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
Siphonodictyon densum
(
Schmidt, 1870
)
Figures 30
a–c
Siphonochalina densa
Schmidt, 1870
: 34
.
Material examined.
RMNH
Por. 9922,
Suriname
, ‘
Luymes O.C.P.S.
II’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station M97,
7.3083°N
54.1667°W
, depth
130 m
, bottom coarse sand,
16 April 1969
.
Examined for comparison
. Slide of Schmidt labeled with the present species name, BMNH 1870.5.3.129.
Description.
(
Fig. 30
a) The specimen is a small group of tubes, that has become damged and partially fragmented during the collection and preservation process. The base of the larger tube is about
1 cm
in diameter, a smaller one is only
0.5 cm
in diameter. The upper parts of the tubes ar missing, so the height is not known. The outer surface is smooth, the inner surface is ridged. It looks as if on the inside of the tube there are septa dividing the tubar lumen, at least in the retrieved basal parts. Color (in alcohol) white or pale yellow. Consistency fragile.
Skeleton.
(
Fig. 30
b,b1) Densely spiculated ectosomal crust with barely any openings between the spicules. As
Schmidt (1870: 34)
described, the curved fat spicules are arranged with the concave and convex sides closely adhering to form a continuous flat sheath (
Fig. 30
b1). The ectosome is carried (
Fig. 30
b) by a system of rounded meshes of 300–400 µm in size formed by tracts of 6–8 spicules in cross section.
Spicules.
Oxeote strongyles only.
Oxeote strongyles (
Figs 30
c), curved, fat, with bluntly rounded ends, 151–
168
–186
x 17
–
19.2
–21 µm.
Distribution and ecology.
Guayana Shelf,
Florida
, on sand bottom,
130–216 m
depth (
Guyana
Shelf
130 m
).
Remarks.
Examination of a slide in the Natural History Museum, London, presumed to have been taken from the Harvard
type
MCZ PORa-6471, confirmed the likely conspecificity of the
Guyana
specimen. The extremely dense arrangement of the ectosomal spicules is a characteristic shared feature. This is the first record of the species since Schmidt’s original description. There is considerable similarity with
Siphonodictyon viridescens
(
Schmidt, 1880
)
reported recently from
Bonaire
(Van Soest
et al.
2014), but this has longer spicules (225–245 µm).