenas sp. nov., given as length [mean (min.–max.)] × width [mean (min.– max.)], n = 10–17 unless stated otherwise.

Specimen Straight megascleres Contort megascleres
L. strongylata
NZOI Holotype 33 ( Bergquist 1968) 1980(1000–2808) × 26(14–33)  
NIWA 0 0 356 (NZOI Holotype 33) 1993(1520‾2416) × 27(21‾31) 1556(1306–1787) × 17(11–24)
NIWA 93474 1968(1373‾2552) × 22(9–30) 1564(1288‾1816) × 15(8‾21)
L. australis sp. nov.
NZOI Station B176 ( Bergquist 1968) 1482(1161–1937) × 23(17–28)  
NIWA 89736 leg. (holotype) 1655(1130–1981) × 26(17–41) not present
NIWA 93483 leg. (paratype) 1754(1454‾2223) × 26(15‾36) 2159(1499‾3079) × 25(14‾31)
NIWA 93484 leg. (paratype) 1562(1403‾1988) × 21(13‾27) 2657(2243‾3058) × 23(17‾33)
NIWA 93485 leg. (paratype) 1640(1044‾2026) × 19(6‾25) 3164(2672‾3555) × 23(18‾27)
NIWA 93486 leg. (paratype) 1725(1231‾2320) × 19(13‾28) 2257(1702‾3575) × 20(13‾32)
NIWA 93487 leg. (paratype) 1752(1226‾2613) × 24(16‾31) 2195(1658‾3560) × 23(17‾34)
NIWA 93499 leg. 1882(1572‾2400) × 27(21‾39) 2664(2098‾3100) × 25(16‾35)

Table 2. Microscleres and dimensions (µm) of Lamellomorpha strongylata Bergquist, 1968 and L. australis Kelly & Cárdenas sp. nov., given as length [mean (min.–max.)] × width [mean (min.– max.)], n = 10–17 unless stated otherwise.

Specimen Microstrongyles Streptasters Spirasters
L. strongylata Bergquist, 1968
NZOI Holotype 33 ( Bergquist 1968) 25(23–28) × 3(2–4) 10(8–11) not present
NIWA 0 0 356 (NZOI Holotype 33) 23(21‾28) × 3(2‾4) 10(8‾15) not present
NIWA 93474 27(24‾34) × 2(2‾3) 9(7‾12) not present
L. australis s p. nov.
NZOI Station B176 ( Bergquist 1968) 27(24–30) × 3(2–4) 10(8–11) not given
NIWA 89736 leg. (holotype) 37(31–42) × 3(2–4) 12(10–13) 10(8–11)
NIWA 93483 leg. (paratype) 32(25‾41) × 2(2‾4) 10(8‾12) 10(9‾15)
NIWA 93484 leg. (paratype) 32(29‾37) × 2(1–3) 8(8‾9) 10(8–12)
NIWA 93485 leg. (paratype) 28(21‾38) × 3(2‾5) 10(9‾12) 11(9‾14)
NIWA 93486 leg. (paratype) 36(31‾40) × 2(2‾3) 9(7‾11) 11(9‾13)
NIWA 93487 leg. (paratype) 27(19‾34) × 3(1‾5) 9(8‾12) 10(8‾14)
NIWA 93499 leg. 32(26‾41) × 2(1‾2) 9(8‾15) 10(8‾12)
NZOI

New Zealand Oceanographic Institute

NIWA

National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Tetractinellida

Family

Vulcanellidae

Genus

Lamellomorpha

Loc

Lamellomorpha strongylata Bergquist, 1968

Kelly, Michelle, Cárdenas, Paco, Rush, Nicola, Sim-Smith, Carina, Macpherson, Diana, Page, Mike & Bell, Lori J. 2019
2019
Loc

Lamellomorpha strongylata

NABIS 2017: 1
Kelly M. & Edwards A. R. & Wilkinson M. R. & Alvarez B. & Cook S. de & Bergquist P. R. & Buckeridge St. J. & Campbell H. J. & Reiswig H. M. & Valentine C. & Vacelet J. 2009: 42
Hickford S. J. H. 2007: 40
Hooper J. N. A. & Maldonado M. 2002: 165
Cryer M. & O'Shea S. & Gordon D. & Kelly M. & Drury J. & Morrison M. & Hill A. & Saunders H. & Shankar U. & Wilkinson M. & Foster G. 2000: 21
2000
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF