Latrunculia (Latrunculia) austini Samaai, Kelly & Gibbons, 2006
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4121.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2C978846-61DD-48BD-87BE-0BC22D0CABF2 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5057987 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F40C7E-FFA1-292D-CCDB-F9C9FAF2FAB2 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Latrunculia (Latrunculia) austini Samaai, Kelly & Gibbons, 2006 |
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Latrunculia (Latrunculia) austini Samaai, Kelly & Gibbons, 2006 View in CoL
( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A, 3, 4, 16K; Tables 1, 8 View TABLE 8 , 9 View TABLE 9 )
Latrunculia (Biannulata) austini Samaai, Kelly & Gibbons, 2006: 46 View in CoL View Cited Treatment ; Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 O, 3H, 5D, 7; Table 2 View TABLE 2 , 3 View TABLE 3 . Latrunculia austini, Abbas et al. 2011: 2429 View in CoL ‒2430; Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 B.
Latrunculia View in CoL sp. (undescribed), Stone et al. 2011: 115, Fig. 1‒2 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 ; 141, 145.
Sceptrella View in CoL sp. nov. (chocolate puffball sponge), Lamb & Hanby 2005: 67.
Material examined. Type material. Holotype — RBCM 982-62-1: Sutton Island, Jervis Inlet, British Columbia, 49.758° N, 123.927° W, 30 m. British Columbia, Canada: RBCM 014-00091-001: Learmonth Bank, Dixon Entrance, 54.367° N, 132.826° W, 384 m, 3 Jul 2008, collected by S. Lees and J. Pegg from Canadian Coast Guard ship JP Tully, Canadian Scientific Submersible Facility ROPOS ROV Dive 1153-0009b; RBCM 015-00475-001: East of Dundas Island, 54.590° N, 130.962° W, 62 m, 19 May 2009, collected by J. Pegg from Canadian Coast Guard ship JP Tully, Canadian Scientific Submersible Facility ROPOS ROV (Pac2009 Dive 13); RBCM 014- 00118-001 (KML acc 1148): Upwood Point, Texada Island, 49.483° N, 124.117° W, 21 m, 10 Sep 2001, collected by N. McDaniel; RBCM 014-00119-001 (KML Stn 190/83): Truro Island, Portland Canal, 54.732° N, 130.388° W, 91 m, 30 Oct 1983. North Washington State, United States of America: RBCM 015-00476-001: Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, Survey Site 36, 48.133° N, 125.076° W, 163 m, 10 Jul 2008, collected by M. S. Brancato from Canadian Coast Guard ship JP Tully, Canadian Scientific Submersible Facility ROPOS ROV Dive 1159; RBCM 015-00478-001: Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, Survey Site 36, 48.131° N, 125.083° W, 206 m, 10 Jul 2008, collected by M. S. Brancato from Canadian Coast Guard ship JP Tully, Canadian Scientific Submersible Facility ROPOS ROV Dive 1159. Gulf of Alaska, United States of America: NHMUK 2008.3.27.3: 28 km west of Cape Ommaney, Baranof Island, 56.186° N, 135.108° W, 102 m, 17 Aug 2005, collected by R. Stone with the submersible Delta from RV Velero IV (figured in Stone et al. 2011), spicules only; RBCM 015-00479-001, RBCM 015-00479-002: Shutter Ridge, 28 km west of Cape Ommaney, Baranof Island, 56.198° N, 135.102° W, 88 m, 15 Aug 2013, collected by R. Stone with ROV deployed from the FV Alaska Provider; RBCM 015-00479-003: Shutter Ridge, 28 km west of Cape Ommaney, Baranof Island, 56.198° N, 135.103° W, 87 m, 15 Aug 2013, collected by R. Stone with ROV deployed from the FV Alaska Provider; RBCM 015-00479-004: Shutter Ridge, 28 km west of Cape Ommaney, Baranof Island, 56.197° N, 135.102° W, 106 m, 15 Aug 2013, collected by R. Stone with ROV deployed from the FV Alaska Provider. Other location records. British Columbia, Canada: Sonora Point, Sonora Island, between Dixon Entrance and Juan de Fuca, 50.427° N, 125.306° W, 155–159 m, 24 Mar 2007, collected by J. Pegg, Fisheries and Oceans Canada. North Washington State, United States of America: Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, 48.125° N, 125.371° W, 115 m, 27 May 2006, collected by M. S. Brancato from Canadian Coast Guard ship JP Tully, Canadian Scientific Submersible Facility ROPOS ROV Dive 953; Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, 48.302° N, 124.937° W, 243 m, 0 1 Jun 2006, collected by M. S. Brancato from Canadian Coast Guard ship JP Tully, Canadian Scientific Submersible Facility ROPOS ROV Dive 958‒131; Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, 48.169° N, 125.370° W, 114 m, 11 Jul 2008, collected by M. S. Brancato from Canadian Coast Guard ship JP Tully, Canadian Scientific Submersible Facility ROPOS ROV 1160‒0031; Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, Survey Site 17, 48.116° N, 125.371° W, 13 Jul 2008, collected by M. S. Brancato from Canadian Coast Guard ship JP Tully, Canadian Scientific Submersible Facility ROPOS ROV Dive 1163.
Type location. Jervis Inlet, British Columbia, 30 m.
Distribution. Continental shelf and slope off eastern Gulf of Alaska, south along outer coast of British Columbia including Queen Charlotte Sound, to British Columbia –Washington State border.
Description. Small spherical to block-shaped sponge ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ), typically about 5–8 cm diameter, but can reach up to 12 cm diameter, found often in large groups ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 G, I, K). Surface distinctive with small, circular, cratershaped pore fields (e.g. Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 F, I, J), or pore fields that cover large sections of the surface (e.g. Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 A, B, G, H). Skeletal network visible through pore fields in life. One to five large oscules appear prominently on the apex of specimens; these are either flush or raised ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 J). Texture very soft and compressible, somewhat slimy in life; surface features collapse in preservation. Colour in life is khaki to emerald green in deeper waters. The holotype ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 A), and other shallow-water British Columbian specimens are brown ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 B), colour in preservative is dark brown. Lamb & Hanby (2005) noted that their specimen was a turquoise green underwater but chocolatecoloured under artificial light.
Skeleton. Ectosome a palisade of vertically arranged anisodiscorhabds, below which is a thin paratangential layer of megascleres; ectosome varies in thickness but averages about 100 µm. Choanosome, a polygonal reticulation of wispy tracts of anisostyles, tracts undifferentiated into primary and secondary structures, sometimes forming a loose, laddered structure within the deep choanosome. Tracts about 100 µm wide, and meshes variable, 100–500 µm wide. Megascleres plumose below the sub-ectosome. Choanosome cavernous near oscules and in the sub-ectosome.
Spicules. Megascleres ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 F, Table 1), anisostyles, fusiform, with smooth heads, rarely malformed and polytylote, slightly sinuous, often slightly bent in the upper third, 363 (246–428) × 7 (5–12) µm.
Microscleres ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A–E, Table 1), anisodiscorhabds, manubrium completely separate from basal whorl in about 90% of spicules ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 E, O–R), highly variable and quite close to basal whorl in about 8% of spicules ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A–C, K–N), basal whorl and manubrium indistinguishable in about 2% of spicules ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 D, I–J). Median and subsidiary whorls are composed of undulate petals and/or sculpted spines with denticulate margins, manubrium and basal whorl are spines that appear sculpted with rows of tiny spines. The apical whorl and apex slant towards vertical and are formed from fused undulating petals with denticulate margins forming overall, a beautiful roseshaped crown, 54 (45–65) × 27 (20–37) µm.
Substrate, depth range and ecology. Locally abundant in Alaska off the continental shelf off Cape Ommaney, Baranof Island, eastern Gulf of Alaska ( Stone et al. 2011). Grows on bedrock and boulders in Alaskan shelf habitats, in the subduction zone between 69 and 210 m, on part of the basement rock complex of a tectoniostratigraphic terrane of the Pacific Plate that has docked with Alaska (H. Gary Greene, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, pers. comm.). Relatively common in the shallow inlets of Queen Charlotte Sound and coastal inlets of the British Columbia Coast, down to about 30 m, but also found in deeper waters (110–384 m) off the coast. In Alaska, can be found in association with the homosclerophorid Plakina atka Lehnert et al. 2005 . Often found in small groups of dozens of individuals, and can be locally abundant.
Remarks. When L. (L.) austini was first described, it was considered to be rare ( Samaai et al. 2006) as it was only known from the type location. Samaai et al. (2006) placed L. austini within the newly established subgenus Latrunculia (Biannulata) , a decision that was considered to be erroneous by Samaai et al. (2012), who relegated L. austini and two other species to incertae sedis . The 2006 description was based upon a single specimen, the holotype, which had a high percentage of anisodiscorhabds with malformations (See Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A–D), and a relatively high number of microscleres in which the manubrium and the basal whorl were indistinguishable (see Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 H–R); fusion of these two structures is diagnostic for species of subgenus L. ( Biannulata ). Examination of numerous new specimens in this study reveal that the majority of microscleres have a fully differentiated manubrium and basal whorl (see Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 E, O–R), and that because of this, assignment to L. (L.) is the most parsimonious solution.
Specimen Anisostyles Anisodiscorhabds British Columbia, Canada
RBCM 982-62-1 Holotype 376 (335‒402) 58 (51‒64) RBCM 014-00091-001 396 (327‒428) × 9 (7‒11) 55 (51‒63) × 28 (23‒33) RBCM 015-00475-001 355 (304‒392) × 5 (8‒9) 51 (48‒59) × 25 (20‒30) RBCM 014-00118-001 329 (246‒366) × 7 (5‒8) 54 (48‒59) × 30 (24‒36) RBCM 014-00119-001 350 (282‒389) × 7 (5‒9) 56 (49‒65) × 28 (23‒32) North Washington State, United States of America
RBCM 015-00476-001 379 (356–399) × 8 (7‒12) 53 (46‒59) × 34 (27‒37) RBCM 015-00478-001 357 (309‒390) × 8 (6‒10) 51 (45‒57) × 27 (22‒31) Gulf of Alaska, United States of America
NHMUK 2008.3.27.3 369 (350‒385) × 8 (7‒10) 56 (53‒60) × 26 (21‒28) RBCM 015-00479-001 354 (350‒375) × 6 (5‒8) 50 (45‒56) × 23 (20‒25) RBCM 015-00479-002 363 (342‒380) × 7 (6‒8) 51 (48‒53) × 24 (23‒25) Hajdu et al. (2013) commented on the same phenomenon in relation to their four new species of Latrunculia (L.) from the Chilean fiords. These authors considered that, despite the lack of a clear space between the manubrium and basal whorl spines in some of the anisodiscorhabds, the difference in orientation of the spines, with the basal whorl slanting towards the apex and the manubrium slanting towards the base, indicated a greater affinity with species in L. (L.) than with species in L. ( Biannulata ).
Latrunculia (L.) austini is moderately variable in terms of morphology, depth distribution and latitude; there is a colour difference between the shallow-water holotype (brown) and offshore (green) specimens, and a small proportion of the microscleres in some specimens are malformed. The species ranges in distribution from the eastern Gulf of Alaska, east and south to the north coast of Washington, U.S.A., and is found down to about 200 m. On the coast of British Columbia, specimens are found in shallow coastal inlets around 30 m. With more intensive study, perhaps using genetic markers, these differences might support further differentiation of the species.
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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Latrunculia (Latrunculia) austini Samaai, Kelly & Gibbons, 2006
Kelly, Michelle, Sim-Smith, Carina, Stone, Robert, Reiswig, Toufiek Samaai Henry & Austin, William 2016 |
Latrunculia
Stone 2011: 115 |
Sceptrella
Lamb 2005: 67 |