Abyssocladia annae Ekins & Erpenbeck & Hooper 2020, sp. nov.

Abyssocladia annae sp. nov. Figure 4, Table 1 urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: E572DF22-EF0F-406D-B053-C20C0A5F84EA Material Examined : Holotype: QM G337611, off the continental shelf of central New South Wales, Australia, Station 88, 30° 15’ 50.4”– 30° 17’ 12.2” S, 153° 52’ 12”– 153° 49’ 48.7” E, 4481– 44...

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Main Authors: Ekins, Merrick, Erpenbeck, Dirk, Hooper, John N. A.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3846440
https://zenodo.org/record/3846440
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3846440
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
Cladorhizidae
Abyssocladia
Abyssocladia annae
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Porifera
Demospongiae
Poecilosclerida
Cladorhizidae
Abyssocladia
Abyssocladia annae
Ekins, Merrick
Erpenbeck, Dirk
Hooper, John N. A.
Abyssocladia annae Ekins & Erpenbeck & Hooper 2020, sp. nov.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Porifera
Demospongiae
Poecilosclerida
Cladorhizidae
Abyssocladia
Abyssocladia annae
description Abyssocladia annae sp. nov. Figure 4, Table 1 urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: E572DF22-EF0F-406D-B053-C20C0A5F84EA Material Examined : Holotype: QM G337611, off the continental shelf of central New South Wales, Australia, Station 88, 30° 15’ 50.4”– 30° 17’ 12.2” S, 153° 52’ 12”– 153° 49’ 48.7” E, 4481– 4401 m, Beam Trawl, Coll. Merrick Ekins on RV Investigator , Cruise IN2017_ V03, Sample 88–141.1 6/vi/2017. Etymology : Named after the loving memory of Anne Ekins and Anna Nelson, both of whom instructed the senior author about the beautiful design in nature. Distribution : This species is currently known only from the central coast of New South Wales, Australia, at abyssal depth. Description: Growth form : The holotype consists of the remains of a stem supporting a slightly cupped obovate (leaf-like, flabellate, fan-shaped) apical body (Figure 4 F). The body is hispid, with bundles of spicules radiating out only over a 90° quadrant. The specimen is 3 mm long x 2 mm wide. Colour : Beige on deck and beige in ethanol. Ectosomal skeleton : Thin membranous layer encrusted with abyssochelae. Endosomal skeleton : The axis of the stem consists of longitudinally arranged subtylostyles. The main body consists of radiating bundles of subtylostyles, undifferentiated from those of the stem. Megascleres: Subtylostyles are long and straight, thickest in the centre with a sharp tip (288-(504)- 1000 x 3.1- (7.4)-15.2 μm, n=49). Microscleres : Abyssochelae isochelae with obvious ridge and curved triangular shaft. (48.2-(60.6)-72.2 x 5.1- (9.7)-14.9 μm, n=45). Sigmancistras (11.6-(15.6)-18.5 x 0.9-(1.3)-1.8 μm, n=54). Molecular data: It was not possible to get unambiguous molecular data from the type material. Remarks : The shape of this species resembles one of the distal ends of the branches of A. koltuni Ereskovsky & Willenz, 2007 from the Sea of Okhotsk. However, A. annae sp. nov. lacks the large filament-forming mycalostyles that radiate from the oval bodies of A. koltuni , and also differs in lacking sigmas and having only a single size class of abyssochelae, which presents a very different shape to the isochelae of A. koltuni (Table 1). The gross morphology of this new species also superficially resembles that of the distal parts of A. hemiradiata Hestetun et al. , 2017a from the SW Indian Ocean Ridge, but differs in having the slightly cupped morphology, with mainly bundles of subtylostyles radiating in one quadrant only. Abyssocladia annae sp. nov. also lacks the larger and thicker styles and the sigmas of A. hemiradiata , and has much larger sigmancistras (Table 1). Most obvious in this new species is the much larger and highly ridged abyssochelae. The only other Abyssocladia with similar chelae is A. brunni Lévi, 1964 from the Kermadec Trench. Abyssocladia annae sp. nov. differs in morphology from A. brunni which has a stem supporting a pedunculate spherical body heavily echinated by large lateral filaments up to 13 mm in length, as described both in Lévi (1964) and Koltun (1970). In addition, the current species also has smaller isochelae of a different shape (which Lévi 1964 terms ‘thaumatochetes’), sigmancistras only half the size, and smaller subtylostyles than those of A. brunni . In addition, A. brunni has styles, with only few showing slight subtylote basal swelling. The two known specimens of A. brunni described by Lévi (1964) and Koltun (1970) are possibly two different species. Abyssocladia annae sp. nov. also differs from A. natushimae Ise & Vacelet, 2010 from the Izu-Ogasawara Arc, in lacking filaments that echinate the main body, and the absence of styles, strongyles, and substrongyles and microstrongyles found in the Japanese species (Table 1). : Published as part of Ekins, Merrick, Erpenbeck, Dirk & Hooper, John N. A., 2020, Carnivorous sponges from the Australian Bathyal and Abyssal zones collected during the RV Investigator 2017 Expedition, pp. 1-159 in Zootaxa 4774 (1) on pages 23-25, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4774.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/3825140 : {"references": ["Ereskovsky, A. V. & Willenz, P. (2007) Esperiopsis koltuni sp. nov. (Demospongiae: Poecilosclerida: Esperiopsidae), a carnivorous sponge from deep water of the Sea of Okhotsk (North Pacific). Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 87 (06), 1379 - 1386. https: // doi. org / 10.1017 / S 0025315407058109", "Hestetun, J. T., Rapp, H. T. & Xavier, J. (2017 a) Carnivorous sponges (Porifera, Cladorhizidae) from the Southwest Indian Ocean Ridge seamounts. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 137, 166 - 189. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / j. dsr 2.2016.03.004", "Levi, C. (1964) Spongiaires des zones bathyale, abyssale et hadale. Galathea Report. Scientific Results of The Danish Deep-Sea Expedition Round the World, 1950 - 52, 7, 63 - 112.", "Koltun, V. M. (1970) Sponge fauna of the northwestern Pacific from the shallows to the hadal depths. In: Bogorov, V. G. (Ed.), Fauna of the Kurile-Kamchatka Trench and its environment. Institute of Oceanology of the Academy of Sciences of the U. S. S. R., 86. (Akademiya Nauk SSSR. Trudy Instituta Okeanologii in P. P. Shishov and Izdatelstvo Nauka, Moskwa, pp. 165 - 221.", "Ise, Y. & Vacelet, J. (2010) New carnivorous sponges of the genus Abyssocladia (Demospongiae, Poecilosclerida, Cladorhizidae) from Myojin Knoll, Izu-Ogasawara Arc, southern Japan. Zoological Science, 27 (11), 888 - 894. https: // doi. org / 10.2108 / zsj. 27.888"]}
format Text
author Ekins, Merrick
Erpenbeck, Dirk
Hooper, John N. A.
author_facet Ekins, Merrick
Erpenbeck, Dirk
Hooper, John N. A.
author_sort Ekins, Merrick
title Abyssocladia annae Ekins & Erpenbeck & Hooper 2020, sp. nov.
title_short Abyssocladia annae Ekins & Erpenbeck & Hooper 2020, sp. nov.
title_full Abyssocladia annae Ekins & Erpenbeck & Hooper 2020, sp. nov.
title_fullStr Abyssocladia annae Ekins & Erpenbeck & Hooper 2020, sp. nov.
title_full_unstemmed Abyssocladia annae Ekins & Erpenbeck & Hooper 2020, sp. nov.
title_sort abyssocladia annae ekins & erpenbeck & hooper 2020, sp. nov.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3846440
https://zenodo.org/record/3846440
long_lat ENVELOPE(49.300,49.300,-67.700,-67.700)
geographic Okhotsk
Pacific
Indian
Merrick
geographic_facet Okhotsk
Pacific
Indian
Merrick
genre Kamchatka
genre_facet Kamchatka
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op_rights Open Access
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3846440
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4774.1.1
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3846440 2023-05-15T16:59:34+02:00 Abyssocladia annae Ekins & Erpenbeck & Hooper 2020, sp. nov. Ekins, Merrick Erpenbeck, Dirk Hooper, John N. A. 2020 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3846440 https://zenodo.org/record/3846440 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/3825140 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFEBFFCE914E3B18FFE9FFBBFFF8FF9D http://zoobank.org/B0C4A2F8-F2AB-4147-BB12-63720EEF2516 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4774.1.1 http://zenodo.org/record/3825140 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFEBFFCE914E3B18FFE9FFBBFFF8FF9D https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3825148 http://zoobank.org/B0C4A2F8-F2AB-4147-BB12-63720EEF2516 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3846441 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Porifera Demospongiae Poecilosclerida Cladorhizidae Abyssocladia Abyssocladia annae Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3846440 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4774.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3825148 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3846441 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Abyssocladia annae sp. nov. Figure 4, Table 1 urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: E572DF22-EF0F-406D-B053-C20C0A5F84EA Material Examined : Holotype: QM G337611, off the continental shelf of central New South Wales, Australia, Station 88, 30° 15’ 50.4”– 30° 17’ 12.2” S, 153° 52’ 12”– 153° 49’ 48.7” E, 4481– 4401 m, Beam Trawl, Coll. Merrick Ekins on RV Investigator , Cruise IN2017_ V03, Sample 88–141.1 6/vi/2017. Etymology : Named after the loving memory of Anne Ekins and Anna Nelson, both of whom instructed the senior author about the beautiful design in nature. Distribution : This species is currently known only from the central coast of New South Wales, Australia, at abyssal depth. Description: Growth form : The holotype consists of the remains of a stem supporting a slightly cupped obovate (leaf-like, flabellate, fan-shaped) apical body (Figure 4 F). The body is hispid, with bundles of spicules radiating out only over a 90° quadrant. The specimen is 3 mm long x 2 mm wide. Colour : Beige on deck and beige in ethanol. Ectosomal skeleton : Thin membranous layer encrusted with abyssochelae. Endosomal skeleton : The axis of the stem consists of longitudinally arranged subtylostyles. The main body consists of radiating bundles of subtylostyles, undifferentiated from those of the stem. Megascleres: Subtylostyles are long and straight, thickest in the centre with a sharp tip (288-(504)- 1000 x 3.1- (7.4)-15.2 μm, n=49). Microscleres : Abyssochelae isochelae with obvious ridge and curved triangular shaft. (48.2-(60.6)-72.2 x 5.1- (9.7)-14.9 μm, n=45). Sigmancistras (11.6-(15.6)-18.5 x 0.9-(1.3)-1.8 μm, n=54). Molecular data: It was not possible to get unambiguous molecular data from the type material. Remarks : The shape of this species resembles one of the distal ends of the branches of A. koltuni Ereskovsky & Willenz, 2007 from the Sea of Okhotsk. However, A. annae sp. nov. lacks the large filament-forming mycalostyles that radiate from the oval bodies of A. koltuni , and also differs in lacking sigmas and having only a single size class of abyssochelae, which presents a very different shape to the isochelae of A. koltuni (Table 1). The gross morphology of this new species also superficially resembles that of the distal parts of A. hemiradiata Hestetun et al. , 2017a from the SW Indian Ocean Ridge, but differs in having the slightly cupped morphology, with mainly bundles of subtylostyles radiating in one quadrant only. Abyssocladia annae sp. nov. also lacks the larger and thicker styles and the sigmas of A. hemiradiata , and has much larger sigmancistras (Table 1). Most obvious in this new species is the much larger and highly ridged abyssochelae. The only other Abyssocladia with similar chelae is A. brunni Lévi, 1964 from the Kermadec Trench. Abyssocladia annae sp. nov. differs in morphology from A. brunni which has a stem supporting a pedunculate spherical body heavily echinated by large lateral filaments up to 13 mm in length, as described both in Lévi (1964) and Koltun (1970). In addition, the current species also has smaller isochelae of a different shape (which Lévi 1964 terms ‘thaumatochetes’), sigmancistras only half the size, and smaller subtylostyles than those of A. brunni . In addition, A. brunni has styles, with only few showing slight subtylote basal swelling. The two known specimens of A. brunni described by Lévi (1964) and Koltun (1970) are possibly two different species. Abyssocladia annae sp. nov. also differs from A. natushimae Ise & Vacelet, 2010 from the Izu-Ogasawara Arc, in lacking filaments that echinate the main body, and the absence of styles, strongyles, and substrongyles and microstrongyles found in the Japanese species (Table 1). : Published as part of Ekins, Merrick, Erpenbeck, Dirk & Hooper, John N. A., 2020, Carnivorous sponges from the Australian Bathyal and Abyssal zones collected during the RV Investigator 2017 Expedition, pp. 1-159 in Zootaxa 4774 (1) on pages 23-25, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4774.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/3825140 : {"references": ["Ereskovsky, A. V. & Willenz, P. (2007) Esperiopsis koltuni sp. nov. (Demospongiae: Poecilosclerida: Esperiopsidae), a carnivorous sponge from deep water of the Sea of Okhotsk (North Pacific). Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 87 (06), 1379 - 1386. https: // doi. org / 10.1017 / S 0025315407058109", "Hestetun, J. T., Rapp, H. T. & Xavier, J. (2017 a) Carnivorous sponges (Porifera, Cladorhizidae) from the Southwest Indian Ocean Ridge seamounts. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 137, 166 - 189. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / j. dsr 2.2016.03.004", "Levi, C. (1964) Spongiaires des zones bathyale, abyssale et hadale. Galathea Report. Scientific Results of The Danish Deep-Sea Expedition Round the World, 1950 - 52, 7, 63 - 112.", "Koltun, V. M. (1970) Sponge fauna of the northwestern Pacific from the shallows to the hadal depths. In: Bogorov, V. G. (Ed.), Fauna of the Kurile-Kamchatka Trench and its environment. Institute of Oceanology of the Academy of Sciences of the U. S. S. R., 86. (Akademiya Nauk SSSR. Trudy Instituta Okeanologii in P. P. Shishov and Izdatelstvo Nauka, Moskwa, pp. 165 - 221.", "Ise, Y. & Vacelet, J. (2010) New carnivorous sponges of the genus Abyssocladia (Demospongiae, Poecilosclerida, Cladorhizidae) from Myojin Knoll, Izu-Ogasawara Arc, southern Japan. Zoological Science, 27 (11), 888 - 894. https: // doi. org / 10.2108 / zsj. 27.888"]} Text Kamchatka DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Okhotsk Pacific Indian Merrick ENVELOPE(49.300,49.300,-67.700,-67.700)