Darwinella pronzatoi Bertolino

Bertolino, Marco, Costa, Gabriele, Bavestrello, Giorgio, Pansini, Maurizio & Daneri, Giovanni, 2020, New sponge species from Seno Magdalena, Puyuhuapi Fjord and Jacaf Canal (Chile), European Journal of Taxonomy 715, pp. 1-49 : 38-40

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2020.715

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:08022AE1-B293-4D42-9733-AC4845E656B7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4330262

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FA17C8DB-1973-4E6F-9AB9-A025F68D38F5

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:FA17C8DB-1973-4E6F-9AB9-A025F68D38F5

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Darwinella pronzatoi Bertolino
status

sp. nov.

Darwinella pronzatoi Bertolino View in CoL , Costa & Pansini sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:FA17C8DB-1973-4E6F-9AB9-A025F68D38F5

Fig. 15 View Fig

Etymology

The new species is named after Professor Roberto Pronzato (DISTAV – Università degli Studi di Genova) in recognition of his significant contributions to taxonomic studies on horny sponges.

Type material

Holotype

CHILE – Puerto Cisnes • Seno Magdalena C ; 44.631113° S, 72.929130° W; depth 15 m; 5–10 Aug. 2016; Marco Bertolino leg.; on a rocky wall by scuba diving; CILE 100 ; MSGN 61500 .

GoogleMaps

Description

HABITUS. Encrusting sponge about 5 cm long and 1.5 cm thick, with regular conulose surface. Colour in life bright yellow ( Fig. 15A View Fig ). Live specimens soft, very fragile, showing numerous oscula with low rim ( Fig. 15A View Fig ). Ostia also visible on sponge surface ( Fig. 15A View Fig )

SKELETON. Structure typical of Darwinella genus with ascending dendritic fibres supporting surface conules. Several dendritic fibres arise from common basal plate. Red dendritic fibres laminated, linear and sinuous, 14–(15)– 16 mm long and 70–(80)–90 μm thick, with opaque core ( Fig. 15B View Fig ); axial core 10–(11)–12 μm thick.

SPICULES. Smooth, straight, slightly curved or sinuous horny styles, with visible axial core ( Fig. 15C View Fig ), 87.5–(436)–830 μm long and 9–(12.5)–16 μm thick; axial core 2.5–(8.3)–13 μm thick.

Habitat

Species lives at a depth of 15 m in a shady area on rocky wall.

Remarks

Up to now, there was no evidence of the presence of the genus Darwinella from the Chilean coasts. Thirteen species belonging to this genus have been described worldwide, eleven of which have multiradiate spicules and one species, Darwinella tango (Poiner & Taylor, 1990) , has no spicules. Only two species are characterized by monaxonic spicules: D. gardineri Topsent, 1905 , characterised by curved horny oxeas (1600–2000 × 20 μm), and D. oxeata Bergquist, 1961 , having horny spined oxeas (530– 2083 × 4.2–29.8 μm). Due to the presence of smooth, straight, slightly curved or sinuous horny styles, D. pronzatoi is clearly different from both these species, therefore it should be considered as a species new to science.

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF