Latrunculia (Biannulata) triloba Schmidt 1875

Latrunculia ( Biannulata ) triloba (Schmidt, 1875) (Fig. 14, 16 AF; Table 9) Sceptrella triloba Schmidt, 1875: 119, Pl. 1, Fig. 17, 18. Material examined. Holotype — ZMB Por 2667 (2 lots): Bukenfjord on the southwest coast of Norway, 59.333 ° N, 5.783 ° E. Type location. Bukenfjord. Distribution. No...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kelly, Michelle, Sim-Smith, Carina, Stone, Robert, Reiswig, Toufiek Samaai Henry, Austin, William
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5058036
https://zenodo.org/record/5058036
Description
Summary:Latrunculia ( Biannulata ) triloba (Schmidt, 1875) (Fig. 14, 16 AF; Table 9) Sceptrella triloba Schmidt, 1875: 119, Pl. 1, Fig. 17, 18. Material examined. Holotype — ZMB Por 2667 (2 lots): Bukenfjord on the southwest coast of Norway, 59.333 ° N, 5.783 ° E. Type location. Bukenfjord. Distribution. North Atlantic Ocean, Northern Norway and Finnmark, southern Norway. Description. The holotype is a thickly encrusting sponge (Fig. 14 A–B, D) with compressed tapering aquiferous turrets on the surface, some terminating in oscules, some blunt with microscopic pores. The preserved holotype was originally attached to a Terebratulina brachiopod shell, now composed of six fragments in two lots, probably originally about 48 mm long and wide, about 5–7 mm thick, aquiferous turrets about 2–4 mm long. Location of the areolate pore fields, if present, cannot be determined because of condition of specimens. Texture in life soft, compressible. Colour of preserved holotype golden brown. Spicules. Megascleres (Fig. 14 G), anisostyles, slightly centrally thickened, occasionally polytylote, smooth proximally, 370 (350–385) × 11 (10–13) µm. Microscleres (Fig. 14 F, H–L), anisodiscorhabds with four distinct whorls, the first is the basal whorl (manubrium indistinguishable or absent), above which is the median, subsidiary and apical whorls, apex absent. Occasionally subsidiary and apical whorls form a barely differentiated tuft of spines, those at the apex are often elongated and irregular, 48 (45–53) × 32 (28–35) µm. Remarks. In searching for the holotype of Latrunculia tricincta at the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, Dr Carsten Lüter also found the holotype of Latrunculia triloba (Schmidt, 1875), from Bukenfjord on the southwest coast of Norway. The holotype of L . triloba is a wet specimen divided into two lots (preserved in two glass jars carrying the same number); Lot 1 contains 5 pieces, one of which is attached to a Terebratulina brachiopod shell, and Lot 2 contains a single specimen. Unfortunately, the microscope slide mentioned in Hentschel (1929: 870) could not be located. As the gross morphology was not shown in the original description, the illustrations of the microscleres are stylised, and the spicules were not measured, we have taken the opportunity to re-describe the species here, provide new observations (Fig. 14, Table 9) and to assign the species to one of the Latrunculia subgenera. Schmidt (1875) stated that the anisostyles are thickest centrally and that the anisodiscorhabds showed greatest kinship with Sceptrella regalis Schmidt, 1870 of Florida, with four whorls of projections that, in end-on profile, form three palmate, indented whorls. Examination of the microscleres of L . triloba (Fig. 14 H–L) reveals that the normal anisodiscorhabds are not as regular as those of Sceptrella regalis (see Fig. 1 F, left) and the second category of microsclere, the ‘amphityles’ or isoconicorhabds, are absent. The microscleres are in fact, typical of Latrunculia ( Biannulata ) species; the anisodiscorhabds have median, subsidiary and apical whorls, an apex, and an undifferentiated basal whorl and manubrium. We transfer the species to subgenus Biannulata (Table 9); this represents the first record of the subgenus outside the Pacific Ocean and further north than South Africa in the Atlantic Ocean. : 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 page 36, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4121.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/265513 : {"references": ["Schmidt, O. (1875) Spongien. In: Die Expedition zur physikalisch-chemischen und biologischen Untersuchung der Nordsee im Sommer 1872. Jahresbericht der Commission zur Wissenschaftlichen Untersuchung der Deutschen Meere in Kiel, Volume 2 - 3, pp. 115 - 120, pl. I.", "Hentschel, E. (1929) Die Kiesel- und Hornschwamme des Nordlichen Eismeers. In: Romer, F., Schaudinn, F., Brauer, A. & Arndt, W. (Eds.), Fauna Arctica. Eine Zusammenstellung der arktischen Tierformen mit besonderer Berucksichtigung des Spitzbergen-Gebietes auf Grund der Ergebnisse der Deutschen Expedition in das Nordliche Eismeer im Jahre 1898. 5 (4). G. Fischer, Jena, pp. 857 - 1042, pls. XII - XIV.", "Schmidt, O. (1870) Grundzuge einer Spongien-Fauna des atlantischen Gebietes. Wilhelm Engelmann, Leipzig, iii - iv, 88 pp., 1 - 6."]}