Desmacella Schmidt, 1870 from Brazil: Description of two new species and a review of records (Desmacellida: Demospongiae: Porifera)
Author
Cavalcanti, Thaynã
Author
Santos, George Garcia
Author
Pinheiro, Ulisses
text
Zootaxa
2015
4034
2
364
374
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4034.2.8
d3099fd2-efc2-45cd-a1f1-3d47c8312a4b
1175-5326
239394
5C08231F-2280-4FF8-A042-F94F04466AE3
Desmacella annexa
Schmidt, 1870
(
Figures 1
,
4
, Table 1)
For full synonymy see
Muricy
et al
. 2011
.
Specimens examined.
MNRJ 2860 (Hajdu
et al
. 2004), São Paulo State (
25º 36.988’ S
;
45º 13.571’ W
),
Brazil
,
153 m
depth, REVIZEE South, trawl, station 6686 (28) (
13/I/1998
), det. E. Hajdu
et al
.
External morphology (
Fig. 4
A).
Fragments, thinly encrusting 2
x
1
cm (length x width). Oscules were not found, vaguely hispid surface, consistency is fragile and colour cream in ethanol.
Skeleton (
Fig. 4
B).
There is no special ectosomal skeleton. Choanosomal skeleton formed by large tylostyles making massive plumose bundles; well developed spongin fibres. Abundant sigmas (I and II) appear to be randomly distributed. Toxiform microxeas were not recognized.
Spicules (
Fig. 4
C–I).
Tylostyles (286–
392.5
–521
x 3
–
8.1
–14 µm, length x width): long, thin, erect and smooth (
Fig. 4
C–D); Sigmas I (19–
29.8
–38 µm, chord length) and Sigmas II: (9–
11.6
–14 µm, chord length) thin, abundant and terminally microspined (
Fig. 4
F, G, I); Toxiform microxeas (54–
76.7
–90 µm, length) long, thin, curved and microspined (
Fig. 4
E, H).
Geographical distribution.
Florida (
Schmidt 1870
), South and West
Iceland
(
Stephens 1921
), Adriatic Sea (
Pansini 1987
), Mediterranean (
Vacelet 1969
), Naples (
Pulitzer-Finali 1978
),
Spain
(
Bibiloni 1981
), Azores (
Boury-Esnault & Lopes 1985
),
Barbados
(van
Soest & Stentoft 1988
), Alboran Sea (
Boury-Esnault
et al
. 1994
;
Sitj & Maldonado 2014
) and Aegean Sea (
Voultsiadou 2005
).
Brazil
: São Paulo State: off Guarujá and off Ilhabela (Hajdu
et al.
2004;
Hajdu & Lopes 2007
;
Muricy
et al
. 2011
).
Remarks.
Van Soest & Stentoft (1988)
described the typical morphology of
D. annexa
. The species’ spicules consist of tylostyles, two categories of sigmas and toxiform microxeas. Here, we provide for the first time illustrations using scanning electron microscopy of
D. annexa
,
the microspination of its sigmas and toxiform microxeas. The presence of microspination on microscleres is also observed in other species of
Desmacella
such as
D. austini
Lehnert
et al
. (2005
, from the Pacific coast of
Canada
) (
Lehnert
et al
. 2005
) and
Desmacella
aff.
pumilio
(from Campos Basin,
Brazil
) (
Cosme & Hajdu 2010
).
Desmacella austini
has microspines on the tips of its two categories of sigmas, while
Desmacella
aff.
pumilio
has microspines on the tips of one category of sigma. We believe that this new feature probably occur in other populations of
D. annexa
, however this hypothesis can be confirmed only with SEM images. Records biogeographically akin to the Floridian
type
locality, such as the Brazilian ones (see Hajdu
et al
. 2004), are likely conspecific. Nevertheless, the other more disjunct records need to be reviewed with great care.