Haliclona (Flagellia) hiberniae, Van Soest, 2017

Van Soest, Rob W. M., 2017, Flagellia, a new subgenus of Haliclona (Porifera, Haplosclerida), European Journal of Taxonomy 351, pp. 1-48 : 29-32

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2017.351

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:245E3075-9559-4DD4-8101-665F9321648A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3851951

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EAB80C5A-6259-4189-90D9-1715A83A3A2A

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:EAB80C5A-6259-4189-90D9-1715A83A3A2A

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Haliclona (Flagellia) hiberniae
status

subgen. et sp. nov.

Haliclona (Flagellia) hiberniae View in CoL subgen. et sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:EAB80C5A-6259-4189-90D9-1715A83A3A2A

Fig. 14 View Fig

Gellius flagellifer View in CoL – Topsent 1904: 231, in part (only stat. 584). — Stephens 1916: 233; 1917: 5; 1921: 6. Haliclona (Gellius) flagellifera View in CoL – Van Soest et al. 2007: 131.

non Gellius flagellifer Ridley & Dendy 1886: 323 View in CoL ; 1887: 42, pl. XIII figs 5, 10.

Etymology

Hibernia ’ is the Latin name of Ireland in Roman times, chosen here as a reference to the type locality.

Material examined

Holotype

NORTH ATLANTIC : SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.4994° N, 15.8007° W, depth 560 m, boxcore, coll. R. W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX66, 1 Jul. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 19596a).

GoogleMaps

Paratype

NORTH ATLANTIC: SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.4444° N, 16.0756° W, depth 762 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX72, 4 Jul. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 19619).

Additional specimens examined

NORTH ATLANTIC: SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.4991° N, 15.7967° W, depth 626 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, Moundforce 2004 stat. BX32, 2 Sep. 2004 ( ZMA Por. 18506, 18527d); SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.5037° N, 15.7852° W, depth 673 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, Moundforce 2004 stat. BX33, 2 Sep. 2004 ( ZMA Por. 18536a); SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.4359° N, 16.1158° W, depth 778 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, Moundforce 2004 stat. BX41B, 5 Sep. 2004 ( ZMA Por. 18551); SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.4998° N, 15.7982° W, depth 602 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX10, 10 Jul. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 19407, 19412); SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.4993° N, 15.7979° W, depth 587 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX12, 25 Jun. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 19421); SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.5037° N, 15.7869° W, depth 614 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX28, 27 Jun. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 19476a); SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.4440° N, 16.0752° W, depth 785 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX38, 28 Jun. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 19517); SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.5011° N, 15.7887° W, depth 577 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX96, 6 Jul. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 19690); SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.4429° N, 16.0974° W, depth 644 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX115, 9 Jul. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 19745, 19752); SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.4907° N, 15.8013° W, depth 573 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX153, 11 Jul. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 19985); SE Rockall Bank, W of Ireland, 55.5012° N, 15.7885° W, depth 585 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX160, 11 Jul. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 20023); Porcupine Bank, W of Ireland, 53.77° N, 13.9472° W, depth 683–749 m, dredge, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, HERMES2005 stat. DR190, 14 Jul. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 20099); Porcupine Bank, W of Ireland, 53.7701° N, 13.9457° W, depth 745–754 m, dredge, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, HERMES2005 stat. DR215, 17 Jul. 2005 ( ZMA Por. 20123).

Unregistered slides examined

NORTH ATLANTIC: W of Ireland, SE Rockall Bank, 55.5007° N, 15.7893° W, depth 586 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX71, 4 Jul. 2005; W of Ireland, SE Rockall Bank, 55.4441° N, 16.0756° W, depth 767 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX78,

4 Jul. 2005; W of Ireland, SE Rockall Bank, 55.4428° N, 16.0975° W, depth 644 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX114, 9 Jul. 2005; W of Ireland, SE Rockall Bank, 55.5011° N, 15.7884° W, depth 585 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX161, 11 Jul. 2005; W of Ireland, SE Rockall Bank, 55.4443° N, 16.0756° W, depth 691 m, boxcore, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest, BIOSYS2005 stat. BX168, 12 Jul. 2005.

Description

Small dirty white to greyish brown or greyish beige encrustations ( Fig. 14A View Fig holotype, A 1 paratype), often forming thick cushions or small globular masses, occasionally pear-shaped (grey in alcohol). Color remains unchanged in alcohol. Size variable from tiny, <2 mm individuals up to 2.5 × 1.6 × 1 cm. Surface undulating to shaggy, sometimes ‘hairy’ due to protruding spicule tracts, and also appearing clathrate. There may be one or two oscules, only apparent in larger, thicker specimens. Consistency soft.

SKELETON. Confused reticulation, consisting of ascending paucispicular spicule tracts connected by single spicules, spongin present only at the nodes.

OXEAS ( Fig. 14 View Fig B–B1). Slightly curved to almost straight, 288– 367 –419 × 6– 11. 1 –14 μm.

FLAGELLOSIGMAS ( Fig. 14 View Fig C–G). Similar to those of Haliclona (Flagellia) flagellifera , ovoid, larger spicules strongly asymmetrical, smaller less so, curvature of long ending shortly rounded ( Fig. 14C View Fig 1 View Fig ), no upturned hook, curvature of short ending shallow ( Fig. 14C View Fig 2 View Fig ). Found in a wide size range, suggesting two overlapping size categories, but this depends on individual sponges. Larger spicules (I) ( Fig. 14 View Fig C– E) with length of long ending 64– 104 –159 μm, length of short ending 48– 69 –106 μm, width 51– 73 – 102 μm, thickness 1.5– 2. 6 –4 μm. Smaller (II) ( Fig. 14 View Fig F–G), length of long ending 13– 29. 5 –55 μm, length of short ending 10– 27 –39 μm, width 12– 27 –45 μm, thickness 0.5– 1. 05 –2 μm.

NORMAL SIGMAS ( Fig. 14 View Fig H–I). Numerous, in two distinct size categories, larger (I) ( Fig. 14H View Fig ) robust, with more shallow curve, 53– 76 –92 × 2.5– 3. 3 –5 μm, smaller (II) ( Fig. 14I View Fig ) thin, deeper curve, with more distinct incurved endings, 28– 33. 5 –39 × 1– 1. 6 –2.5 μm.

Distribution and ecology

Rockall and Porcupine Banks, W of Ireland (Marine Ecoregion Celtic Seas). Known predominantly from deep-water coral banks. Depth range: 560–785 m ( Stephens (1921) mentions 90–1328 m).

Remarks

The present deep-water North Atlantic specimens are overall very similar to the type of Gellius flagellifer . The one major difference is the occurrence of two distinct size categories of normal sigmas. Minor differences are thinner oxeas and larger size range of the two flagellosigmas’ size categories in the present specimens.

Topsent (1904) reported Gellius flagellifer from the Azores (845–1360 m). Oxea size ranges were from 335–345 × 8–10 μm in the more shallow station, to 620–680 × 18–20 μm at the deeper stations, suggesting a relationship between oxea size and depth. In the Azores material flagellosigmas reached sizes of up to 118 μm, and normal sigmas occurred in a large size range of 30–80 μm, suggesting the presence of size categories in both. It is possible that the Azores specimens conform to the Irish material, at least the shallower sample (but there is some doubt over the identity of the deeper sample, see below).

Conspecificity is also likely for Irish material reported by Stephens (1921). She described specimens from the Porcupine Bank (698–1145 m depth) with oxeas up to 400 × 13 μm, flagellosigmas of up to 120 μm (width 60–90 μm), and sigmas in a large size range of 35–90 μm.

Remarkably, Topsent (1928: 314) took the erroneous view that his earlier reports on Gellius flagellifer were part of what he considered to be Gellius vagabundus ( Schmidt, 1870) , referring to Vosmaer as the inspiration for this change. In fact, Topsent’s (1928) description of ‘ Gellius vagabundus ’ from 1378 m near São Miguel, Azores, is likely to be a different species from his other described specimens as the sigmas appear dissimilar to the flagellosigmas discussed here. Possibly, it is a Haliclona (Gellius) species, but it is not the present species.

Lundbeck (1902) (and other authors such as Rezvoi 1928 and Koltun 1959) assigned specimens from Arctic waters to Gellius flagellifer , which could perhaps be members of the present species because Lundbeck’s drawing (pl. XIV fig. 1d) of the normal sigmas shows a large size range. However, without the original material this cannot be decided for certain.

Mediterranean records of Gellius vagabundus (cf. Babič 1922), Gellius flagellifer (cf. Vacelet 1969; Pulitzer-Finali 1978, 1983; Pansini 1987) and Haliclona (Gellius) flagellifera (cf. Longo et al. 2005; Sitjà & Maldonado 2014) could be conspecific with the present species. The depth range of the combined records is 20– 809 m. Babič (1922: 228, text-fig. H) provides detailed spicule data that appear to conform to those of the present material, except the upper size of the oxeas (222–480 × 2–12 μm) and the normal sigmas (15–125 μm) which are in excess of the North Atlantic material. The other Mediterranean records do not provide details of size categories of normal sigmas, so the conspecificity remains doubtful.

ZMA

Universiteit van Amsterdam, Zoologisch Museum

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Haplosclerida

Family

Chalinidae

Genus

Haliclona

Loc

Haliclona (Flagellia) hiberniae

Van Soest, Rob W. M. 2017
2017
Loc

Gellius flagellifer

Van Soest R. W. M. & Cleary D. F. R. & De Kluijver M. J. & Lavaleye M. S. S. & Maier C. & Van Duyl F. C. 2007: 131
Stephens J. 1921: 6
Stephens J. 1917: 5
Stephens J. 1916: 233
Topsent E. 1904: 231
1904
Loc

Gellius flagellifer

Ridley S. O. & Dendy A. 1887: 42
Ridley S. O. & Dendy A. 1886: 323
1886
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