Taxonomy of Clathria (Thalysias) (Demospongiae: Poecilosclerida: Microcionidae) from the Colombian Caribbean, with description of three new species
Author
Zea, Sven
Author
Rodríguez, Angélica
Author
Martínez, Ana María
text
Zootaxa
2014
3835
4
401
436
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3835.4.1
44b48913-6e24-4fd6-8984-9b59a21bfc40
1175-5326
251145
E3F3FD5C-E526-4A66-911F-0FF5D692AAA8
Clathria (Thalysias) chelosigmoidea
new species
Figures 14
,
15
, plate 3 figures A, B
Clathriidae
sp. 1;
Zea 1993
: 88
(ecology).
FIGURE 14.
Clathria (Thalysias) chelosigmoidea
n. sp.
Schematic drawing of spicule types (A) and skeleton (B). (a) Basal principal styles, (b) choanosomal auxiliary subtylostyle, (c) ectosomal auxiliary subtylostyle, (d) echinating accessory acanthostyle, (e) sigmoid palmate chela, (f) section perpendicular to the surface.
FIGURE 15.
Clathria (Thalysias) chelosigmoidea
n. sp.
SEM micrographs of spicules of a specimen from Santa Marta. (a) Choanosomal principal styles, (b) ectosomal auxiliary subtylostyle (the larger choanosomal ones were scarce in the SEM sample), (c) echinating accessory acanthostyles, (d) sigmoid palmate chelae.
Material examined.
Santa
Marta
:
Holotype
: ICN-MHN(Po) 261, Bahía de Santa
Marta
, El Morro, rocky shore, on crustose coralline algae on metamorphic, overhanging rock,
8–9 m
, coll. S. Zea,
10 Feb. 1994
.
Paratypes
, INV-
POR
1253 (among gorgonian bases
4.5 m
,
10 Feb. 1994
), INV-POR 1254 (overhanging rock,
7–8.5 m
,
29 Feb. 1988
), INV-POR 1255 (
4.5–6 m
,
6–7 Apr. 1988
), Bahía de Santa
Marta
, El Morro, coll. S. Zea.
Shape, color and consistency.
Indistinguishable in the field in shape, color and consistency from
Clathria (Thalysias) sulfocleistochela
n. sp.
Briefly, very thin encrustations with a slightly conspicuous star-shaped vein pattern of the canal system and oscules. Ectosome transparent; choanosome with various shades of greenish, sulfur yellow, dark orange and cinnamon. Consistency soft.
Skeleton.
Ectosome as a thin pinacoderm supported by sparse, rather open brushes of small auxiliary subtylostyles. In the choanosome there are basal principal styles in groups of 1–3, arising each 90–200 µm from slight elevations of a basal spongin sheet, surrounded by echinating accessory acanthostyles; areas between groups with a few acanthostyles. Ectosomal brushes of subtylostyles rise from the tips of the styles; larger subtylostyles are paratangentially located below the ectosome or are horizontally located among styles in the basal choanosome; chelae abundant everywhere. Spicules (Table 1): (1) Long, slightly curved principal styles, with prominent heads with low and wide spines, 157–
256.5
–409 µm by 5,7–
9.5
–13.8 µm. (2) Straight auxiliary subtylostyles with very small heads, usually not spined, a wide axial canal, and blunt, telescopic ends; the shaft may be spined or rugose near the base; the two size categories are difficult to separate, but the smaller are usually ectosomal; large ones, 161–
187.2
–228 µm by 1.0–
2.4
–4.3 µm, smaller ones, 104–
134.0
–143 µm by 1.0–
1.4
–2.4 µm. (3) Echinating accessory acanthostyles, slender, heads slightly prominent, spined; shaft straight to slightly curved, sparsely spined, last apical quarter smooth, narrow, slightly telescopic, 76–
83.3
–103 µm by 3.7–
4.5
–5.2 µm. (4) Sigmoid palmate chelae, with reduced alae, 13.2–15.0 µm.
Type
locality.
El Morro, Bay of Santa
Marta
,
Colombia
, Caribbean Sea (
11° 14’ 57” N
,
74° 13’ 49” W
).
Distribution and ecology.
Santa
Marta
,
Colombia
. It inhabits rocky shores, on inclined to overhanging substrata,
4–10 m
in depth.
Etymology.
Adjective derived from the unusually shaped palmate sigmoid chelae.
Remarks.
See remarks on similarities and differences with
C (T.) sulfocleistochela
n. sp.
The sigmoid chelae are present in other species of the subgenus from
Australia
[e.g.,
C. (T.) hesperia
Hooper, 1996
,
C. (T.) michaelseni
(Hentschel, 1911)
], and other poecilosclerids (see
Hooper 1996
).