Janulum spinispiculum ( Carter, 1876 )

Kelly, Michelle, Erpenbeck, Dirk, Morrow, Christine & Soest, Rob Van, 2015, First record of a living species of the genus Janulum (Class Demospongiae) in the Southern Hemisphere, Zootaxa 3980 (2), pp. 255-266 : 258-261

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3980.2.6

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A09C107C-3F36-44A3-AE6D-339D0D2E4ED9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6122464

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5B6587C8-026E-0D03-2385-FC5DFA3C0186

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Janulum spinispiculum ( Carter, 1876 )
status

 

Janulum spinispiculum ( Carter, 1876)

( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ; Table 1)

Isodictya spinispiculum Carter 1876: 310 , Pl. 15, Fig. 42.

Metschnikowia spinispiculum, Lundbeck 1902: 52 , Pl. 12, Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ; Topsent 1904: 243, Pl. 5, Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ; Hentschel 1929: 901, 987.

Janulum spinispiculum , de Laubenfels 1935: 79; Boury-Esnault et al. 1994: 132, Fig. 102; Vacelet 1969: 210, Fig. 54; Calcinai et al. 2013: 6, Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 .

Lithoplocamia spinispiculum, Hooper 2002: 506 (with question).

Material examined. ZMA Por. 19460, 19461: BIOSYS/HERMES 2005, boxcore 24, southeast Rockall Bank, 55.506° N, 15.786° W, 680 m, 27 Jun 2005, collected by 50 cm boxcore from RV Pelagia ; ZMA Por. 19579, BIOSYS/HERMES 2005, boxcore 60, southeast Rockall Bank, 55.444° N, 16.076° W, 780 m, 30 Jun 2005, collected by 50 cm boxcore from RV Pelagia ; ZMA Por. P. 8676, slide, Porcupine Seabight, southwest of Ireland, 852 m, coll. L.A. Hendry, Scottish Association for Marine Science, Jun 2003; ZMA Por. P. 8672, 8673, East of Iceland, from Copenhagen Museum’s Lundbeck collection; BELUM Mc7745, Mc7798, Mc7812, West Coast of Ireland, RV Celtic Explorer Cruise CE10004, 54.063° N, 12.413° W, 1469 m, 26 May 2010, collected by ROV Holland I; BELUM Mc7816, West Coast of Ireland, RV Celtic Explorer Cruise CE10004, 54.058° N, 12.547° W, 1350 m, 27 May 2010, collected by ROV Holland I. Other material. Janulum filholi ( Topsent, 1890) , MOM 0 4 0078: Holotype, Campagnes de l' Hirondelle Stn 105 (1892), 927 m.

Distribution. Northeast Atlantic region: southern Portugal, Azores, Rockall Bank; Mediterranean Sea: Alboran and Ionian Seas, Canyon de la Cassidaigne; North Atlantic: Iceland; Arctic Ocean: Barents Sea, northern Norway and Spitzbergen.

Description. Very thinly to relatively thickly encrusting, often very small, 1–2 cm 2, 1– 2 mm thick, with a smooth, porous, membranous surface ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A), or erect, almost cylindrical, irregularly lobate with an encrusting base ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 B), about 25 mm thick, texture firm, friable. Colour in life white, pale cream, dull yellow. BELUM Mc7745 was a pale cream crust on coral, with a pattern of channels on the surface ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A).

Skeleton. Choanosome, a regular, areolate, multispicular isodictyal reticulation of spined strongyles with no fibre or tract development, spongin limited to the skeletal nodes ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 D). Ectosome a tangential isodictyal reticulation of individual spicules.

Spicules. Strongyles, ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 C, E; Table 1) with sparse, distinctive, prominent sharp concave spines concentrated in the middle of the spicule in short linear arrays, smooth at the extremities. Spicules may

Locality Strongyles (µm) Janulum spinispiculum ( Carter, 1876)

Northeast Atlantic ( Portugal)

Carter (1876) Type species North of Cape St Vincent, southern 208 x 8 Portugal, 136–680 m

Topsent (1904) Princess-Alice Bank, Azores, 200 m — ( As Metschnikowia spinispiculum ) (Campagne of 1897), Pico et São Jorge

Islands, 1250 m (Campagne of 1902)

Northeast Atlantic ( Ireland)

Mediterranean Sea

North Atlantic ( Iceland)

Lundbeck (1902) East of Iceland, 307 m and Denmark Strait, 208–238 x 10–12 ( As Metschnikowia spinispiculum ) 567 m

ZMA Por.P.8672 and 8673 slides East of Iceland, 307 m 235 (222–252) x 13 (12–14), n=10 from Lundbeck (1902)

Arctic Ocean

Janulum princeps sp. nov.

Note 1. Hentschel (1929: 901) Part I listed specimens of Metschnikowia spinispiculum from Spitzbergen but did not provide any spicule dimensions. In an overview (Part 2) of Arctic species he includes a fuller description of the species with spicule dimensions that appear to be taken directly from Lundbeck (1902).

have slightly swollen ends and may be straight or slightly bent at one or both ends, to the same or opposite sides. Immature spicules may be entirely smooth and may occasionally have mucronate ends. Spicule lengths and widths range from 159–267 x 8–17 µm in the Northeast Atlantic, 100–230 x 3–10 µm in the Mediterranean Sea, 208–252 x 10–14 µm to the east of Iceland, and 208–252 x 8–14 µm in the Arctic Ocean ( Table 1).

Substrate, depth range and ecology. Found on stones ( Carter 1876) and on the interstices of dead corals at 550 m depth at Gibraltar ( Boury-Esnault et al. 1994). Collected from red and white corals on deep Mediterranean coral bank habitats at 623 and 539 m depth by Calcinai et al. (2013). Rockall Bank samples were all from cold water coral reefs, growing on dead branches of Lophelia and Madrepora , at depths of 680– 780 m. Porcupine Seabight material came from 852 m. West coast of Ireland samples collected from cold water coral reefs, overgrowing dead Lophelia, 1350 –1470 m.

Remarks. Janulum spinispiculum has a North Atlantic – Arctic Ocean distribution and varies considerably in depth from about 140 m off the coast of Portugal to about 1500 m on the Rockall Plateau region in the Northeast Atlantic. Spicule lengths and thickness vary accordingly ( Table 1), with the shortest spicules being found in specimens in the Western Mediterranean, and the longest in specimens collected from the Rockall Bank area and east of Iceland region. The sponge also has a variable gross morphology that ranges from thinly encrusting patches to thickly encrusting with lobes.

Bukry (1978) figured a spined strongyle from a Neogene deep sea core (3–23 Ma) from the west of Iceland ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 F) that is more heavily spined and longer and thicker ( Bukry 1978, Pl. 7, Fig. 20: spined strongyle 288 x 20 µm) than any spicule recorded from J. spinispiculum from Iceland ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 E) ( Lundbeck 1902, Pl. 12, Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 a–b: 208–238 x 10–12 µm), and the largest spicule measured from J. spinispiculum is 267 µm (ZMA 19461) which is somewhat smaller than the microfossil spicule. The microfossil spicule is considerably longer than the average length of spicules for J. spinispiculum for the general region (about 200–240 µm), suggesting that Janulum was present in the North Atlantic sometime during the Neogene but likely to be a species distinct from J. spinispiculum .

ZMA

Universiteit van Amsterdam, Zoologisch Museum

BELUM

Ulster Museum, Belfast

MOM

Musee Oceanographique Monaco

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Poecilosclerida

Family

Raspailiidae

Genus

Janulum

Loc

Janulum spinispiculum ( Carter, 1876 )

Kelly, Michelle, Erpenbeck, Dirk, Morrow, Christine & Soest, Rob Van 2015
2015
Loc

Lithoplocamia spinispiculum

Hooper 2002: 506
2002
Loc

Janulum spinispiculum

Calcinai 2013: 6
Boury-Esnault 1994: 132
Vacelet 1969: 210
1994
Loc

Metschnikowia spinispiculum

Hentschel 1929: 901
Topsent 1904: 243
Lundbeck 1902: 52
1902
Loc

Isodictya spinispiculum

Carter 1876: 310
1876
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF