Leuclathrina translucida Voigt et al., 2018

Van, Rob W. M. & De, Nicole J., 2018, Calcareous sponges of the Western Indian Ocean and Red Sea, Zootaxa 4426 (1), pp. 1-160 : 70-73

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4426.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:18929E20-5296-4458-8A8A-4F5316A290FD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5966718

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/386CC616-DC37-A579-FF67-8E3CFF25FE11

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Leuclathrina translucida Voigt et al., 2018
status

 

Leuclathrina translucida Voigt et al., 2018 View in CoL

Figures 39a–f View FIGURE 39 , 40a–c View FIGURE 40

Leuclathrina translucida Voigt et al., 2018: 151 View in CoL , figs 2A–I, 3A–F.

Material examined. RMNH Por. 10072, Maldives, Faafu Atoll, Wallino, 3.087472°N 72.9567°E, depth 20 m, scuba, coll. N.J. de Voogd, field nr. MAD02 View Materials /MAS022, 16 February 2015 GoogleMaps ; RMNH Por. 10090, Maldives, Faafu Atoll , Coral Garden, 3.0875°N 72.968861°E, depth 18 m, scuba, coll. N.J. de Voogd, field nr. MAD04 View Materials /MAS043, 17 February 2015 GoogleMaps .

Description. In life, these sponges form pale yellow cushions ( Figs 39a–b, e View FIGURE 39 ) consisting of dense layers of anastomosed thin tubes, from which issue long upright tubes. These long tubes are yellow at the base, but become transparent towards their ends ( Figs 39a–b View FIGURE 39 ). The ends may be broadly flattened or occasionally bifid or curling downwards. The tubes are mostly closed but some are open and may function as oscules. The yellow base is ‘punctate’, i.e. there are regularly spaced rounded openings separating the tubes. On deck photos ( Figs 39c,f View FIGURE 39 ) show the specimens to become uniformly yellow, while preserved specimens (3 in RMNH 1 0 0 72, 1 in RMNH 10090) become pale orange-brown all over ( Fig. 39d View FIGURE 39 ). The size of preserved specimens is up to 4 x 3 x 1 cm, length of upright tubes 1–2 cm, width 3–4 mm, but the preservation has caused notable shrinkage, so in situ sizes are larger.

Aquiferous system. Leuconoid, not supported by spicules.

Skeleton. ( Figs 40a,b View FIGURE 40 ) Thickness of tube walls consisting of two layers of overlapping triactines, or more than two layers in the upright long tubes. Insides of the bottom layer tubes and the basal parts of the long upright tubes ( Fig. 40b View FIGURE 40 ) covered in yellow-colored organic mass, devoid of spicules, presumed to be choanoderm. The extent and thickness of this choanoderm precludes the tubes to be asconoid. This organic layer is absent from the end of the long tubes coinciding with the transparent parts observed in situ.

Spicules. ( Figs 40c View FIGURE 40 ) Triactines only.

Triactines, equiradiate and equiangular, in a large size range, 101– 181 –243 x 8 – 13.1 –19 µm (RMNH Por. 10072: 101–238 x 8–19 µm, RMNH Por. 10090: 122–243 x 10–15 µm).

Distribution and ecology. Maldives, coral reefs

Remarks. This is a peculiar and deviating Clathrinida , assigned to Leuclathrina by Voigt et al. (2018) because of the presence of uniformly sized triactines at the surface with a choanoderm not supported by spicules. The 28S sequence we obtained (GenBank acc.nr. MF872789 View Materials ) grouped with Oliver Voigt’s sequence (nr. GW393) with 99% bootstrap value confirming the specimens belong to the same species. Because the affiliation of this species is rather uncertain, we included in our phylogenetic tree several sequences of possible close relatives ( Burtonulla , Ascandra , Levinella and Soleneiscus ). Although Leuclathrina translucida appeared indeed in the same clade as these genera (cf. Fig. 2B View FIGURE 2 ), the bootstrap value is low, so none of the mentioned genera is likely close.

In the process, we made the discovery that the Indonesian Ernstia chrysops Van Soest & De Voogd, 2015 is apparently not an Ernstia but more likely an Ascandra .

So far, the position of Leuclathrina translucida in the molecular tree of Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 is outside and independent of the clades of Clathrina , Leucaltis, Ernstia and Leucetta . Ascandra species may have a rather similar habitus, but they have a majority and diversity of tetractines. Previously, Leuclathrina was monospecific and occurred in bathyal coral reefs off the coasts of Northwestern Europe. This second species is unlike the type species in shape, color and habitat.

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Calcarea

Order

Clathrinida

Family

Leucaltidae

Genus

Leuclathrina

Loc

Leuclathrina translucida Voigt et al., 2018

Van, Rob W. M. & De, Nicole J. 2018
2018
Loc

Leuclathrina translucida Voigt et al., 2018 : 151

Voigt et al., 2018 : 151
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF