Mycale species of the tropical Indo-West Pacific (Porifera, Demospongiae, Poecilosclerida)
Author
Van, Rob W. M.
Author
Aryasari, Ratih
Author
De, Nicole J.
0000-0002-7985-5604
rob.vansoest@naturalis.nl
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-01-19
4912
1
1
212
journal article
8641
10.11646/zootaxa.4912.1.1
8a5efe86-cabc-4981-afb4-163791f2530c
1175-5326
4450930
9536C1CF-4AEF-47F8-959B-48CD7A5392D8
Mycale (Carmia) tubiporicola
sp.nov.
Figs 49
a–b, 50a–c, 44a–c
Mycale
spec.
Van Soest & Verseveldt 1987: 28
, figs 1–3;
Erhardt & Baensch 2000: 52
;
Van Soest & Hajdu 2002: 680
.
Material examined
.
Holotype
ZMA
Por. 09261,
Indonesia
,
Nusa Tenggara
,
Komodo, NE
cape,
8.4833°S
119.5683°E
, coastal reef with sandy bottom, depth
1–4 m
, snorkeling, coll.
R
.
W.M. van Soest
,
Indonesia-Dutch Snellius
II
Expedition
stat. 096, field nr. 096/
II/19
,
20 September 1984
.
Paratype
ZMA
Por.
08009,
Indonesia
,
Nusa Tenggara
, E of
Komodo
,
Teluk Slawi
,
8.6°S
119.52°E
, coastal reef with sandy bottom, depth
1–4 m
, snorkeling, coll
.
R
.
W.M. van Soest
,
Indonesia-Dutch Snellius
II
Expedition
stat. 069, field nr. 069
/
II/16
,
17 September 1984
;
paratype
ZMA
Por.
09280,
Indonesia
,
Nusa Tenggara
,
Komodo, NE
cape,
8.4833°S
119.5683°E
, coastal reef with sandy bottom, depth
1–4 m
, snorkeling, coll
.
R
.
W.M. van Soest
,
Indonesia-Dutch Snellius
II
Expedition
stat. 096, field nr. 096
/
II/19
,
20 September 1984
;
paratype
ZMA
Por.
09281,
Indonesia
,
Nusa Tenggara
,
Komodo, NE
cape,
8.4833°S
119.5683°E
, coastal reef with sandy bottom, depth
1–4 m
, snorkeling, coll
.
R
.
W.M. van Soest
,
Indonesia-Dutch Snellius
II
Expedition
stat. 096, field nr. 096
/
II/19
,
20 September 1984
;
paratype
ZMA
Por.
09283,
Indonesia
,
Nusa Tenggara
,
Komodo, NE
cape,
8.4833°S
119.5683°E
, coastal reef with sandy bottom, depth
1–4 m
, snorkeling, coll
.
R
.
W.M. van Soest
,
Indonesia-Dutch Snellius
II
Expedition
stat. 096, field nr. 096
/
II/19
,
20 September 1984
;
paratype
ZMA
Por.
09315,
Indonesia
,
Nusa Tenggara
, E of
Komodo
,
Teluk Slawi
,
8.6°S
119.52°E
, coastal reef with sandy bottom, depth
1–4 m
, snorkeling, coll
.
R
.
W.M. van Soest
,
Indonesia-Dutch Snellius
II
Expedition
stat. 069, field nr. 069
/
II/16
,
17 September 1984
.
FIGURE 49
.
Mycale (Carmia) tubiporicola
sp.nov
.
,
in situ
images at Komodo, Indonesia, a, whole specimen, b, detail showing sphincter-like pseudoscules (previously published as black & white images in
Van Soest & Verseveldt 1987
: figs 1–2).
Not
type material:
ZMA
Por.
09282,
Indonesia
,
Nusa Tenggara
,
Komodo
, NE cape,
8.4833°S
119.5683°E
, coastal reef with sandy bottom, depth
1–4 m
, snorkeling, coll.
R
.
W.M. van Soest
,
Indonesia-Dutch Snellius
II
Expedition
stat. 096, field nr. 096/
II/19
,
20 September 1984
(dried)
;
ZMA
Por.
16695,
Indonesia
,
Sulawesi
, SW
Sulawesi
,
Spermonde Archipelago
,
Kapoposang
,
5.1338°S
119.3381°E
,
SCUBA
, coll.
N.J. de Voogd
, field nr. NV/ KP/020900/120,
2 September 2000
;
ZMA
Por.
22224,
Indonesia
,
Nusa Tenggara
,
Komodo
, NE cape,
8.4833°S
119.5683°E
, coastal reef with sandy bottom, depth
1–4 m
, snorkeling, coll.
R
.
W.M. van Soest
,
Indonesia-Dutch Snellius
II
Expedition
stat. 096, field nr. 096/
II/19
,
20 September 1984
(dried)
;
RMNH
Por.
5310,
Indonesia
,
Halmahera
, Tidore
Desa Tahua
,
4.75275°N
127.39203°E
, depth
3 m
,
SCUBA
, coll.
B.Hoeksema
,
Ternate-Halmahera Expedition
stat. TER.07, field nr. TER07/281009/061,
28 October 2009
.
Description
(
Figs 49
a–b, 50a–c). The pale-white tissues and skeleton of the present
Mycale
specimens are intimately intertwined with specimens of the octocoral
Tubipora musica
L., forming tube-like structures not found in free
T. musica
individuals. Apparently, the sponge has caused the octocoral to form these tubes, an obvious advantageous growth form for an otherwise encrusting sponge without elaborate supporting skeleton.
Van Soest & Verseveldt (1987)
gave an extensive description of the present symbiotic association with
Tubipora musica
, including drawings made from histological sections, reproduced here in
Fig. 50c
. We refer to this paper for more details, confining ourselves to measurements and illustrations of the spicule complement.
FIGURE 50
.
Mycale (Carmia) tubiporicola
sp.nov
.
, a, holotype ZMA Por. 09621, photographed on deck, b, light microscopic image of skeleton and spicules, c, drawing of section of
Tubipora
tube enclosed in sponge tissue (reproduced from
Van Soest & Verseveldt 1987
, where additional information is provided).
Skeleton
(
Fig. 50b
).
Not
clearly developed. Megascleres in vague bundles or scattered singly in low density. Microscleres abundant, rosettes of anisochelae not clearly developed, but clustered anisochelae are not uncommon.
Spicules
(
Figs 51
a–c). Mycalostyles, anisochelae, sigmas.
Mycalostyles (
Figs 51a,a
1
), comparatively robust, straight, with prominent heads and pointed opposite endings, 202–
237.8
–262 x 4–
5.1
–
6 µm
.
Anisochelae I (
Figs 51b
), usually solitary but one rosette-like cluster was found in ZMA Por. 09280; shape of individual spicule narrow, median alae parallel and close to the shaft, lower median alae with upwards extended finger-shaped lobe, free part of the shaft 20% of spicule length, 16–
24.2
–
27 µm
.
Sigmas (
Fig. 51c
), robust, thickness
2.5–3 µm
, often symmetrical, comparatively narrow, 84–
95.2
–
119 µm
. A few thin small sigmas (
20–30 µm
) were found in one of the specimens (
paratype
ZMA Por. 08009), but it is uncertain whether they were proper.
Distribution and ecology
.
Indonesia
, particularly common around the island of Komodo, also found off SW
Sulawesi
and Halmahera; sandy bottom in bays and lagoons, down to
4 m
.
Etymology
. The name means ‘dwelling on
Tubipora
’ referring to the likely symbiosis of the sponge with its ‘host’
Tubipora musica
.
Remarks
. The features of this new species, apart from its co-habitation with
Tubipora musica
are the large symmetrical sigmas in combination with a single category of narrow-shaped anisochelae and straight comparatively robust mycalostyles. Earlier speculation (
Van Soest & Verseveldt 1987
) that this species could be free-living elsewhere in
Indonesia
has so far been demonstrated as unproven. No
Mycale (Carmia)
species with similar skeletal characters was found among the many specimens studied from the region. This confirms its hypothesized symbiotic nature.