Cinachyra crassispicula ( Lendenfeld, 1907 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4455.2.3 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B8FBCB01-CA87-4761-A9F9-2D90AB9EF597 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5988741 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A005C267-4109-BA29-FF68-C6504F174D6A |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Cinachyra crassispicula ( Lendenfeld, 1907 ) |
status |
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Cinachyra crassispicula ( Lendenfeld, 1907) View in CoL
Synonymy: Tethya crassispicula Lendenfeld, 1907 ; Craniella crassispicula ( Lendenfeld, 1907) .
Material examined: Holotype of Tethya crassispicula , ZMB Por 1248 Lendenfeld, 1907 from Kerguelen (Subantarctic).
GenBank accession number: Holotype of Tethya crassispicula , ZMB Por 1248 MF168950 View Materials .(see S1).
Description ( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 ). Globular, 8 cm in diameter, sponge ( Fig. 14a View FIGURE 14 ); hispid surface mainly on its apical part, produced by the protruding oxeas and protriaenes. Oscules inconspicuous. Porocalices large (up to 3 mm in diameter) and numerous with a flask-shape pattern ( Fig. 14b View FIGURE 14 ), placed on the sponge lateral zones; color reddish brown in alcohol. Cortex ( Fig. 14c–d View FIGURE 14 ) formed by a dense layer of cris-cross, thick auxiliary oxeas together with sigmaspires. Basal anchoring tufts made of anatriaenes.
Spicules ( Fig. 15 View FIGURE 15 ; Table 1)
Megascleres: oxeas I ( Fig. 15a View FIGURE 15 ) large and fusiform: 5775–6890–7750 µm x 50 –64–80 µm. Auxiliary oxeas II small and thick ( Fig. 15b View FIGURE 15 ): 300–582.3–950 µm x 15 –23.6–40 µm. Anatriaenes I ( Fig. 15c,d,e,f,g View FIGURE 15 ): 4500–11158– 18800 µm x 12.5–20–27.5 µm in size with clades of different forms, sometimes deformed, more or less open: 60– 92.5–125 µm in length; rhabdomes fusiform, thicker at the middle and filiform at the terminal part. Anatriaenes II: 3500–4065–4650 µm x 7.5–9.3–12.5 µm in size ( Fig.15h View FIGURE 15 ) with short clades: 30–38.6–50 µm and fusiform rhabdomes. Protriaenes I ( Fig. 15i View FIGURE 15 ), sometimes prodiaenes: 4470–6244.3–12360 µm x 10 –15.4–27.5 µm, clades with equal length: 80–110.3–150 µm long; rhabdomes tapering from the base of the clades to end in a filamentous termination. Protriaenes II ( Fig. 15j View FIGURE 15 ) sometimes prodiaenes: 1450–2630–3970 µm x 3.75–7.26–10 µm, clades with equal length: 20–58.9–90 µm; rhabdomes tapering from the base of the clades to end in a filamentous termination. Trichodal protriaenes ( Fig. 15l View FIGURE 15 ) very small with filamentous rhabdomes: 287.5–629–1400 µm x 1.25–2.7–5 µm long and thin, 10–21.2–50 µm long clades. Microscleres: sigmaspires ( Fig. 15k View FIGURE 15 ): 12.5–15–20 µm in length.
Skeletal arrangement. Bundles of oxeas, anatriaenes, and protriaenes radiating spirally form the center to the periphery, piercing the ectosome. Thick auxiliary oxeas mostly arranged at the sponge periphery, but also scattered in the choanosome. Trichodal protriaenes mostly present at the peripheral zone. Sigmaspires mainly accumulated at the peripheral layer of the cortex.
Distribution and habitat. Kerguelen ( Lendenfeld, 1907).
Remarks. Tethya crassispicula Lendenfeld, 1907 was revised to confirm whether it belongs to any of the Antarctic genera. As it has been proved to be a Cinachyra , its description is included in this study. Re-examination of the type of Tethya crassispicula Lendenfeld, 1907 proved that this species has porocalices and a clear spiculemade cortex. These characters are typical of Cinachyra and thus the species is here renamed Cinachyra crassispicula . The COI minibarcode sequences ( Meusnier et al. 2008 and Cárdenas & Moore 2017; data not shown) also suggest assigning this and A. coactifera to the Antarctic clade of Tetillidae .
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.
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