Sigmaxinella hipposiderus, Mitchell, Kirsty D., Hall, Kathryn A. & Hooper, John N. A., 2011
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.201797 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5662862 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AD0787DD-FFB0-FF9C-FF79-839D02A3FCFF |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Sigmaxinella hipposiderus |
status |
sp. nov. |
Sigmaxinella hipposiderus sp. nov.
Figs 2–5 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 View FIGURE 5
Holotype. QM G323175, Big Horseshoe Canyon ( West Bank), Bass Canyon system, Tasman Sea, Australia, - 38.1148 S, 149.3565 E, depth 159.6 m, coll. CSIRO ‘Southern Surveyor’ cruise SS0404, Sherman sled, 26.iv.2004.
Diagnosis. Sigmaxinella with a single category of styles as megascleres (mean length 791 μm, mean width 19.2 μm); microscleres include a single category of sigmas (mean length 19.6 μm) and microxeas singly or in bundles (mean length 42 μm).
Taxon # QM α GenBank β SBD γ Reference Registration Accession Accession
Biemna fistulosa (Topsent, 1897) AM076982 View Materials Rot et al. (2006) Biemna saucia Hooper, Capon & Hodder, 1991 G303281 JF7731346 1054 δ Neofibularia hartmani Hooper & Lévi, 1993 A G306606 642/592 B G206628 644/594 C G324632 JF773145 View Materials 1055 δ Neofibularia irata Wilkinson, 1978 G307266 650/600 Neofibularia nolitangere (Duchassaing & Michelotti, EF519653 View Materials 156/156 Erpenbeck et al. (2007) 1864)
Sigmaxinella hipposiderus sp. nov. G323175 JF773147 View Materials 1053 δ
Esperiopsis challengeri (Ridley, 1885) View in CoL G306063 732/762
Coelocarteria singaporensis ( Carter, 1883) View in CoL G319331 669/619
Mycale fibrexilis (Wilson, 1894) View in CoL AJ843890 View Materials Hess et al. (direct submission) Mycale (Arenochalina) laxissima View in CoL (Duchassaing & EF519649 View Materials Erpenbeck et al. (2007) Michelotti, 1864)1
Mycale (Arenochalina) mirabilis (Lendenfeld, 1887) View in CoL G 300561 572/522 Mycale (Mycale) sulcata Hentschel, 1911 View in CoL G304666 693/719
Diacarnus spinipoculum (Carter, 1879) View in CoL AY561975 View Materials Nichols (2005)
Artemisina melana Van Soest, 1984 View in CoL EF519575 View Materials Erpenbeck et al. (2007) Clathria (Clathria) prolifera (Ellis & Solander, 1786) View in CoL 2 AJ843888 View Materials Hess et al. (direct submission) Clathria (Thalysias) oxeota (Van Soest, 1984) View in CoL 3 EF519606 View Materials Erpenbeck et al. (2007) Clathria (Thalysias) schoenus View in CoL (de Laubenfels, 1936)4 EF519607 View Materials Erpenbeck et al. (2007) Pandaros acanthifolium Duchassaing & Michelotti View in CoL , EF519662 View Materials Erpenbeck et al. (2007) 1864
continued next page Taxon # QM α GenBank β SBD γ Reference Registration Accession Accession Queensland Museum; not all specimens have vouchers in the Queensland Museum collection.
NCBI database, available at: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/
Sponge Barcoding Database, available at: http://www.spongebarcoding.org/; number provided as record number then sequence number (xxx/xxx).
sequence generated newly in this study as Mycale laxissma 9 as Tedania ignis View in CoL
as Microciona prolifera 10 as Tedanis klausi
as Clathria oxeota View in CoL 11 this species is undescribed but has been identified as an operational taxonomic unit as Clathria schoenus View in CoL by the Queensland Museum, as designated by an OTU number. as Strongylacidon bermudae 12 as Pseudaxinella reticulata
as Lissodendoryx isodictyalis View in CoL 13 as Halichondria magniconulosa
as Lissodendoryx sigmata View in CoL 14 as Halichondria melanodocia
as Holopsamma helwigi 15 as Halichondria panicea
Description. Growth form arborescent, erect, flattened into one plane, branching dichotomously, but irregularly, basal attachment small and on well formed stalk (now detached in fixed specimen); branches cylindrical, laterally compressed, ellipsoidal in cross-section, matting of spicules gives appearance of external segmentation in fixed specimen ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 B). Dimensions: overall height 103.0 mm; maximum breadth 69.0 mm; stalk length is approximately 15 mm; width of main axis 1.5 mm at base, widening to 3.8 mm at first bifurcation and 5.7 mm at apex; longest branch 62.2 mm in length from point of bifurcation to branch apex, maximum width 7.5 mm; shortest branch 35.7 mm in length, maximum width 2.6 mm. Colour light beige to pale grey in ethanol. Oscules inconspicuous, shallow, less than 1mm diameter, few, roughly circular; fine oscules observed on proximal portion of main axis in fixed specimen.
Surface uneven, velvety, hispid, with hair-like conulose projections forming a pile which becomes matted distally on branches, axial region villose. Texture barely compressible, tough, difficult to tear although easily cut; branches flexible, pliable; main axis flexible, but more resistant to bending than branches.
Skeleton with markedly differentiated axial and extra-axial construction; axis strongly compressed, extra-axial region plumose ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ). Compressed axial core occupies approximately half the diameter of the sponge in the region of the stalk, and one third the diameter in the branches. Choanosomal skeleton an axially condensed reticulation of multispicular tracts enclosed in abundant collagenous spongin; extra-axial skeleton plumose, with ends of terminal spicules forming brushes at the surface; microscleres densely packed along and between megascleres in plumose tracts; packing of microscleres more dense near axis than in periphery of skeleton, and density of microscleres decreases towards ectosome. Ectosome indistinct from choanosome, without any conspicuous specialisation aside from plumose terminal spicule bundles protruding from the choanosomal extra-axial skeleton.
Spicules (n = 25) (Table 1, Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 ):
Megascleres: single category of styles as megascleres, occasionally bent, 500–1300 (791.0) × 15–25 (19.2) μm.
Microscleres: single categories of both sigmas and microxeas; sigmas c-shaped, elongate, entirely smooth, 10– 41 (19.6) × 1–2 (1.4) μm (chord length and widest axis), microxeas single or in compact bundles, isodiametric, completely smooth, tips hastate, 27–55 (42.1) × 1–1.5 (1.2) μm (length and maximum width).
Ecology and distribution. Known only from the holotype collected from the shallower margins of the Big Horseshoe Canyon, a side canyon to the Bass Canyon system off the eastern Victorian boarder, lying on the edge of the southeastern continental shelf. The specimen was collected from 160 m in a habitat dominated by rock and silt.
Etymology. The epithet is made as a masculine noun in apposition from the ancient Greek hipposideros (= horseshoe) in reference to the type locality, Big Horseshoe Canyon, Tasman Sea.
DNA sequence data. 1 sequence: COI mt DNA (partial, Folmer fragment, 658 bp, 1 replicate).
Remarks. This species is clearly assigned to Sigmaxinella on the basis of its compressed axial and plumose extra-axial skeletons, which is otherwise similar to Biemna . By having a single category of unmodified style megascleres, and single categories of both sigmas and microxeas, and in specific sizes of its spicules, this species differs from the 12 valid species of Sigmaxinella as follows (refer to Table 1 for the comparison among species of Sigmaxinella ).
Sigmaxinella hipposiderus sp. nov. clearly differs from the type species, S. australiana Dendy, 1897 , in having a single category of styles, sigmas and microxeas. The latter has much smaller styles, some of which are modified into strongyles and oxeas, two categories of sigmas and one category of much thinner raphides (i. e. those in the present species are thicker and more obviously microxeas than raphides, and, even though they form bundles, these bundles are not trichodragmata) (Table 1, Fig 5 View FIGURE 5 B). Nevertheless, both species have a similar external morphology (see Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 , 6 View FIGURE 6 A) and a differentiated axial and extra-axial skeletal architecture, features which can only be described as ‘typical’ of Sigmaxinella .
In growth form, S. hipposiderus also vaguely resembles S. dendroides Whitelegge, 1907 from southern New South Wales ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 C), but the latter has distinctly smaller megascleres, two categories of sigmas, all s-shaped, and rare microxeas not forming bundles (Table 1). The present species should also be compared to the Atlantic S. cearense Salani et al., 2006 ; both species show simple, reduced spiculation, but the present species also has microxeas and sigmas. The sigmas of S. hipposiderus lack the Paresperella -like spines on the outer edge as is seen in the Atlantic species.
There has been some confusion by previous authors in the descriptions of some species of Desmacellidae (including Sigmaxinella and Biemna ) about the possession of raphides versus microxeas. Usually these spicule categories have been combined into a single category (e. g.: Hooper 1984; Salani et al. 2006), yet they are differentiated clearly under electron microscopy (e. g.: Hooper & Lévi 1993). This is the case for S. flabellata Carter, 1885 sensu Dendy, 1897 redescribed by Hallmann (1916). This species was described as having two categories of raphides, yet further examination indicates that the larger category, occurring both in bundles and singly, are microxeas, not raphides.
A further note on S. flabellata is appropriate, as re-examination of one of the syntypes of Axinella flabellata Carter, 1885 (BMNH 1886.12.15.471 from Port Phillip Heads, Victoria), the type species of the genus Sigmaxia Hallmann, 1916 , shows this to actually be a species of Raspailia (Raspailia) Nardo, 1833 . Unfortunately, the other syntype (BMNH 1886.12.15.143 wet) has not yet been located in the collections of the BMNH. Therefore, for the time being, we must use the concept of Sigmaxinella flabellata in the sense of Dendy (1897: 241). Hallmann (1916: 535) subsequently redescribed S. flabellata much more comprehensively based on new material, which he also stated he compared to “one of Dendy’s specimens”. Carter’s (1885) original concept of A. flabellata remains uncertain.
CSIRO |
Australian National Fish Collection |
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.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
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Genus |
Sigmaxinella hipposiderus
Mitchell, Kirsty D., Hall, Kathryn A. & Hooper, John N. A. 2011 |
S. cearense
Salani et al. 2006 |
Svenzea zeai (Alvarez, Van Soest & Rützler, 1998)
Alvarez, Van Soest & Rutzler 1998 |
Neofibularia hartmani Hooper & Lévi, 1993
Hooper & Levi 1993 |
Biemna saucia
Hooper, Capon & Hodder 1991 |
Artemisina melana
Van Soest 1984 |
Clathria (Thalysias) oxeota
Van Soest 1984 |
Myrmekioderma gyroderma
Alcolado 1984 |
Neofibularia irata
Wilkinson 1978 |
Scopalina ruetzleri
Wiedenmayer 1977 |
Halichondria (Halichondria) magniconulosa
Hechtel 1965 |
Cinachyrella apion
Uliczka 1929 |
Cinachyrella kuekenthali
Uliczka 1929 |
Sigmaxia
Hallmann 1916 |
Mycale (Mycale) sulcata
Hentschel 1911 |
Hymeniacidon heliophila
Parker 1910 |
S. dendroides
Whitelegge 1907 |
Biemna fistulosa
Topsent 1897 |
S. australiana
Dendy 1897 |
S. flabellata
Carter, 1885 sensu Dendy 1897 |
Mycale fibrexilis
Wilson 1894 |
Mycale (Arenochalina) mirabilis
Lendenfeld 1887 |
Esperiopsis challengeri
Ridley 1885 |
Axinella flabellata
Carter 1885 |
Coelocarteria singaporensis (
Carter 1883 |
Diacarnus spinipoculum
Carter 1879 |
Raspailia (Raspailia)
Nardo 1833 |
Clathria (Clathria) prolifera
Ellis & Solander 1786 |
Halichondria (Halichondria) panicea
Pallas 1766 |
Aplysina fulva
Pallas 1766 |