Latrunculia (Uniannulata) velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler 2006, subgen. nov.

Latrunculia ( Uniannulata ) velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler, 2006 subgen. nov., comb. nov. (Fig. 2 B, 9, 16AH; Tables 8, 9) Latrunculia velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler, 2006: 27 –30; Fig. 15 A–F, 16 A–D. Latrunculia velera , Abbas et al. 2011: 2429 ‒2430; Fig. 8 D; Stone et al . 2011: 114, F...

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Main Authors: Kelly, Michelle, Sim-Smith, Carina, Stone, Robert, Reiswig, Toufiek Samaai Henry, Austin, William
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3510710
https://zenodo.org/record/3510710
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3510710
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Porifera
Demospongiae
Poecilosclerida
Latrunculiidae
Latrunculia
Latrunculia velera
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Porifera
Demospongiae
Poecilosclerida
Latrunculiidae
Latrunculia
Latrunculia velera
Kelly, Michelle
Sim-Smith, Carina
Stone, Robert
Reiswig, Toufiek Samaai Henry
Austin, William
Latrunculia (Uniannulata) velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler 2006, subgen. nov.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Porifera
Demospongiae
Poecilosclerida
Latrunculiidae
Latrunculia
Latrunculia velera
description Latrunculia ( Uniannulata ) velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler, 2006 subgen. nov., comb. nov. (Fig. 2 B, 9, 16AH; Tables 8, 9) Latrunculia velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler, 2006: 27 –30; Fig. 15 A–F, 16 A–D. Latrunculia velera , Abbas et al. 2011: 2429 ‒2430; Fig. 8 D; Stone et al . 2011: 114, Fig. 1–3; 141; 145; 185, Fig. A, B; 186, Fig. C–F; 187, Fig. G–J. Material Examined. None. Distribution. Central Aleutian Islands. Description. Club-shaped to sub-globose sponge with a flattened, circular to kidney-shaped apex (Fig. 9 A, C), about 12 cm diameter, restricted base about 1–2 cm diameter. Slightly elevated cylindrical oscules regularly dispersed across a flat apex, areolate pore fields not visible, possibly positioned laterally. Surface smooth between the oscules, interior cavernous, markedly fibrous, wrinkled in the preserved condition (Fig. B), Overall texture leathery, slightly elastic, and easily torn. Colour in life dull brown, choanosome slightly darker. Skeleton. Ectosomal skeleton, a detachable, paratangential layer of megascleres upon which sits a singlelayered palisade of anisodiscorhabds. Choanosomal skeleton, a wispy reticulation of megascleres in tracts (modified from Lehnert et al. 2006 and Stone et al. 2011). Spicules. Megascleres (Fig. 9 D), styles with lightly spined heads very lightly and irregularly spined distal ends (Fig. 9 E), 500–540 × 9–11 µm. Microscleres (Fig. 9 F), anisodiscorhabds, manubrium, a single stump with denticulate margins, in the same line as the shaft. Basal whorl a ring of thick sculpted spines with rows of tiny teeth that curve along the edges of the sculpted sections, spines orientated obliquely towards manubrium. Median whorl a regular, thick ‘saucer’ with incised, sharply denticulate margins, located approximately centrally along the axis. Undifferentiated subsidiary/ apical whorl arises obliquely from the shaft, from just above the median whorl, forming a thick-walled, concave chalice with finely notched, beaded, denticulate margins. The apex sits atop the slightly concave subsidiary/apical cup and ranges in shape from a lemon-squeezer with five prominent beaded, denticulate ridges extending from the tip to the base, to an opening flower bud, with the tips of the five enfolded spines expanded out (Fig. 9 F, I), 37–43 µm long. Substrate, depth range and ecology. Locally common in the central Aleutians region where it is found attached to bedrock, boulders and cobbles between 412 and 1009 m, but relatively rare at depths shallower than 600 m. Remarks. The anisodiscorhabds of L . ( U .) velera are similar in general form to those of L . ( U .) oparinae , with the undifferentiated subsidiary and apical whorls, and the clearly differentiated manubrium and basal whorl. However, the anisodiscorhabds in each species differ markedly in the degree of micro-ornamentation; in L . ( U .) velera the anisodiscorhabds are very smooth with beaded denticulate margins in the apical region, while in L . ( U .) oparinae all features are microspined. The megascleres of L . ( U .) velera (500–540 µm) are also considerably larger than those of L . ( L .) hamanni sp. nov. (433–508 µm) and L . ( U .) oparinae (400–464 µm), but similar in length to those of L . ( B .) lincfreesei sp. nov. (480–590 µm). The latter species, however, has been recorded much further east, in the Gulf of Alaska. While L . ( U .) velera occurs in the same general area as L . ( L .) hamanni sp. nov. and L . ( U .) oparinae , it occurs at depths well beyond these two species, from about 400–1000 m. : Published as part of Kelly, Michelle, Sim-Smith, Carina, Stone, Robert, Reiswig, Toufiek Samaai Henry & Austin, William, 2016, New taxa and arrangements within the family Latrunculiidae (Demospongiae, Poecilosclerida), pp. 1-48 in Zootaxa 4121 (1) on pages 20-22, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4121.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/265513 : {"references": ["Lehnert, H., Stone, R. & Heimler, W. (2006) New species of deep-sea demosponges (Porifera) from the Aleutian Islands (Alaska, USA). Zootaxa, 1250, 1 - 35.", "Abbas, S., Sims, J., Kelly, M., Bowling, J. & Hamman, M. (2011) Advancement into the Arctic region for bioactive secondary metabolites. Marine Drugs, 9, 2423 - 2437. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.3390 / md 9112423", "Stone, R. P., Lehnert, H. & Reiswig, H. (2011) A guide to the deep-water sponges of the Aleutian Island Archipelago. NOAA Professional Paper NMFS 12, 187 pp."]}
format Text
author Kelly, Michelle
Sim-Smith, Carina
Stone, Robert
Reiswig, Toufiek Samaai Henry
Austin, William
author_facet Kelly, Michelle
Sim-Smith, Carina
Stone, Robert
Reiswig, Toufiek Samaai Henry
Austin, William
author_sort Kelly, Michelle
title Latrunculia (Uniannulata) velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler 2006, subgen. nov.
title_short Latrunculia (Uniannulata) velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler 2006, subgen. nov.
title_full Latrunculia (Uniannulata) velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler 2006, subgen. nov.
title_fullStr Latrunculia (Uniannulata) velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler 2006, subgen. nov.
title_full_unstemmed Latrunculia (Uniannulata) velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler 2006, subgen. nov.
title_sort latrunculia (uniannulata) velera lehnert, stone & heimler 2006, subgen. nov.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3510710
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Austin
Gulf of Alaska
Stump
geographic_facet Arctic
Austin
Gulf of Alaska
Stump
genre Aleutian Island
Archipelago
Arctic
Alaska
Aleutian Islands
genre_facet Aleutian Island
Archipelago
Arctic
Alaska
Aleutian Islands
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3510710 2023-05-15T13:14:48+02:00 Latrunculia (Uniannulata) velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler 2006, subgen. nov. Kelly, Michelle Sim-Smith, Carina Stone, Robert Reiswig, Toufiek Samaai Henry Austin, William 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3510710 https://zenodo.org/record/3510710 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/265513 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFCD7406FFA52924CC4CFF9CFFB0FFDD http://table.plazi.org/id/DF22EDE0FF8D290CCC3BFD87FDC5FDF2 http://table.plazi.org/id/DF22EDE0FF8F290ECC3BFD7FFEFDFD2A http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD8C18FF968E18FEC8F88DD9AF2AB8 http://zoobank.org/2C978846-61DD-48BD-87BE-0BC22D0CABF2 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4121.1.1 http://zenodo.org/record/265513 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFCD7406FFA52924CC4CFF9CFFB0FFDD https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265515 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265527 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265521 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265514 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265516 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265522 http://table.plazi.org/id/DF22EDE0FF8D290CCC3BFD87FDC5FDF2 http://table.plazi.org/id/DF22EDE0FF8F290ECC3BFD7FFEFDFD2A https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6253516 http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD8C18FF968E18FEC8F88DD9AF2AB8 http://zoobank.org/2C978846-61DD-48BD-87BE-0BC22D0CABF2 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3510709 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Porifera Demospongiae Poecilosclerida Latrunculiidae Latrunculia Latrunculia velera article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3510710 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4121.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265515 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265527 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265521 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265514 https://do 2022-04-01T12:22:56Z Latrunculia ( Uniannulata ) velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler, 2006 subgen. nov., comb. nov. (Fig. 2 B, 9, 16AH; Tables 8, 9) Latrunculia velera Lehnert, Stone & Heimler, 2006: 27 –30; Fig. 15 A–F, 16 A–D. Latrunculia velera , Abbas et al. 2011: 2429 ‒2430; Fig. 8 D; Stone et al . 2011: 114, Fig. 1–3; 141; 145; 185, Fig. A, B; 186, Fig. C–F; 187, Fig. G–J. Material Examined. None. Distribution. Central Aleutian Islands. Description. Club-shaped to sub-globose sponge with a flattened, circular to kidney-shaped apex (Fig. 9 A, C), about 12 cm diameter, restricted base about 1–2 cm diameter. Slightly elevated cylindrical oscules regularly dispersed across a flat apex, areolate pore fields not visible, possibly positioned laterally. Surface smooth between the oscules, interior cavernous, markedly fibrous, wrinkled in the preserved condition (Fig. B), Overall texture leathery, slightly elastic, and easily torn. Colour in life dull brown, choanosome slightly darker. Skeleton. Ectosomal skeleton, a detachable, paratangential layer of megascleres upon which sits a singlelayered palisade of anisodiscorhabds. Choanosomal skeleton, a wispy reticulation of megascleres in tracts (modified from Lehnert et al. 2006 and Stone et al. 2011). Spicules. Megascleres (Fig. 9 D), styles with lightly spined heads very lightly and irregularly spined distal ends (Fig. 9 E), 500–540 × 9–11 µm. Microscleres (Fig. 9 F), anisodiscorhabds, manubrium, a single stump with denticulate margins, in the same line as the shaft. Basal whorl a ring of thick sculpted spines with rows of tiny teeth that curve along the edges of the sculpted sections, spines orientated obliquely towards manubrium. Median whorl a regular, thick ‘saucer’ with incised, sharply denticulate margins, located approximately centrally along the axis. Undifferentiated subsidiary/ apical whorl arises obliquely from the shaft, from just above the median whorl, forming a thick-walled, concave chalice with finely notched, beaded, denticulate margins. The apex sits atop the slightly concave subsidiary/apical cup and ranges in shape from a lemon-squeezer with five prominent beaded, denticulate ridges extending from the tip to the base, to an opening flower bud, with the tips of the five enfolded spines expanded out (Fig. 9 F, I), 37–43 µm long. Substrate, depth range and ecology. Locally common in the central Aleutians region where it is found attached to bedrock, boulders and cobbles between 412 and 1009 m, but relatively rare at depths shallower than 600 m. Remarks. The anisodiscorhabds of L . ( U .) velera are similar in general form to those of L . ( U .) oparinae , with the undifferentiated subsidiary and apical whorls, and the clearly differentiated manubrium and basal whorl. However, the anisodiscorhabds in each species differ markedly in the degree of micro-ornamentation; in L . ( U .) velera the anisodiscorhabds are very smooth with beaded denticulate margins in the apical region, while in L . ( U .) oparinae all features are microspined. The megascleres of L . ( U .) velera (500–540 µm) are also considerably larger than those of L . ( L .) hamanni sp. nov. (433–508 µm) and L . ( U .) oparinae (400–464 µm), but similar in length to those of L . ( B .) lincfreesei sp. nov. (480–590 µm). The latter species, however, has been recorded much further east, in the Gulf of Alaska. While L . ( U .) velera occurs in the same general area as L . ( L .) hamanni sp. nov. and L . ( U .) oparinae , it occurs at depths well beyond these two species, from about 400–1000 m. : Published as part of Kelly, Michelle, Sim-Smith, Carina, Stone, Robert, Reiswig, Toufiek Samaai Henry & Austin, William, 2016, New taxa and arrangements within the family Latrunculiidae (Demospongiae, Poecilosclerida), pp. 1-48 in Zootaxa 4121 (1) on pages 20-22, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4121.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/265513 : {"references": ["Lehnert, H., Stone, R. & Heimler, W. (2006) New species of deep-sea demosponges (Porifera) from the Aleutian Islands (Alaska, USA). Zootaxa, 1250, 1 - 35.", "Abbas, S., Sims, J., Kelly, M., Bowling, J. & Hamman, M. (2011) Advancement into the Arctic region for bioactive secondary metabolites. Marine Drugs, 9, 2423 - 2437. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.3390 / md 9112423", "Stone, R. P., Lehnert, H. & Reiswig, H. (2011) A guide to the deep-water sponges of the Aleutian Island Archipelago. NOAA Professional Paper NMFS 12, 187 pp."]} Text Aleutian Island Archipelago Arctic Alaska Aleutian Islands DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Austin Gulf of Alaska Stump ENVELOPE(-153.167,-153.167,-86.183,-86.183)