Polymastiidae Gray 1867 ...

Family Polymastiidae Gray, 1867a Some peculiar, club-shaped spicules have been found in the studied material that may be assigned to the family Polymastiidae. Some of them have well developed pointed ends and strongly sculptured, club-shaped heads (Figs. 10 K–M). The others have small, weakly define...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Łukowiak, Magdalena
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2015
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6108563
https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.6108563
Description
Summary:Family Polymastiidae Gray, 1867a Some peculiar, club-shaped spicules have been found in the studied material that may be assigned to the family Polymastiidae. Some of them have well developed pointed ends and strongly sculptured, club-shaped heads (Figs. 10 K–M). The others have small, weakly defined pointed ends and smooth, slightly club-shaped heads (Figs. 10 N, O). These club-shaped spicules strongly resemble those of Recent polymastiid Sphaerotylus Topsent, 1898. The variability of the studied spicules may be intraspecific, or they may belong to at least two different species. Among seven currently known species of Sphaerotylus, the spicules with sculptured heads (Figs. 10 K–M) occur in Sphaerotylus vanhoeffeni Hentschel, 1914 (described as S. capitatus; compare with Hentschel 1914, fig. 5.5/ Fig. 12 C). This sponge is known from the Antarctic Ocean (Hentschel 1914) and it is also recorded from the Ross Sea, as well as from the coasts of Norway and Canada (as synonym S. capitatus; van Soest et al. 2013). ... : Published as part of Łukowiak, Magdalena, 2015, Late Eocene siliceous sponge fauna of southern Australia: reconstruction based on loose spicules record, pp. 1-65 in Zootaxa 3917 (1) on pages 24-25, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3917.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/287785 ...