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New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts


A recent sponge, Pleroma aotea Kelly (“Order” Lithistida: Family Pleromidae), in the late Eocene Ototara Limestone of Otago, New Zealand

Michelle Kelly1
Daphne Lee2
Shane Kelly1
John S. Buckeridge3

National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Limited
Private Bag 109 695
Newmarket
Auckland, New Zealand

2Department of Geology
University of Otago
P.O. Box 56
Dunedin, New Zealand

3Earth and Oceanic Sciences Research Centre
Auckland University of Technology
Private Bag 92 006
Auckland, New Zealand

Abstract   Numerous remarkably well-preserved lithistid sponges recovered from the late Eocene-early Oligocene Ototara Limestone at Kakanui, North Otago, represent the first sponge body fossils to be described from the New Zealand Cainozoic. The sponges are scattered throughout a 1-3-m-thick volcaniclastic limestone horizon immediately overlying the Kakanui Mineral Breccia. The fossils are now solid calcite, the former siliceous skeleton having been replaced during diagenesis. The Kakanui sponges are the only known body fossils remaining from an extremely diverse sponge fauna which formed a major component of the benthos in the Kakanui-Oamaru region in late Eocene-early Oligocene times (c. 35-33 Ma). The sponge body fossils are described and compared with living sponges that have a similar flattened globose morphology. The fossils are morphologically indistinguishable from the living lithistid sponge Pleroma aotea Kelly (“Order” Lithistida: Family Pleromidae) from deep-water seamounts and banks off north-eastern New Zealand, and are significant in that they represent a stratigraphic range for the species of more than 35 million years. The present-day distribution of P. aotea, limited to silica-rich deeper waters, is in marked contrast to the relatively shallow warm water volcanic environments occupied during the Palaeogene. This restriction, and that of related lithistid sponges to silica-rich deeper waters off northern New Zealand, is paralleled in other demosponges and several calcareous invertebrate groups such as barnacles, bryozoans, and crinoids.

Keywords   fossil Porifera; Demospongiae; Lithistida; Pleroma aotea; Ototara Limestone; Kakanui; Oamaru; Eocene; Oligocene; New Zealand

M02022 Received 2 April 2002; accepted 26 July 2002; Published 20 March 2003
New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 2003, Vol. 37: 129-148
0028-8330/03/3701-0129 $7.00 © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2003

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