Sponge biodiversity of South Georgia island with descriptions of fifteen new species
Author
Goodwin, Claire
National Museums Northern Ireland, 153 Bangor Road, Cultra, Holywood, County Down, BT 18 0 EU & Shallow Marine Surveys Group, PO Box 598, Stanley, FIQQ 1 ZZ, Falkland Islands
Author
Brickle, Paul
Shallow Marine Surveys Group, PO Box 598, Stanley, FIQQ 1 ZZ, Falkland Islands & South Atlantic Environmental Research Institute, PO Box 609, Stanley, FIQQ 122, Falkland Islands
text
Zootaxa
2012
2012-11-07
3542
1
48
journal article
1175-5326
8D917062-2FC8-4EE9-83A0-FDDCB6A08F45
Myxilla (Ectyomyxilla) kerguelensis
(
Hentschel, 1914
)
(
Figure 14
)
Synonymy:
Ectyomyxilla kerguelensis
Hentschel, 1914
.
Myxilla kerguelensis
(
Hentschel, 1914
)
.
Crellomyxilla intermedia
Dendy, 1924
.
Not
Myxilla tornotata
Brøndsted, 1924
.
Material:
Samples
in 95% ethanol, tissue section and spicule preparation on slides;
BELUM
Mc
7589,
BELUM
Mc
7591,
BELUM
Mc
7595 and
BELUM
Mc
7596.
Prion Island
Site
2,
South Georgia
(
54°001.862’S
,
37° 15.032’W
); depth
18m
; collected by
C. Goodwin
, D. Poncet, and
P. Brewin
,
19
th
November 2010
.
BELUM
Mc
7684.
Green Island
,
Stromness
,
Site
1,
South Georgia
(
54°09.448’S
,
36° 39.752’W
); depth
17.4m
; collected by
C. Goodwin
, P. Brickle and
S. Cartwright
,
27
th
November 2010
.
Comparative material examined:
ZMH
S2325
Ectomyxilla kerguelensis
, S2319
Acanthoxa werthii
External morphology:
In situ appearance:
Thickly
encrusting orange sponge, some specimens very thick and mounded. Scattered large oscules up to
0.5cm
in diameter. Surface with a honeycomb appearance due to patches of ostia (
Fig. 14a
).
Preserved appearance:
Very firm, pale yellow, crust with some inclusions of grey sediment grains. Spaces visible in choanosome. Ectosome is glassily smooth but is not easily detachable.
Skeleton:
Choanosome: Dense reticulation of bundles of 2–3 acanthostyles, predominantly large acanthostyles but some small acanthostyles are scattered through the bundles. Sigmas and chelae scattered abundantly through the tissue. Ectosome: Palisade of tornotes covered with tangential crust of the small acanthostyles (
Fig. 14b
).
Spicules:
Measurements from Mc7589.
Choanosomal acanthostyles:
203(226)245 by 15(19)25µm. Parallel sided acanthostyles with large, conical spines. End terminates in an abrupt, unspined point (
Fig. 14c
).
Ectosomal acanthostyles:
74(91)109 by 7(10)13µm. Similar in form to the choanosomal acanthostyles but with much larger spines relative to the shaft (
Fig. 14d
).
Ectosomal tornotes:
174(190)210 by 7(9)12µm. Fusiform tornotes with mucronate points (
Fig. 14e
).
Chelae:
18(20)23µm (
Fig. 14f
).
Sigmas:
18(24)29µm (
Fig.
14g
).
Remarks:
The specimen appears to be a good match for the
type
description. There is a slight difference in that the
type
specimens are reported as massive and ‘mostly in rounded form’ with the largest piece
11.5cm
wide and
7cm
high, rather than thickly encrusting. However, it seems that specimens might be quite variable in form, as samples collected in this survey range from thickly encrusting to massive mounds (Mc7596 and Mc7684 were approximately
10cm
high).
Hentschel (1914)
reports that some of his specimens were found on whale bones which may indicate that they were actually very thickly encrusting. In terms of speculation, the chelae (12.5–19µm), small acanthostyles (56–75µm) and sigmas (17–22µm) reported from the
type
are slightly smaller than those of our specimens. However, Boury-Esnault and Van Beveren (1982) described a larger size range in their specimens, similar to that found in ours. It was not possible to examine the
type
as the
type
specimen jar was found to contain a specimen of
Acanthoxa werthii
Hetschel, 1914
(now reassigned to
Spanioplon werthi
(
Hentschel, 1914
)
.
The species
Crellomyxilla intermedia
Dendy, 1924
, described from
New Zealand
(
Dendy 1924
), is currently regarded as a synonym. This has similar sizes spicules and ectosomal acanthostyles to the
type
specimen of
M. kerguelensis
. Dendy describes two categories of chelae, but
Burton (1929)
on re-examination of the
type
found only one category.
Burton (1929
,
1934
) also considered
Myxilla tornotata
Brøndstedt, 1924 a
synonym, despite noting it differed in having microspined ends to the tornotes. However, the two species can be separated by the size of the sigmas and the size and form of the ectosomal spicules (
Lévi 1956
; Boury-Esnault and Van Beveren 1982) and have been recorded sympatrically from the Kerguelen Islands (Boury-Esnault and Van Beveren 1982).
Distribution:
Other than the
type
locality, Kerguelen (
Lévi 1956
; Boury-Esnault & Van Beveren 1982), this species has been recorded from McMurdo sound (
Burton, 1929
), although these specimens differ from the
type
description in that they are flabellate specimens with chelae up to 33µm, and
New Zealand
(as
Crellomyxilla intermedia
) (
Dendy 1924
). There are no previous records from
South Georgia
.