Poecillastra macquariensis Kelly & Cárdenas, 2019

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 : 17-20

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.5619286

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/78B12A37-93E0-4CA9-9317-81F835B112FE

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:78B12A37-93E0-4CA9-9317-81F835B112FE

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Poecillastra macquariensis Kelly & Cárdenas
status

sp. nov.

Poecillastra macquariensis Kelly & Cárdenas sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:78B12A37-93E0-4CA9-9317-81F835B112FE

Fig. 5 View Fig

Etymology

Named for the type location of this species, the Macquarie Ridge.

Type material

Holotype

NEW ZEALAND • Subantarctic region of New Zealand , Seamount 5, Macquarie Ridge, NIWA Station TAN0803/48; 51.096° S, 161.976° E; depth 462–524 m; 4 Apr. 2008; NIWA 52640 View Materials leg.; epibenthic sled; NIWA. GoogleMaps

Description

Solid stalk of sponge of unknown morphology, 15 mm in diameter, 20 mm high, expanding on the broken, upper surface, sides of stalk sculpted, attachment base contains patches of substrate ( Fig. 5A View Fig ). Surface hispid and scratchy to the touch; texture firm, incompressible. Colour in preservative tan.

Skeleton

Stalk composed of huge swathes of contort oxeas and triaenes between which are abundant microscleres.

Spicules

MEGASCLERES ( Fig. 5 View Fig D–E)

Abundant contort to sinuous oxeas ( Fig. 5D View Fig ) with slightly rounded tips, 3725(2125‾5750) × 53(30‾70) µm; medium-shafted triaenes ( Fig. 5E View Fig ), rhabd slightly curved, tapering to a sharp tip, 852(550‾1225) µm, clads of slightly uneven length, slightly curved downwards, 578(450‾680) µm, overall cladome width, about 900‾1360 µm long, ranging to pseudocalthrops. Broken true oxeas are evident but unmeasurable.

MICROSCLERES ( Fig. 5 View Fig B–C, F–G)

Microxeas ( Fig. 5 View Fig B–C), straight to slightly curved, roughened, abundant, 332(260‾420) × 7(5‾8) µm, n = 20; plesiasters ( Fig. 5F View Fig ), with 3‾5 microspined blunt-tipped rays, overall 67(50‾100), ray length 37(25‾60) µm, n = 10; metaster- to amphiaster- to spiraster-like streptasters ( Fig. 5G View Fig ), with long, microspined rays, abundant, 19(15‾20) µm long.

Distribution

Macquarie Ridge.

Substrate, depth range and ecology

Attached to rock substrate; depth 462– 524 m.

Remarks

The specimen is the attachment base of a sponge of unknown morphology, but it clearly differs from the holotype of Poecillastra ducitriaena sp. nov. in having a very hispid, crisp, scratchy surface, indicating a reduction of the ectosomal crust of microscleres, and the abundance of large megascleres. It is similar to Poecillastra ducitriaena sp. nov. in the possession of abundant contort oxeas in the stalk, but differs in the lack of straight oxeas in the stalk and the much larger dimensions of all the spicules: the contort oxeas are up to 2000 µm longer, on average, in Poecillastra macquariensis sp. nov., and the triaenes are about double the size of those in Poecillastra ducitriaena sp. nov., and much more abundant, the microxeas are about ten times larger, and the sponge contains plesiasters, absent in Poecillastra ducitriaena sp. nov.

Because our knowledge of Poecillastra in the New Zealand region is reasonable (see above), we have made the decision to record and name this second Poecillastra species, despite our lack of information on the body shape, and because surface texture, spicule types and dimensions are so different from those of Poecillastra ducitriaena sp. nov.

NIWA

National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research

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