Leucandra pulvinar ( Haeckel, 1872 )

Van, Rob W. M. & De, Nicole J., 2018, Calcareous sponges of the Western Indian Ocean and Red Sea, Zootaxa 4426 (1), pp. 1-160 : 95-96

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.5966736

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/386CC616-DC2C-A56E-FF67-8B80FC65FDA4

treatment provided by

Plazi (2018-06-04 21:28:19, last updated 2024-11-25 00:13:00)

scientific name

Leucandra pulvinar ( Haeckel, 1872 )
status

 

Leucandra pulvinar ( Haeckel, 1872) View in CoL

Figs 56a–d View FIGURE 56 , 57a–e View FIGURE 57

Sycolepis pulvinar Haeckel, 1870: 251 (nomen nudum)

Mlea dohrnii Miklucho-Maclay View in CoL MS in Haeckel, 1872: 162 (nomen nudum)

Leucortis pulvinar var. semitica Haeckel, 1872: 163 View in CoL

Leucandra pulvinar View in CoL ; Dendy 1905: 234 (listed, not described)

Material examined. ZMA Por. 13423, Israel, Stylus Pinnacle , Gulf of Aqaba, depth 9 m, scuba, coll. M. Wunsch, field nr. AQ 77, 6 July 1998 ; ZMA Por. 13615, Israel, NW of harbor, Gulf of Aqaba, under overhang on harbor pile, depth 12 m, scuba, coll. M. Wunsch, field nr. AQ 39, 3 July 1998.

Description. Whitish or pale yellow globular-lobate sponges ( Figs 56a,d View FIGURE 56 ) with optically smooth or irregular hispid surface, approximately 3 x 2 x 1.5 cm. Both specimens have two prominent oscules, 3–4 mm in diameter, with naked collar, leading to atrial spaces that are shallow and narrow. In preserved condition the color is beigedirty white ( Fig. 56b View FIGURE 56 ). Consistency brittle, firm.

Aquiferous system. Leuconoid.

Skeleton ( Fig. 56c View FIGURE 56 ). A thin cortical skeleton of sagittal triactines covering tangential giant diactines arranged in all directions. There are also tangential trichoxeas. Choanosomal skeleton a confused mass of irregular triactines with scattered diactines of all sizes. Atrial skeleton consists of small irregular triactines.

Spicules ( Figs 57a–e View FIGURE 57 ). Diactines, trichoxeas, sagittal triactines, irregular triactines. No tetractines.

Diactines fusiform ( Figs 57a,a View FIGURE 57 1 View FIGURE 1 ), varying in size from giant to very small, 105– 929 – 2760 x 11 – 47 –108 µm.

Trichoxeas ( Figs 57b,b View FIGURE 57 1 View FIGURE 1 ), often broken, but also varying in length, 123– 465 – 1200 x 1.5– 3.4 –7 µm.

Cortical triactines ( Fig. 57c View FIGURE 57 ), predominantly sagittal, almost T-shaped, with unpaired actine shorter than paired actines, although equiactinal spicules also occur, unpaired actines 90– 143 –212 x 9 – 14.7 –20 µm, paired actines 165– 198 –270 x 14 – 16.3 –21 µm.

Choanosomal triactines ( Fig. 57d View FIGURE 57 ), basically equiactinal, but irregularly sagittal or oxhorns-haped, 168– 229 –298 x 15 – 19.1 –24 µm.

Atrial triactines ( Fig. 62e View FIGURE 62 ), smaller than the other triactines, equiactinal, irregularly parasagittal, 45– 91 –120 x 5 – 8.1 –10 µm.

Distribution and ecology. Red Sea, Sri Lanka, shallow reef localities.

Remarks. Our specimens resemble Haeckel’s 1872 description (vol. 2: 163) and figures (vol. 3: pl. 29 figs 1–10) of Leucortis pulvinar var. semitica . Next to this variety, Haeckel also described a var. indica . Since he did not describe a typical, separate variety one of the two varieties ( semitica or indica ) has to be the nominotypical variety (ICZN art. 47) Leucortis pulvinar var. pulvinar . In the absence of previous treatments of this problem, we choose here the var. semitica as the nominotypical variety to take the name pulvinar , as it is the first mentioned. It is likely that both varieties belong to the same species, but a formal synonymization must await the description of recent Indian material. Dendy’s (1905) Sri Lanka record of Leucandra (Leucortis) pulvinar remains undescribed.

There are several Leucandra species described in the region with similar spiculation, including giant diactines: Leucandra echinata Schuffner, 1877 (also reported by Dendy 1913), Leucandra fascigera Schuffner, 1877 , Leucandra donnani var. tenuiradiata Dendy, 1916 , Leucandra dwarkaensis Dendy, 1916 and Leucandra seychellensis Hozawa, 1940 ), but all these have atrial tetractines and differ in habitus. This also applies to two Leucandra species from NE Australia, L. sphaeracella Wörheide & Hooper, 2003 , and L. nicolae Wörheide & Hooper, 2003 .

Unfortunately, our attempt to obtain a partial 28S sequence failed.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 1. Marine Ecoregions in the Western Indian Ocean with localities (numbered blue squares) from where the studied calcareous sponges were obtained. 1, Israelian Red Sea, Gulf of Aqaba, 2, Saudi Arabian Red Sea, off Jeddah, 3, Eritrean Red Sea, Dahlak Archipelago, 4, Oman, Gulf of Arabia, 5, Maldives, 6, India, Lakshadweep, 7, Seychelles, Mahé region, 8, Seychelles, Amirantes, 9, Mayotte, 10, Mozambique Channel, 11, Mauritius, 12, Rodrigues, 13, South Africa, Kwazulu Natal, 14. South Africa, Port Elizabeth, 15. Nosy Be, Madagascar.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 56. Leucandra pulvinar (Haeckel, 1872), from Gulf of Aqaba, Red Sea, a, habitus in situ of ZMA Por. 13423 (photo M. Wunsch), b, preserved habitus of the same (scale bar = 1 cm), c, view of surface skeleton of the same, d, habitus in situ of ZMA Por. 13615 (photo M. Wunsch).

Gallery Image

FIGURE 57. Leucandra pulvinar (Haeckel, 1872), ZMA Por. 13423, from Gulf of Aqaba, Red Sea, SEM images of spicules, a, giant diactines, a1, detail of sharp end of giant diactine, b, trichoxea, b1, detail of same, c, cortical triactine, d, choanosomal triactine, e, atrial triactine.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 62. Leucandrilla aff. intermedia (Row, 1909), ZMA Por. 13482, from Gulf of Aqaba, a, habitus in situ (photo M. Wunsch), b, preserved habitus of same (scale bar = 1 cm), c, light microscopic view of peripheral skeleton.

ZMA

Universiteit van Amsterdam, Zoologisch Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Calcarea

Order

Leucosolenida

Family

Grantiidae

Genus

Leucandra