Abstract

A new species of Tethya Lamarck, 1815 is described from a depth of 1000 m on the continental slope of the Great Australian Bight (GAB), southern Australia. The GAB slope was explored as part of systematic benthic surveys to understand unexplored communities in the light of current oil and gas exploration activity in the area. Tethya irisae sp. nov. was present at 1000 m in six of eight longitudinal depth surveys. Three molecular markers were obtained: COI, 28S (D3–D5) and ITS1-5.8S-ITS2. COI and 28S phylogenetic analyses show that the new species fits clearly within the genus Tethya. This is the 28th species of Tethya reported from Australia; it is unusual in that it has a stalk. The presence of a stalk as a morphological character to split genera in this family is questioned. The description of this new species is an opportunity to revisit the molecular phylogeny of the Tethyida Morrow & Cárdenas, 2015 using comprehensive datasets of COI and 28S markers. As in previous analyses, four Tethya clades were retrieved; we discuss the possibility of using external colour to support some of these clades. Despite unclear phylogenetic relationships amongst Tethyidae Gray, 1848 from Australia, our results suggest that tethyid genera Tethytimea Laubenfels, 1936, Tectitethya Sarà, 1994, Laxotethya Sarà & Sarà, 2002, Stellitethya Sarà, 1994, and Xenospongia Gray, 1858 derive from species of Tethya. We show that asters have been secondarily lost at least twice in the Hemiasterellidae Lendenfeld, 1889: in Liosina Thiele, 1899 and a potential new genus from northern Australia. We formally propose the reallocation of Liosina from Dictyonellidae van Soest, Diaz & Pomponi, 1990 to Hemiasterellidae Lendenfeld, 1889.

Highlights

  • The family Tethyidae Gray, 1848, reclassified from the order Hadromerida Topsent, 1894 to order Tethyida Morrow & Cárdenas, 2015, contains 14 genera of which the genus Tethya Lamarck, 1815 is by far the most speciose with 93 accepted species (Van Soest et al 2019)

  • The first phylogenetic analyses of Tethya, using c oxidase subunit 1 (COI) and morphology (Heim et al 2007; Heim & Nickel 2010) revealed four main clades: 1) the seychellensis-wilhelma complex, 2 + 3) the citrinia-actinia complex divided in two subclades (European species and western Atlantic species + eastern Pacific) and 4) the aurantium clade

  • This is precisely the group joined by the COI sequence of T. irisae sp. nov.; its position within this group, remains unclear

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Summary

Introduction

The family Tethyidae Gray, 1848, reclassified from the order Hadromerida Topsent, 1894 (order abandoned) to order Tethyida Morrow & Cárdenas, 2015, contains 14 genera of which the genus Tethya Lamarck, 1815 is by far the most speciose with 93 accepted species (Van Soest et al 2019). The Australian Faunal Directory (AFD) (Hooper 2012) lists six genera of Tethyidae in Australia (Anthotethya Sarà & Sarà, 2002; Laxotethya Sarà & Sarà, 2002; Oxytethya Sarà & Sarà, 2002; Stellitethya Sarà, 1994; Tethya Lamarck, 1815; Xenospongia Gray, 1858). A seventh genus Tethyastra Sarà, 2002 (Tethyastra oxyaster (Burton, 1934), ‘accepted’ (van Soest et al 2019)) is listed in the Codes for Australian Aquatic Biota (Rees et al 1999 onwards); in the AFD this is listed as Tethya oxyaster

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