Microxina benedeni ( Topsent, 1901 )

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 : 420

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.10562206

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D687FD-C518-824A-FF45-FCEA6A01BBE1

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Microxina benedeni ( Topsent, 1901 )
status

 

Microxina benedeni ( Topsent, 1901) View in CoL

( Fig. 10a–c View FIGURE 10 )

Restricted synonymy: Gelliodes benedeni Topsent, 1901 , Gellius benedeni ( Topsent, 1901) .

Material examined: Several specimens collected at station 11 ( SOI; 60°53'S, 42°35'W; 487 m; 10/3/2014; MACN-In 44388; IEO-CSIC Col.) GoogleMaps .

Description: Tubular specimens, with a densely hairy and conulated surface ( Figure 10a View FIGURE 10 ). Beige to light-brown in colour. Two specimens used small rocks as settlement substrates. Spicules are straight oxeas with sharp ends of 320–780 µm by 20–30 µm and exclusively c sigmata of 45–55 µm ( Figure 10b, c View FIGURE 10 ).

Remarks: There are currently six valid Microxina species which are known from the Antarctic: M. charcoti Topsent, 1916 , M. benedeni ( Topsent, 1901) , M. lanceolata Calcinai & Pansini, 2000 , M. phakellioides ( Kirkpatrick, 1907) , M. sarai Calcinai & Pansini, 2000 and M. simplex ( Topsent, 1916) . They differ in the size range of the oxeas and the complementary microscleres (sigmas, microxeas, toxas) (see Goodwin et al. 2012, for the comparison).Also, M. myxa Goodwin, Brewin & Brickle, 2012 has been also described from South Georgias Islands. Our specimen fits well with the descriptions of M. benedeni , from other Antarctic records: Campos et al. (2007), Göcke & Janussen (2013), Koltun (1964). This finding represents a new record for the SOI. This species has been also documented in other subantarctic regions, such as Malvinas (Falkland) and South Georgias Islands by Burton (1932).

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