Hamigera bakusi, Ott & Mcdaniel & Humphrey, 2024

Ott, B., Mcdaniel, N. & Humphrey, E., 2024, Fourteen new species of demosponges (Porifera) from three coastal fjords in southern British Columbia, Canada, Zootaxa 5463 (2), pp. 151-200 : 164-166

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5463.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FDB4CE85-B07E-49C7-AABF-A67914F17E6B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11611206

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C7F7FD4E-0E55-4E8A-B9A8-EA07E427D86A

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:C7F7FD4E-0E55-4E8A-B9A8-EA07E427D86A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Hamigera bakusi
status

sp. nov.

Hamigera bakusi n. sp.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:C7F7FD4E-0E55-4E8A-B9A8-EA07E427D86A

Figure 6 View FIGURE 6

Diagnosis. Compound oscula in sieve plates in crater-like depressions surrounded by shallow chimneys; colour always a shade of orange.

Etymology The name, suggested by the late Dr. W.C. Austin, is in honour of Dr. Gerald Bakus who conducted pioneering taxonomy on Poecillosclerida in the Puget Sound/San Juan Islands region in the mid-1960s and continued active research on sponge taxonomy for several decades thereafter.

Material Examined Holotype RBCM 024-00010 View Materials - 001 View Materials , Stn NM 397 , Defence Isl (E), Howe Sd., BC, 49° 34.511’ N / 123° 16.425’ W, coll. N. McDaniel, 30 Sept 2019, 15 m depth, 1 specimen GoogleMaps . Paratype RBCM 024-00010 View Materials - 002 View Materials , Stn NM 394, Defence Isl (E), Howe Sd., BC, 49° 34.511’ N / 123° 16.425’ W, coll. N. McDaniel, 24 Sept 2019, 15 m depth, 1 specimen GoogleMaps .

Description

External ( Figure 6A View FIGURE 6 ) Holotype RBCM 024-00010-001. Moderately thick encrusting with sieve plates in crater-like depressions; sponge 12 x 8 x 0.5 cm. Surface finely microhispid, densely micropapillate. Oscula compound on shallow chimneys and 3–4 mm diameter ( Figure 6B View FIGURE 6 ). Oscula chimneys can be partly or completely closed voluntarily ( Figure 6A View FIGURE 6 ). Ostia not visible in preserved specimen. Colour lemon yellow to orange. Consistency fairly easily torn.

Skeleton ( Figure 6C View FIGURE 6 ) The ectosome is a 30–50 µm thick layer packed with tornotes perpendicular to the surface and isochelas; single subtylotes may penetrate the surface up to 100 µm. Choanosome plumose tracts branching and anastomosing. Large styles predominate deeper in the sponge while subtylotes mixed mostly with shorter styles predominate closer to the surface. Deeper in the sponge larger styles cross connect tracts randomly forming a very loose reticulation. Tracts are 100–150 µm thick just below the ectosome. Deeper in the choanosome tracts become more diffuse and vague or may become plumose. Subtylotes and isochelas are scattered throughout the choanosome.

Spicules ( Figures 6D, E, F and G View FIGURE 6 ) Large and small styles, subtylotes, spatulate arcuate isochelas. Large styles ( Figure 6D View FIGURE 6 ) gently curved or straight; sharp apices; heads slightly swollen, dimension range 378–536 x 18.2–26.0 µm. A few immature. Small styles ( Figure 6E View FIGURE 6 ) same shape as large styles, shorter and thinner; apices may be mucronate, dimension range 190–263 x 13.0–18.2 µm. Tornotes ( Figure 6F View FIGURE 6 ) inequiended, straight, swollen heads, shafts smooth or slightly polysubtylote, dimension range 252–368 x 7.3–10.4 µm. Spatulate arcuate isochelas ( Figure 6G View FIGURE 6 ) strongly bent; spatulate alae, 33.8–49.4 µm. Immature isochelas fairly common. Table 6 compares spicule dimensions of specimens examined.

Distribution Widely distributed and abundant in BC; Howe Sound, Sechelt Inlet, Strait of Georgia. Shallow subtidal, 10–20 m depth.

Ecology Forms moderately thick encrustations up to 15 cm in diameter on bedrock.

Remarks Hamigera bibiloniae Santín, Grinyó, Uriz & Gili, 2020 , H. dendyi Shaw, 1927 , H. kellyae Santín, Grinyó, Uriz & Gili, 2020 , H. macrostrongyla Bergquist & Fromont, 1988 , H. strongylata Burton, 1934 , and H. macrostrongyla Bergquist & Fromont, 1988 have strongyles and no tornotes. Hamigera cleistochela Bertolino, Costa & Pansini, 2019 has cleistochelas.

Hamigera hamigera is closest to H. bakusi n. sp. but oscula are not described as compound (Van Soest 2002 [2004]a) and H. hamigera can be lobate. Hamigera hamigera has only one size class of shorter, thinner styles (240–320 x 5–9 µm vs. 378–536 x 18.2–26.0 µm and 190–263 x 13.0–18.2 µm in H. bakusi n. sp.). Isochelas of H. hamigera are smaller (15–20 µm vs. 33.8–49.4 µm for H. bakusi n. sp.) (Van Soest 2002 [2004]a).

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