Morphological description and DNA barcodes of shallow-water Tetractinellida (Porifera: Demospongiae) from Bocas del Toro, Panama, with description of a new species
Author
Cárdenas, Paco
Author
Menegola, Carla
Author
Rapp, Hans Tore
Author
Díaz, Maria Cristina
text
Zootaxa
2009
2276
1
39
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.191088
5a169008-e3e8-4f54-9bfa-4618612942b9
1175-5326
191088
46BBD11F-098D-4074-807A-D0BF34AB0522
Cinachyrella kuekenthali
(
Uliczka, 1929
)
(
Figure 4
)
Synonyms
(
Rützler & Smith 1992
).
Cinachyra kuekenthali
Uliczka, 1929
: 43
, figs. 16–21, pl. I, fig. 4.
Cinachyra schistospiculosa
Uliczka, 1929
: 45
, figs. 27–30, pl. I, fig. 6.
Cinachyrella kuekenthali
(
Uliczka, 1929
)
:
Rützler 1987
: 200
, figs. 2f, 5c.
Neotype
. USNM 31491, off
St. John
,
Virgin Islands
,
16 m
depth (not seen).
Material.
3 specimens
collected at Caracol Reef and Adriana’s reef,
3–15 m
depth. Two specimens deposited:
ZMBN
81786–81787, both from Adriana’s reef,
3 m
depth.
Outer morphology
(
Fig. 4
A). Massive, subglobular, it can reach
15 cm
of diameter. Strongly hispid. Often covered with sand, green and red algae or more rarely macro-epibionts (ascidians, sponges). It can therefore appear grayish or reddish in the field, while its true surface color is orange. Choanosome is orange when alive, yellowish in ethanol. Few oscules (ca
1 cm
), sometimes only one. Porocalices (
0.3– 0.5 cm
) are numerous, unevenly distributed but usually not on the top. Oscules and porocalices can contract.
Skeleton
(
Fig. 4
B). The skeleton organization is fairly similar to that of
C. apion
. Radial bundles of oxeas cross the choanosome until and beyond the surface. The ectosome layer is somewhat larger (
1.2–1.5 mm
). The cladomes of anatriaenes are still placed in this layer or protruding beyond the surface. Protriaenes are less abundant than anatriaenes and mainly placed at the surface. Numerous spiny microxeas are randomly positioned in the choanosome, and in lower densities in the ectosome. Sigmaspires are present throughout the choanosome. Foreign spicules and diatoms are rare in the sponge. No crystalline structures were observed.
Spicules
(measurements of ZMBN 81786) (
Fig. 4
C–D).
Megascleres
: (a) oxeas, large, length: 2088–
2853.4
-3840 µm (N=15); width: 15–
39.6
–58 µm. (b) microxeas (
Fig. 4
C), spiny, straight or slightly bent, length: 141–
184.3
–215.5 µm; width: 2.7–
5.1
–5.3 µm. (c) protriaenes, with rare prodiaenes, width of rhabdome tends to increase from cladome base, rhabdome length: 2200–3500 µm (N=2); rhabdome width: 4–
8.5
–11 µm; clad length: 73–
122.4
–177 µm. (d) anatriaenes, very common, rhabdome length:
1600–
2735
– 3600 µm (N=6); rhabdome width: 3–
5.7
–11.4 µm; clad length: 30–
67.9
–107 µm.
Microscleres
: (e) sigmaspires (
Fig. 4
D), spiny, with occasional central or terminal bulge, length: 11.1–
13.8
–16.5 µm (N=22); width: 1–
1.2
–1.6 µm (N=22).
Habitat in the Bocas del Toro region.
Common on reef and coral rubble,
3–18 m
depth.
Distribution
. North Carolina and Florida,
U.S.A.
(
Rützler & Smith 1992
);
Bahamas
(
Wiedenmayer 1977
; van
Soest & Sass 1981
);
Cuba
(
Alcolado 2002
);
Virgin Islands
(
Uliczka 1929
;
Rützler & Smith 1992
);
Jamaica
(
Rützler & Smith 1992
; Lehnert & van
Soest 1998
);
Barbados
(
Uliczka 1929
; van
Soest & Stentoft 1988
);
Curaçao
(van Soest 1981);
Belize
(
Rützler & Smith 1992
);
Panama
(this study);
Colombia
(
Rützler & Smith 1992
;
Valderrama 2001
; Díaz 2007);
Brazil
(
Rützler & Smith 1992
).
Remarks and discussion.
This is the first record of
C. kuekenthali
in
Panama
although it had already been studied at Bocas del Toro, as
Cinachyrella
sp. (
Erwin & Thacker 2007
). Most descriptions state that
C. kuekenthali
is characterized by a depression on top (
Wiedenmayer 1977
;
Rützler & Smith 1992
; Díaz 2007). We did not observe this, as in some Colombian specimens (
Valderrama 2001
). This character difference is not considered of great importance since variability of shape with respect to different environment conditions is well documented in the
Tetillidae
(
McDonald
et al.
2002
;
Meroz-Fine
et al.
2005
). We found it very difficult to distinguish the two categories of oxeas previously observed in
C. kuekenthali
(van
Soest & Stentoft 1988
;
Rützler & Smith 1992
) and therefore considered only one size in our measurements. The microxeas were always very numerous, so their absence in a record from
Venezuela
(
Amaro & Liñero-Arana 2002
) makes this identification doubtful.
There was a 42 bp. difference between the COI Folmer fragment of
C. apion
and
C. kuekenthali
from Bocas. Contrary to
C. apion
, there was high intra-specific genetic polymorphism of COI for
C. kuekenthali
in the Caribbean. Four COI sequences are now known from Florida,
Belize
and
Panama
; they group in 3 haplotypes (
Table 2
).
C. kuekenthali
from Bocas del Toro had the most diverging sequence with four to five base pair differences with specimens from Florida and
Belize
. Therefore, the Folmer partition of COI would possibly be a suitable mitochondrial marker for future population studies of
C. kuekenthali
.
FIGURE 4.
Cinachyrella kuekenthali
(Uliczka, 1929)
[ZMBN 81787]: A. Gross morphology. Scale: 5 cm;
C. kuekenthali
[ZMBN 81786]: B. Cross–section showing the skeletal architecture. Scale: 1 mm; C. Microxeas. Scale: 20 µm; D. Sigmaspire. Scale: 2 µm.
TABLE 2.
Distribution of polymorphic sites in the COI sequences (Folmer fragment) for 4 specimens of
Cinachyrella kuekenthali
. Positions of mutations refer to the complete mitochondrial genome of
C. kuekenthali
(
EU237479
). Positions of mutations
Genbank accession number Locality 51 144 237 264 573
EU237479
Tennessee Reef, FL,
USA
C G T T C
EF519603
* Delta Reef, Keys, FL,
USA
? G G T C
EF519602
* Patch Reef,
Belize
? G T T C
FJ711646
* Bocas del Toro,
Panama
T A T C Y
* in Sponge Barcoding Database: www.spongebarcoding.org? = missing data; Y = T/C.
C. alloclada
,
C. apion
and
C. kuekenthali
are sympatric species in Bocas del Toro. Often covered by sediments and algae, they can be challenging to differentiate in the field without careful spicule observation.
C. apion
is usually small (ca
4 cm
in diameter) and found near mangrove areas, in very shallow waters (
0–1 m
).
C. kuekenthali
is fairly large (ca
10–20 cm
in diameter) and found deeper in the reefs (
2–18 m
).
C. alloclada
is ca
8–10 cm
in diameter and also found in reefs (>
5 m
).
SEM observations showed that all three species of
Cinachyrella
have similar spiny sigmaspire morphologies. The main difference concerned the size of these miscroscleres: the sigmaspires of
C. kuekenthali
were, on average, longer than in
C. apion
and
C. alloclada
.