Diversity of sponges (Porifera) from cryptic habitats on the Belize barrier reef near Carrie Bow Cay
Author
Rützler, Klaus
Author
Piantoni, Carla
Author
Van, Rob W. M.
Author
Díaz, Cristina
text
Zootaxa
2014
3805
1
1
129
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3805.1.1
55b70366-a93b-420b-bee8-2a947098a45f
1175-5326
249983
F0B7652D-6E64-44CE-9181-5A10C8D594C7
Rhaphidhistia belizensis
new species
(
Figures
3
g,
29
)
Material.
Holotype
:
USNM
1228992
, Carrie Bow Cay forereef slope, coral rock underside,
30 m
; K. Ruetzler col.
26
Apr
1974
.
Paratypes
:
USNM
1228993, 1228994, Curlew Cay, frame-work cave in forereef wall (
1.5 m
from entrance),
20 m
; C. Piantoni and M. Parrish col.
22
Aug
2012
.
USNM
1228995
, Curlew Cay, frame-work cave in forereef wall (
1.5 m
from entrance),
20 m
; C. Piantoni and M. Parrish col.
23
Aug
2012
.
Diagnosis.
Thinly encrusting, orange-colored
Rhaphidhistia
with large oxeas (
247–860
x
5–18
µm) and three size classes of spirasters (
28–
48
x
8–15
µm;
23–
35
x
4–6
;
7–
18
x
3–9
µm) spread densely throughout the body. Largest spirasters with straight shaft and regularly spaced spiral spination by equal-sized rays (spinispires); smallest are microspined.
External morphology.
Very thin (
0.5–2 mm
) crusts mirroring the structure of the coral substratum, covering
2–50 cm
2
. Groups of tiny pores but no obvious distinctions of oscula or ostia. Surface smooth, consistency firm, color vivid orange to light orange red.
Skeleton structure.
Oxeas without much orientation (criss-cross), a few in the choanosome in ill-defined tracts, some in the ectosome parallel to the surface. Spirasters occur in abundance throughout the tissue.
Spicules.
Oxeas, straight or slightly bent, thickest in the center of the shaft, gradually tapering to sharp points; a few show styloid or strongylote modifications:
247–860
x
5–18
(
535
x
12
) Μm; spirasters I, straight shafts (averaging
30
% of total spicule width) surrounded by a regular spiral of equal-sized rays:
28–
48
x
8–15
(
39
x
12
) Μm; spirasters II, short and thin and less regular in spination than spirasters I:
23–
35
x
4–6
(
29
x
5
) µm; spirasters III, microspined or rugose:
7–
18
x
3–9
(
12
x
6
) Μm.
Ecology.
Under forereef coral rock and in caves,
20–
30 m
.
Distribution.
Belize
(Caribbean).
Etymology.
Named after
Belize
, the Caribbean nation where it was first discovered.
FIGURE 29.
Rhaphidhistia belizensis
,
spicules (holotype USNM 1228992, SEM): a, oxeas, with styloid and strongyloid modifications; b, spirasters I; c, spirasters II; d, spirasters III.
Comments.
Morphological properties of our species agree well with the redescription of the
type
species of
Rhaphidhistia
,
R. spectabilis
Carter,
1879
(Hooper & van Soest,
2002
, fig.
3
A–C), particularly the thinly encrusting habit, disorganized arrangement of oxeas, abundance of spirasters throughout, and mostly straight and very regular spirasters (spinispirae). The main differences are the fewer twists of spines (up to six versus up to ten) and the second, smaller size class of spirasters in our material, and of course the geographical separation
Belize
versus
Mauritius
.
In course of writing this chapter, colleagues from
Colombia
introduced a new species of
Rhaphidhistia
,
R. guajiraensis
,
discovered in
50 m
on a soft bottom off Dibulla, Colombian Caribbean (
Díaz & Zea,
2013
). This species is similar to ours but is thickly encrusting, as well as incorporating and agglutinating substratum particles (color in life is not known), and, like the
type
species (
R. spectabilis
), it lacks a small class of microspined spirasters (as was confirmed by S. Zea, personal communication).