Latrunculia (Latrunculia) ikematsui Tanita, 1968
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1127.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E3B8BACE-1E5B-4E07-AB94-A4947F966483 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5057856 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038D1B08-1378-FF91-FED7-FDB237D1F88C |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Latrunculia (Latrunculia) ikematsui Tanita, 1968 |
status |
|
Latrunculia (Latrunculia) ikematsui Tanita, 1968 View in CoL
( Figs 1J, 2 View FIGURE 2 , 3D, 5A View FIGURE 5 ; Tables 2 & 3)
Latrunculia ikematsui Tanita, 1968 View in CoL , PG. 53–54, PL. 11, FIG. 11, TEXT FIG. 14.17. Latrunculia ikematsui Tanita View in CoL ; Rho and Sim, 1976, Figs. 1 & 2A–D View FIGURE 2 ; Latrunculia ikematsui Tanita View in CoL ; Hoshino, 1981: 222.
Holotype material. NSMT PO 11 Latrunculia ikematsui Tanita, 1968 , Ariake Sea, Japan, dredged at St. 13, depth unknown, collected by Tanita, September, 1957.
Description. Small, semispherical sponge, 14 x 20 x 3 mm diameter ( Fig. 3D). Surface smooth with no oscules or areolate porefields apparent. Ectosome thin but not easily separable from the underlying choanosome. Texture firm and hard but resilient. Colour in life darkish purple; in preservative dark chocolate brown.
Skeleton. The choanosomal skeleton is a firm, well developed, irregular polygonalmeshed reticulation formed by wispy tracts of smooth styles ( Fig. 5A View FIGURE 5 ). The tracts range in width from 45–91 m in thickness to form meshes that are 91–136 m wide. There is no distinction between the primary and secondary tracts. Towards the surface the spicules tend to be vertically arranged. Interstitial spicules present, with discorhabds scattered abundantly throughout choanosome. The surface of the ectosome is lined with an erect layer of anisodiscorhabds. Beneath the anisodiscorhabds in the ectosome is a thin, loose paratangential layer of interlocking megascleres, approximately 91 m wide.
Spicules. Megascleres: styles are smooth, centrally thickened, fusiform faintly sinuous, 300 (280–320) x 7 (6.5–8) m, n=20. Microscleres ( Fig. 1J): anisodiscorhabds, the manubrium is an expanded and spinose, above which are two basal spines on a smooth slender cylindrical shaft 12 m long and 5 m wide. Median whorl is circular, flat and horizontally arranged, 23 m in diameter, and the largest of the three whorls. The subsidiary whorl is slanted slightly upwards followed by an extended shaft, 5 m long, which gives rise to the apical whorl. Each whorl is deeply notched along the rim and divided into three segments, each possessing a denticulate margin of 5–7 spines. The spines of the apical whorl are slanted upwards with spines nearly parallel to the axis, ending in a crownlike tuft of acute convex spined projections, 38(32–38) m long.
Substratum, depth range and ecology. Found on sandy substrata, together with, bryozoans and other sponges. Depth unknown but dredged from deep water.
Geographic distribution ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). Korea; Japan.
Remark. Tanita (1968) first described this species off the Ariake Sea, Japan on the basis of the shape of its discorhabd, the dimension of spicules and its external morphology ( Table 2, 3). The distinguishing characteristic in this species is the morphology of the anisodiscorhabds; the median, subsidiary and apical whorls are leaflike and lined with rows of spines.
NSMT |
National Science Museum (Natural History) |
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Latrunculia (Latrunculia) ikematsui Tanita, 1968
Samaai, Toufiek, Gibbons, Mark J. & Kelly, Michelle 2006 |
Latrunculia ikematsui
Tanita 1968 |
Latrunculia ikematsui
Tanita 1968 |
Latrunculia ikematsui
Tanita 1968 |