Penares astronavis, Sim-Smith & Kelly, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4638.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E5A26EB4-1F98-4310-A8D7-A0F933E75D95 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CB87E6-FFB6-F96D-FF7B-FF4AFDB0FF2D |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Penares astronavis |
status |
sp. nov. |
Penares astronavis sp. nov.
( Fig. 34–36 View FIGURE 34 View FIGURE 35 View FIGURE 36 , Table 11)
Material examined. Holotype— NIWA 82272 View Materials , NIWA Stn TAN1206/34, Kermadec Ridge, 36.447° S, 177.839° E, 850–980 m, 18 Apr 2012 GoogleMaps .
Type locality. Southern Kermadec Ridge , New Zealand .
Distribution. Only known from type locality, the Southern Kermadec Ridge, New Zealand; 980 m ( Figure 36 View FIGURE 36 ).
Description. Morphology is a thinly encrusting, nodular sponge, growing over dead coral branches ( Figure 34A View FIGURE 34 ); 25 mm × 10 mm × 2 mm thick. Texture is firm but compressible. Surface is slightly scratchy to the touch. No pores or oscules are visible. Colour in ethanol is greyish brown throughout.
Skeleton. Cortical skeleton comprises a densely packed layer of microrhabds, 100–150 µm thick. Microrhabds have no particular orientation in the cortex ( Figure 34C View FIGURE 34 ). Choanosomal skeleton is densely packed with oxyasters ( Figure 34C View FIGURE 34 ). Very short triaenes are common and positioned just below the cortex ( Figure 34B View FIGURE 34 ). Oxeas occur infrequently in the choanosome, having no particular orientation.
Spicules ( Figure 35 View FIGURE 35 ; Table 11). Megascleres —oxeas ( Figure 35A View FIGURE 35 ) are short, very slender and almost straight; 1269 (768–1692) × 21 (13–27) µm (n = 20). Dichotriaenes ( Figure 35B & C View FIGURE 35 ) have a short rhabdome; 180 (117–255) µm long × 593 (407–946) µm wide (n = 20). Deuteroclads are conical, widely separated and longer than proto- clads.
Microscleres —oxyasters ( Figure 35D View FIGURE 35 ), highly modified into asymmetrical shapes. Rays are smooth, strongly conical, of varying length, and have a mixture of sharply pointed and bluntly rounded tips; 54 (39–85) µm in diam- eter (n = 20). Microrhabds ( Figure 35E View FIGURE 35 ) vary from short, very stout, straight rods with pointed or bluntly rounded tips to perfectly spherical balls. Occasionally, fused or cross-shaped microrhabds occur; 40 (16–82) × 13 (6–20) µm (n = 20).
Etymology. Named for the unusual shape of the oxyasters, which resemble a spaceship (astro, of the stars; navis, ship; Latin).
Remarks. The unusual oxyasters of P. astronavis sp. nov. differentiate it from all other Penares species. The species also possesses smooth spherules, but these appear to be a reduced form of microrhabd rather than a separate spicule category in this species. Penares astronavis sp. nov. also has particularly short and wide dichotriaenes (180 (117–255) µm long × 593 (407–946) µm wide). The only other New Zealand Penares that has similar length dicho- triaenes is P. kermadecensis sp. nov. (197 (122–300) µm long × 854 (644–1085) µm wide, but it has a much wider cladome than P. astronavis sp. nov.
NIWA |
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research |
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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