Sponges of the Guyana Shelf
Author
Van, Rob W. M.
text
Zootaxa
2017
1
1
225
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.272951
e2c88f4c-3ac2-45f9-95e4-99b75561a081
1175-5326
272951
6D68A019-6F63-4AA4-A8B3-92D351F1F69B
Erylus incrustans
Lehnert & Van Soest, 1999
Figs 53
a–g
Erylus incrustans
Lehnert & Van Soest, 1999
: 142
, figs 1–8.
Material examined.
RMNH
Por.9367,
Guyana
, ‘Luymes’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station 107,
7.7°N
57.5°W
, depth
65 m
, bottom muddy sandy with shells,
5 September 1970
;
RMNH
Por. 9884,
Suriname
, ‘
Snellius O.C.P.S.
’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station G56,
7.26°N
56.6667°W
, depth
67–68 m
, Agassiz trawl,
10 May 1966
.
Examined
for comparison.
Holotype
ZMA
Por. 13510,
Jamaica
,
Discovery Bay
,
Dairy Bull
,
70.1 m
,
27 June 1996
, coll.
H. Lehnert
#J96/37-1.
Description.
Finger-shaped or irregularly cylindrical (
Figs 53
a), up to 3
x
1
cm. Color in alcohol pale red brown or beige. Inside the color is slightly paler. One sample (9367,
Figs 53
a) consists of three fragments, the other (9884) of two, in both cases it is not clear whether the fragments are from the same specimen. Surface smooth, detachable, no apparent oscules. One of the
paratype
fragments shows lighter spots on the surface. Consistency rather soft.
Skeleton.
The ectosomal skeleton is a thick layer of aspidasters and microrhabds, carried by the cladomes of the ortho/plagiotraenes. The choanosomal skeleton is pulpy and confused.
Spicules.
(
Figs 53
b–g) Oxeas, ortho/plagiotriaenes, aspidasters, microrhabds, spheroxyasters, oxy-/ strongylasters,.
Oxeas (
Figs 53
b,b1), fusiform, occasionally strongylote, 702–
813
–
1014 x 18
–
21.7
–27 µm.
Ortho/plagiotriaenes (
Figs 53
c,c1), short-shafted, occasionally plagiodiaenes, rhabdomes 242–
371
–486
x 7
–
13.9
–21 µm, cladi 76–
141
–168
x 6
–
12.7
–18 µm.
Microrhabds (
Figs 53
d,d1), smooth, fusiform, slightly curved, faintly centrotylote, overall size
22–63 x
1.5–4.5 µm, divisible in two size classes, (1) larger (
Fig. 53
d), 44–
54.2
–
63 x
2.5–
3.4
–4.5 µm and (2) smaller (
Fig. 53
d1), 22–
33.0
–
38 x
1.5–
2.1
–3 µm.
Aspidasters (
Figs 53
e–e4), variable in shape and outline, but always thick-bladed oval with occasionally rather abrupt-squarish apices, with central, vaguely spider-like pattern of smooth areas among the dense fields of rosettes, 126–
144
–169
x 51
–
58.6
–69 µm.
Spheroxyasters (
Fig. 53
f), with smooth center, rays with large conical spines at the apices, overall diameter 13–
14.8
–17 µm, with 9–
12.3
–15 rays.
Oxyasters/strongylasters (
Fig.
53
g), with smooth center, sparingly spined cylindrical rays, at the apices slightly denser spined, overall diameter 32–
37.8
–51 µm, with 5–
5.9
–8 rays.
Distribution and ecology
.
Guyana
Shelf,
Jamaica
, sandy bottom at
65–70 m
depth.
Remarks.
Among the many described
Erylus
species in the Greater Caribbean and
North East Brazilian
waters, the two specimens reported here are assigned to
Erylus incrustans
Lehnert & Van Soest, 1999
as it has almost identical aspidasters and shapes of the other spicules match closely. I compared my material with the
holotype
,
ZMA
Por. 13510, from
70 m
off N
Jamaica
.
Sizes of the oxyasters in the
type
are slightly smaller (32–35 µm), and the encrusting habit of the Jamaican
holotype
is not shared with our specimens.
Both
features are assumed to be subject to considerable variation.
The
length of the rhabds of (rare) triaenes of the
type
were given as 152–163 µm, but my observation of the few triaenes present in the slides made additionally for the present study is that the rhabdomes can be larger than 300 µm.
This
is apparently not a difference between the
Guyana
material and the
type
.
There are several
Erylus
species in the general region (including nearby North East
Brazil
) that appear close. Rather similar aspidasters are found in
E. trisphaerus
(
De Laubenfels, 1953
)
(as
Unimia
), recently re-described by
Ulgalde
et al.
2015
. The shape is, however, distinctly trilobed and also smaller in
E. trisphaerus
, and the aster complement of that species comprises three categories instead of two. The widespread
E. formosus
Sollas, 1886
has also rather similar aspidasters, but these are longer, narrower, and tapering towards both ends.
E. latens
Moraes & Muricy, 2007
likewise has narrow aspidasters, but these are more gradually tapering than those of
E. formosus
. Its aspidasters are up to 302 µm long, almost twice as long as those in the present material. It also has a third category of smooth oxyasters.
Most other Caribbean and North East Brazilian
Erylus
species differ clearly in having thin-bladed oval aspidasters, differing among themselves in details of euasters and other spicular details.