Sponges of the Guyana Shelf
Author
Van, Rob W. M.
text
Zootaxa
2017
1
1
225
journal article
37320
10.5281/zenodo.272951
e2c88f4c-3ac2-45f9-95e4-99b75561a081
1175-5326
272951
6D68A019-6F63-4AA4-A8B3-92D351F1F69B
Myrmekioderma rea
(
De Laubenfels, 1934
)
Figures 36
a–j
Anacanthaea rea
De Laubenfels, 1934
: 11
.
Epipolasis rea
;
Van Soest & Stentoft 1988
: 90
, pl. X figs. 3–4, text-fig. 42.
Myrmekioderma rea
;
Díaz
et al.
1993
: 303
, figs. 39, 45;
Castellanos
et al.
2003
: table 1, footnote d;
Rützler
et al.
2014
: 72
.
Material
examined.
RMNH
Por. 9788, 9789,
Guyana
, ‘Luymes’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station 51,
7.6833°N
57.0333°W
, depth
98 m
, bottom calcareous sand,
30 August 1970
;
RMNH
Por. 9820,
Guyana
, ‘Luymes’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station 107,
7.7°N
57.5°W
, depth
65 m
, muddy sand bottom with shells,
5 September 1970
.
Description.
The three specimens are dissimilar, Por. 9788 (
Fig. 36
a) is a broad knoll or club-shaped sponge of
8 x
3.5 x
3.5 cm
. Color dark brown and surface uneven but optically smooth, overgrown with several other encrusting organisms. Por. 9789 (
Fig 36
f) and 9820 are finger-shaped fragments of maximum
6 cm
high and
0.4–2 cm
diameter, dark colored (probably discolored by verongid specimens in the same catch). Consistency firm.
Skeleton.
The choanosomal skeleton consists of a dense confused mass of oxeas of all sizes, at the periphery of which there is a palisade of small oxeas arranged at right angles to the surface.
Spicules.
(
Figs 36
b–e,g–j) Oxeas, trichodragmas.
Oxeas, in a wide range of shapes—fusiform, often curved, frequently with an abrupt curve in the middle, sharply pointed or mucronate, occasionally stylote modifications occur, the middle sized and smallest may be lightly or heavily spined—and in a wide size range, divisible in three overlapping categories, (1) largest (
Figs 36
b,b1 and
Figs
36
g,g1), 664–
874
–978
x 19
–
31.3
–39 µm, (2) middle sized (
Figs 36
c and
Fig. 36
h), 345–
451
–522
x 11
–
12.8
–16 µm, and (3) smallest (
Figs 36
d,d1 and
Fig.
36
i,
i1
), 111–
276
–360
x 6
–
10.5
–14 µm.
Trichodragmas (
Fig. 36
e and
Fig. 36
j), variably longer and shorter, 40–120
x 6–12
µm, individual raphides less than 1 µm in thickness.
Distribution and ecology.
Guyana
Shelf,
Puerto Rico
,
Barbados
,
Colombia
,
Belize
,
18–100 m
depth (
Guyana
Shelf
65–98 m
).
Remarks.
In assigning the present specimens—with hesitation—to
Myrmekioderma rea
we follow the redescription and discussion of the species by
Díaz
et al.
(1993)
(p. 303) and
Rützler
et al.
(2014)
(p. 72), and the refinement made by Zea in
Castellanos
et al.
(2003)
(footnote of their table 1). To demonstrate the reason for the hesitation I present the characteristic features of two of the specimens in
Fig. 36
. The shapes, although different in both, are more conforming to
M. rea
s.l.
than other
Myrmekioderma
species. The smaller oxeas were variably entirely smooth (RMNH Por. 9788) or heavily spined (RMNH Por. 9789 and 9820), the latter possessing both smaller and middle-sized spined oxeas. According to
Díaz
et al.
(1993)
this is not uncommon for
Myrmekioderma
species, as it was documented for
Myrmekioderma gyroderma
(
Alcolado, 1984
)
and the
type
species
Myrmekioderma granulatum
(
Esper, 1794
)
. Stylote modifications were found rather frequently in 9789 but were rare in 9788, not uncommonly reported for other
Myrmekioderma
species. The trichodragmas were distinctly divisible in a smaller and a larger size category in 9788, but showed a more continuous variation in 9789 and 9820; either condition has been reported for
M. rea
by various authors (
Díaz
et al.
1993
;
Van Soest & Stentoft 1988
). An independent support for the hypothesis that this wide variation is intraspecific is the fact that divergent samples 9788 and 9789 were obtained in the same trawl.
Two other species,
Myrmekioderma gyroderma
(
Alcolado, 1984
)
and
Myrmekioderma laminatum
Rützler
et al.
2014
occur in the Greater Caribbean. The first occurs on shallow-water reefs and has distinct meandering surface grooves that remain visible in preserved condition, the second occurs in reef cavities, is encrusting and has overall thinner spicules.