Tedania (Tedaniopsis) tantula ( Kirkpatrick, 1907 )

Schejter, Laura, Cristobo, Javier & Ríos, Pilar, 2024, New records of demosponges (Porifera) from the South Orkney Islands (Antarctica) with a checklist for the region, Zootaxa 5403 (4), pp. 401-430 : 416

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5403.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C2EAB19C-07CB-4013-9C93-D25259EA2673

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10562179

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D687FD-C504-8256-FF45-FB036B8DB979

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tedania (Tedaniopsis) tantula ( Kirkpatrick, 1907 )
status

 

Tedania (Tedaniopsis) tantula ( Kirkpatrick, 1907)

( Fig. 8a View FIGURE 8 )

Restricted synonymy: Oceanapia tantula Kirkpatrick, 1907 , Paratedania tantula ( Kirkpatrick, 1907) , Tedania tantula ( Kirkpatrick, 1907) .

Material examined: 13 specimens collected in stations 2 ( SOI; 60°53'S, 44°33'W; 218 m; GoogleMaps 20/2/2014; MACNIn 44401; IEO-CSIC Col.), 4 ( SOI; 60°55'S, 44°04'W; 256 m; GoogleMaps 20/2/2014; MACN-In 44402), 5 ( SOI; 61°25'S, 42°55'W; 589 m; GoogleMaps 3/3/2014; MACN-In 44403), 10 ( SOI; 60°59'S, 46°43'W; 307 m; GoogleMaps 5/3/2014; MACN-In 44404; IEO-CSIC Col.), 16 ( SOI; 60°40,992'S, 46°14,560'W; 104 m; GoogleMaps 7/3/2012; MACN-In 44406; IEO-CSIC Col.) and 18 ( SOI; 60°47,561'S, 45°36,854'W; 96 m; GoogleMaps 10/3/2012; MACN-In 44405) GoogleMaps .

Description: Specimens of tubular shape, mostly hollow, some of them erect and attached to substrata (pebbles, dead corals, dead mollusk shells) ( Figure 8a View FIGURE 8 ). Chitinous ectosome. Spicules are styles, usually curved and abruptly pointed of 450–670 µm by 20–40 µm, tornotes of 420–630 µm by 20 µm, and onychaetes of 440–670 and 100–120 µm (see Göcke & Janussen, 2013 for a complete description and discussion of this species).

Remarks: This species has been previously recorded by Kirkpatrick (1908), Burton (1932), Koltun (1964), Ríos (2006), Göcke & Janussen (2013) and Goodwin et al. (2019), amongst others. This species is very common in Antarctic and sub-Antarctic waters. However, this represents the first record for the SOI.

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