Amphoriscus pedunculatus Klautau, Cavalcanti & Borojevic, 2017
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5061.1.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EFE2D12B-3F02-4831-A913-DEFE1F9A0C92 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5699145 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CEAF23-A468-FF8D-FF3C-EBD5F0F6F85A |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Amphoriscus pedunculatus Klautau, Cavalcanti & Borojevic, 2017 |
status |
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Amphoriscus pedunculatus Klautau, Cavalcanti & Borojevic, 2017 View in CoL
Amphoriscus pedunculatus Klautau, Cavalcanti & Borojevic, 2017 View in CoL
Citations: Amphoriscus pedunculatus Klautau, Cavalcanti & Borojevic 2017: 105 View in CoL ; Cóndor-Luján et al. 2019: 1825.
Type material: UFRJPOR 5802 (Holotype). Saco do Poço , São Sebastião, São Paulo State, Brazil (23° 45’ 40.3” S – 45° 14’ 53.5” W); 13 m depth; F. F. Cavalcanti, V. Padula & L. Kremer; 03 December 2008 GoogleMaps . UFRJPOR 5803 (Paratype). Saco da Ponta Grossa , São Sebastião, São Paulo State, Brazil (23° 46’ 31.8” S – 45° 13’ 54.8” W); 6 m depth; F. F. Cavalcanti & V. Padula, 03 December 2008 GoogleMaps .
Type locality: Saco do Poço , São Sebastião, São Paulo State, Brazil .
Analysed material: UFRJPOR 5802 (holotype; specimen and slides containing sections of the skeleton and dissociated spicules). UFRJPOR 5803 (paratype; specimen and slides containing sections of the skeleton and dissociated spicules). UFRJPOR 5801 (specimen and slides containing sections of the skeleton and dissociated spicules), Serraria Island , São Sebastião, São Paulo, Brazil (23° 48’ 47.9”S – 45° 13’ 44.0”W); 9 m depth; F. F. Cavalcanti & V. Padula, 04 December 2008 GoogleMaps . MNRJ 5818 View Materials (specimen and slides containing sections of the skeleton and dissociated spicules). Alcatrazes Archipelago , São Sebastião, São Paulo, Brazil (24° 06’ 00.0” S – 45° 40’ 59.9” W); 12 m depth; M. Custódio & C. Santos, 03 May 2002 GoogleMaps . UFRJPOR 5776 (specimen and slides containing sections of the skeleton and dissociated spicules), Saco da Saia , Arraial do Cabo, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (23° 00’ 23.0” S – 42° 00’ 36.0” W); 1 m depth; G. Muricy, 17 March 1988 GoogleMaps .
Morphology: The specimens are similar in size and shape, with tubular shape and apical osculum surrounded by a delicate fringe of trichoxeas ( Fig. 7A View FIGURE 7 ). The peduncle is white in live specimens and brownish/orange in ethanolpreserved specimens, but the peduncle is brownish/orange. The surface is slightly hispid due to the trichoxeas of the cortical region. The atrial cavity is hispid and fills the entire body of the specimens. The aquiferous system is syconoid.
Anatomy: The cortical region has several broken spicules. It is mostly formed by giant tetractines with long apical actines. Triactines are also present, but they are less abundant ( Fig. 7B and C View FIGURE 7 ). Trichoxeas are abundant throughout the entire cortex ( Fig. 7D View FIGURE 7 ) and may reach the choanosome ( Fig. 7E View FIGURE 7 ). The subatrial region is comprised exclusively of triactines. They vary in size, but the unpaired actine is always long ( Fig. 7C View FIGURE 7 ). The atrial skeleton is comprised of tetractines ( Fig. 7F View FIGURE 7 ).
Spicules ( Table 4; Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ):
Trichoxeas: Very thin, fusiform with sharp tips. Straight or slightly curved. Mostly broken ( Fig. 7D View FIGURE 7 ).
Cortical triactines ( Fig. 8A View FIGURE 8 ): Conical with blunt tips. The paired actines are slightly curved. The unpaired actine is straight.
Cortical tetractines ( Fig. 8B View FIGURE 8 ): Conical with blunt tips. The paired actines are slightly curved, as well as the unpaired one. The apical actine is straight and long.
Subatrial triactines ( Fig. 8C View FIGURE 8 ): Conical to slightly conical and blunt. Paired actines are short and straight. The unpaired actine is straight.
Atrial tetractines: Slightly conical and sharp. Paired actines are slightly curved and larger or the same size as the apical actine. The unpaired actine is straight and longer than the other actines. The apical actine is straight ( Fig. 8D View FIGURE 8 ).
Remarks: Amphoriscus pedunculatus was recently described ( Klautau et al. 2017), with an original description in which important taxonomic characters were fully described and illustrated. The redescription provided in the present study differs only with respect to the tips of the spicules: cortical and subatrial spicules are described here as having blunt tips while they were reported as being sharp in the original description. In our opinion, the differentiation between blunt and sharp tips may not always be obvious, but the availability of images (as in Figure 8 View FIGURE 8 ) helps resolve any doubts. Slight differences were also found in the measurements of the cortical tetractines of the holotype: according to Klautau et al. (2017), the range observed in the length of the unpaired actine is larger (120.0– 238.5 ±58.2–350.0 µm) than that obtained here (177.8– 182.9 ±7.2–188.0 µm). These differences may be related to the existence of several microscopical slides containing dissociated spicules, and the largest spicules may not be evenly distributed.
Among the species with peduncle, Amphoriscus pedunculatus is the only one with a subatrial skeleton formed exclusively by triactines. The remaining species, A. chrysalis , A. cyathiscus , and A. testiparus , have both triactines and tetractines or only tetractines.
Distribution: The species seems to be restricted to the southeastern Brazilian coast in São Sebastião (São Paulo state), and Arraial do Cabo (Rio de Janeiro state) ( Klautau et al. 2017).
Distribution: São Sebastião (São Paulo state) and Arraial do Cabo (Rio de Janeiro state). Corresponding MEOW: Southeastern Brazil ( Spalding et al. 2007).
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Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
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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Amphoriscus pedunculatus Klautau, Cavalcanti & Borojevic, 2017
Chagas, Cléslei & Cavalcanti, Fernanda F. 2021 |
Amphoriscus pedunculatus
Klautau, Cavalcanti & Borojevic 2017 |
Amphoriscus pedunculatus
Klautau, Cavalcanti & Borojevic 2017: 105 |