Latrunclava Kelly, Reiswig & Samaai, gen. nov.

Genus Latrunclava Kelly, Reiswig & Samaai gen. nov. Type species. Latrunclava imago gen. et. sp. nov. , designated herein. Diagnosis. Thickly encrusting Latrunculiidae with two microsclere forms: 1) anisodiscorhabds with manubrium, basal whorl, median whorl and apical whorl; 2) several size cate...

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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.5058032
https://zenodo.org/record/5058032
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5058032
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
Latrunclava
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Porifera
Demospongiae
Poecilosclerida
Latrunculiidae
Latrunclava
Kelly, Michelle
Sim-Smith, Carina
Stone, Robert
Reiswig, Toufiek Samaai Henry
Austin, William
Latrunclava Kelly, Reiswig & Samaai, gen. nov.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Porifera
Demospongiae
Poecilosclerida
Latrunculiidae
Latrunclava
description Genus Latrunclava Kelly, Reiswig & Samaai gen. nov. Type species. Latrunclava imago gen. et. sp. nov. , designated herein. Diagnosis. Thickly encrusting Latrunculiidae with two microsclere forms: 1) anisodiscorhabds with manubrium, basal whorl, median whorl and apical whorl; 2) several size categories of long anisoconicorhabds, with manubrium and basal whorl, apical whorl and apex, and lightly acanthose shaft, and spines arrayed irregularly between the ends of the spicule, around the shaft. Megascleres are sinuous anisostyles, acanthose on the head. Ectosomal skeleton consists of a paratangential layer of megascleres above which is a palisade of anisodiscorhabds. The choanosome is a wispy irregular polygonal reticulation of megascleres. Anisoconicorhabds are scattered without orientation, throughout the outer choanosome, and across the ectosome. Etymology. Named for Latrunculiidae with a new form of sceptre that resembles a spined or knobbed cudgel ( clava , knobbed club; L.) Remarks. Species in the new genus Latrunclava are characterised by the possession of a second form of microsclere in addition to the normal anisodiscorhabds: the sceptre-like anisoconicorhabd in several size categories, with manubrium and basal whorls, apical whorl and apex, but which lacks a median and subsidiary whorl. This form of sceptre extends between the basal whorl and apical whorl with a lightly acanthose shaft covered irregularly in sharp, single or palmate spines; the spines rarely form whorls around the shaft. All size categories of these sceptres are much longer than the ‘normal-length’ anisodiscorhabd and are scattered throughout the choanosome and ectosome without particular orientation. The anisodiscorhabds of Latrunclava gen. nov superficially resemble those in species of Latrunculia ( Uniannulata ) subgen. nov. , with manubrium, basal and median whorls, and an apical whorl, but both lack a subsidiary whorl and apex. The new genus Latrunclava can be compared to Sceptrella which also has a second form of sceptre-like microsclere, the isoconicorhabd (Samaai & Kelly 2002), also scattered throughout the choanosome and ectosome without orientation. The key differences are, however, the form of the sceptre (equiended in species of Sceptrella and inequiended in the species of Latrunclava gen. nov.) , and there is usually only one size category of isoconicorhabd in Sceptrella spp. With the exception perhaps of S . insignis (Topsent, 1890), the isoconicorhabds of Sceptrella species have basal and apical whorls of spines or serrated crowns that are virtually identical to each other; they do not, in any way, resemble an anisoconicorhabd. On the other hand, the anisoconicorhabd of Latrunclava gen. nov. has a clear manubrium, basal whorl, apical whorl and apex, but is extended between these features by a shaft of irregularly placed spines. The anisodiscorhabds of Latrunculia oamaruensis Hinde & Holmes, 1892, named for several microfossil spicules in the New Zealand Late Eocene Oamaru Diatomite, also bear a general likeness to the anisoconicorhabds of Latrunclava gen. nov. (Fig. 12 C) in that they are also inequiended. The key difference between the spicules of Latrunclava gen. nov. and the microfossil spicules is, however, differences in the morphology of the base of the microsclere, which in L . oamaruensis is a blunt extension of the shaft terminating with whorls of small spines. These fossil microscleres are more strongly reminiscent of the anisodiscorhabds of L . ( L .) multirotalis Topsent, 1927 and L . ( L .) tetraverticillata Mothes, Campos, Eckert & Lerner, 2008, which also have multiple whorls around the shaft, but these are plate-like. Several other microfossil spicules that closely resemble those of L . ( L .) multirotalis and L . ( L .) tetraverticillata , have been described and illustrated by Hinde & Holmes (1892: 218; Pl. 11, Fig. 36, 37) and Bukry (1979: Pl. 6, Fig. 12, 13). Furthermore, L . apicalis Ridley & Dendy, 1886 and L . biformis Kirkpatrick, 1907 also have second, larger forms of multi-whorled or spined microscleres. Currently, L . apicalis , L . multirotalis , L . biformis , and L . tetraverticillata are placed in the subgenus Latrunculia but the possession of a second category of microsclere is unusual enough to potentially warrant the establishment of another new subgenus in the future. Until further study can be made of these and other species in the context of Sceptrella and Latrunclava gen. nov. , we hereby remove the four species, L . apicalis , L . multirotalis , L . biformis , and L . tetraverticillata , from the subgenus Latrunculia (Table 9). Figure G illustrates the diagnostic microscleres that define Latrunclava gen. nov. : 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 33-34, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4121.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/265513 : {"references": ["Topsent, E. (1890) Notice preliminaire sur les spongiaires recueillis durant les campagnes de l'Hirondelle. Bulletin de la Societe zoologique de France, 15, 26 - 32, 65 - 71. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. part. 18721", "Hinde, G. J. & Holmes, W. M. (1892) On the sponge remains in the Lower Tertiary strata near Oamaru, Otago, New Zealand. Journal of the Linnean Society (London), Zoology, 24, 177 - 262. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1111 / j. 1096 - 3642.1892. tb 02480. x", "Topsent, E. (1927) Diagnoses d'Eponges nouvelles recueillies par le Prince Albert ler de Monaco. Bulletin de l'Institut oceanographique Monaco, 502, 1 - 19.", "Mothes, B., Campos, M., Eckert, R. & Lerner, C. (2008) Latrunculia (Latrunculia) tetraverticillata sp. nov. (Porifera, Poecilosclerida, Latrunculiidae) from the bathyal region off the coast of Santa Catarina State, Brazil, Southwestern Atlantic. Zootaxa, 1744, 59 - 65. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 1744.1.6", "Bukry, D. (1979) Coccolith and silicoflagellate stratigraphy, northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge and Reykjanes Ridge Deep Sea Drilling project Leg 49. Deep Sea Drilling Project Initial Reports, 49, 551 - 581. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.2973 / dsdp. proc. 49.118.1979", "Ridley, S. O. & Dendy, A. (1886) Preliminary Report on the Monaxonida collected by H. M. S. ' Challenger'. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (5), 18, 325 - 351, 470 - 493. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222938609459982", "Kirkpatrick, R. (1907) Preliminary report on the Monaxonellida of the National Antarctic Expedition. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (7), 20, 271 - 291. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222930709487333"]}
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 Latrunclava Kelly, Reiswig & Samaai, gen. nov.
title_short Latrunclava Kelly, Reiswig & Samaai, gen. nov.
title_full Latrunclava Kelly, Reiswig & Samaai, gen. nov.
title_fullStr Latrunclava Kelly, Reiswig & Samaai, gen. nov.
title_full_unstemmed Latrunclava Kelly, Reiswig & Samaai, gen. nov.
title_sort latrunclava kelly, reiswig & samaai, gen. nov.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5058032
https://zenodo.org/record/5058032
long_lat ENVELOPE(-22.250,-22.250,65.467,65.467)
ENVELOPE(-67.856,-67.856,-67.228,-67.228)
ENVELOPE(-58.017,-58.017,-61.850,-61.850)
geographic Antarctic
Austin
New Zealand
Mid-Atlantic Ridge
Reykjanes
Mothes
Ridley
geographic_facet Antarctic
Austin
New Zealand
Mid-Atlantic Ridge
Reykjanes
Mothes
Ridley
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5058032 2023-05-15T13:32:50+02:00 Latrunclava Kelly, Reiswig & Samaai, gen. nov. Kelly, Michelle Sim-Smith, Carina Stone, Robert Reiswig, Toufiek Samaai Henry Austin, William 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5058032 https://zenodo.org/record/5058032 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/265513 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFCD7406FFA52924CC4CFF9CFFB0FFDD http://table.plazi.org/id/DF22EDE0FF8F290ECC3BFD7FFEFDFD2A 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.265524 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265525 http://table.plazi.org/id/DF22EDE0FF8F290ECC3BFD7FFEFDFD2A http://zoobank.org/2C978846-61DD-48BD-87BE-0BC22D0CABF2 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5058033 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 Latrunclava article-journal ScholarlyArticle Text Taxonomic treatment 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5058032 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4121.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265524 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265525 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5058033 2022-03-10T11:52:32Z Genus Latrunclava Kelly, Reiswig & Samaai gen. nov. Type species. Latrunclava imago gen. et. sp. nov. , designated herein. Diagnosis. Thickly encrusting Latrunculiidae with two microsclere forms: 1) anisodiscorhabds with manubrium, basal whorl, median whorl and apical whorl; 2) several size categories of long anisoconicorhabds, with manubrium and basal whorl, apical whorl and apex, and lightly acanthose shaft, and spines arrayed irregularly between the ends of the spicule, around the shaft. Megascleres are sinuous anisostyles, acanthose on the head. Ectosomal skeleton consists of a paratangential layer of megascleres above which is a palisade of anisodiscorhabds. The choanosome is a wispy irregular polygonal reticulation of megascleres. Anisoconicorhabds are scattered without orientation, throughout the outer choanosome, and across the ectosome. Etymology. Named for Latrunculiidae with a new form of sceptre that resembles a spined or knobbed cudgel ( clava , knobbed club; L.) Remarks. Species in the new genus Latrunclava are characterised by the possession of a second form of microsclere in addition to the normal anisodiscorhabds: the sceptre-like anisoconicorhabd in several size categories, with manubrium and basal whorls, apical whorl and apex, but which lacks a median and subsidiary whorl. This form of sceptre extends between the basal whorl and apical whorl with a lightly acanthose shaft covered irregularly in sharp, single or palmate spines; the spines rarely form whorls around the shaft. All size categories of these sceptres are much longer than the ‘normal-length’ anisodiscorhabd and are scattered throughout the choanosome and ectosome without particular orientation. The anisodiscorhabds of Latrunclava gen. nov superficially resemble those in species of Latrunculia ( Uniannulata ) subgen. nov. , with manubrium, basal and median whorls, and an apical whorl, but both lack a subsidiary whorl and apex. The new genus Latrunclava can be compared to Sceptrella which also has a second form of sceptre-like microsclere, the isoconicorhabd (Samaai & Kelly 2002), also scattered throughout the choanosome and ectosome without orientation. The key differences are, however, the form of the sceptre (equiended in species of Sceptrella and inequiended in the species of Latrunclava gen. nov.) , and there is usually only one size category of isoconicorhabd in Sceptrella spp. With the exception perhaps of S . insignis (Topsent, 1890), the isoconicorhabds of Sceptrella species have basal and apical whorls of spines or serrated crowns that are virtually identical to each other; they do not, in any way, resemble an anisoconicorhabd. On the other hand, the anisoconicorhabd of Latrunclava gen. nov. has a clear manubrium, basal whorl, apical whorl and apex, but is extended between these features by a shaft of irregularly placed spines. The anisodiscorhabds of Latrunculia oamaruensis Hinde & Holmes, 1892, named for several microfossil spicules in the New Zealand Late Eocene Oamaru Diatomite, also bear a general likeness to the anisoconicorhabds of Latrunclava gen. nov. (Fig. 12 C) in that they are also inequiended. The key difference between the spicules of Latrunclava gen. nov. and the microfossil spicules is, however, differences in the morphology of the base of the microsclere, which in L . oamaruensis is a blunt extension of the shaft terminating with whorls of small spines. These fossil microscleres are more strongly reminiscent of the anisodiscorhabds of L . ( L .) multirotalis Topsent, 1927 and L . ( L .) tetraverticillata Mothes, Campos, Eckert & Lerner, 2008, which also have multiple whorls around the shaft, but these are plate-like. Several other microfossil spicules that closely resemble those of L . ( L .) multirotalis and L . ( L .) tetraverticillata , have been described and illustrated by Hinde & Holmes (1892: 218; Pl. 11, Fig. 36, 37) and Bukry (1979: Pl. 6, Fig. 12, 13). Furthermore, L . apicalis Ridley & Dendy, 1886 and L . biformis Kirkpatrick, 1907 also have second, larger forms of multi-whorled or spined microscleres. Currently, L . apicalis , L . multirotalis , L . biformis , and L . tetraverticillata are placed in the subgenus Latrunculia but the possession of a second category of microsclere is unusual enough to potentially warrant the establishment of another new subgenus in the future. Until further study can be made of these and other species in the context of Sceptrella and Latrunclava gen. nov. , we hereby remove the four species, L . apicalis , L . multirotalis , L . biformis , and L . tetraverticillata , from the subgenus Latrunculia (Table 9). Figure G illustrates the diagnostic microscleres that define Latrunclava gen. nov. : 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 33-34, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4121.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/265513 : {"references": ["Topsent, E. (1890) Notice preliminaire sur les spongiaires recueillis durant les campagnes de l'Hirondelle. Bulletin de la Societe zoologique de France, 15, 26 - 32, 65 - 71. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. part. 18721", "Hinde, G. J. & Holmes, W. M. (1892) On the sponge remains in the Lower Tertiary strata near Oamaru, Otago, New Zealand. Journal of the Linnean Society (London), Zoology, 24, 177 - 262. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1111 / j. 1096 - 3642.1892. tb 02480. x", "Topsent, E. (1927) Diagnoses d'Eponges nouvelles recueillies par le Prince Albert ler de Monaco. Bulletin de l'Institut oceanographique Monaco, 502, 1 - 19.", "Mothes, B., Campos, M., Eckert, R. & Lerner, C. (2008) Latrunculia (Latrunculia) tetraverticillata sp. nov. (Porifera, Poecilosclerida, Latrunculiidae) from the bathyal region off the coast of Santa Catarina State, Brazil, Southwestern Atlantic. Zootaxa, 1744, 59 - 65. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 1744.1.6", "Bukry, D. (1979) Coccolith and silicoflagellate stratigraphy, northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge and Reykjanes Ridge Deep Sea Drilling project Leg 49. Deep Sea Drilling Project Initial Reports, 49, 551 - 581. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.2973 / dsdp. proc. 49.118.1979", "Ridley, S. O. & Dendy, A. (1886) Preliminary Report on the Monaxonida collected by H. M. S. ' Challenger'. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (5), 18, 325 - 351, 470 - 493. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222938609459982", "Kirkpatrick, R. (1907) Preliminary report on the Monaxonellida of the National Antarctic Expedition. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (7), 20, 271 - 291. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222930709487333"]} Text Antarc* Antarctic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Austin New Zealand Mid-Atlantic Ridge Reykjanes ENVELOPE(-22.250,-22.250,65.467,65.467) Mothes ENVELOPE(-67.856,-67.856,-67.228,-67.228) Ridley ENVELOPE(-58.017,-58.017,-61.850,-61.850)