Sponges of the Guyana ShelfAuthorVan, Rob W. M.textZootaxa201711225journal article10.5281/zenodo.272951e2c88f4c-3ac2-45f9-95e4-99b75561a0811175-53262729516D68A019-6F63-4AA4-A8B3-92D351F1F69BCervicornia cuspidifera
(
Lamarck, 1815
)
Figures 105a–dAlcyonium cuspidiferumLamarck, 1815
: 168
.
Spirastrella cuspidifera
;
Topsent 1933
: 41
.
Xestospongia tierneyi
;
Wiedenmayer 1977
: 117
, pl. 15 fig. 3, text-fig. 130 (Not:
Prianos tierneyiDe Laubenfels, 1953
: 534
, fig. 10 =
Spheciospongia vesparium
)
Spheciospongia cuspidifera
;
Pulitzer-Finali 1986
: 94
, figs 22–23;
Vicente
et al.
1991
: 217
;
Rützler 1997
: 1393
.
Cervicornia cuspidifera
;
Rützler & Hooper 2000
: 342
; Rützler 2002: 174, figs 1–2; Muricy
et al.
2011: 64.
Material
examined.
RMNH
Por. 6306,
Guyana
, ‘Luymes’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station 107,
7.7°N57.5°W
, depth
65 m
, muddy sand bottom with shells,
5 September 1970
;
RMNH
Por. 9815,
Guyana
, ‘Luymes’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station 68,
7.4167°N57.1333°W
, depth
51 m
, muddy sand bottom,
31 August 1970
;
RMNH
Por. 9830,
Guyana
, ‘Luymes’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station 87,
7.5667°N57.2667°W
, depth
59 m
, bottom sand and shells,
2 September 1970
.
FIGURE 105.Cervicorniacuspidifera
(Lamarck
,
1815), a,
habitus of RMNH Por.
9830 (scale bar = 1 cm), b, light
microscopic image of peripheral skeleton, c–d, SEM
images of
the spicules, c, tylostyle,
c1, details of c, d, various shapes of
spirasters.
Description.
Hollow fingershaped sponges (Fig. 105a) protruding from a broader body mass buried in the sediment. The protruding fingers are closed at the apex.
No
apparent oscules. One of the specimens (Fig. 105a) is
11 cm
high,
2.5 cm
in diameter, without base, a second is
14 cm
high,
3 cm
in diameter from a fragmented base of 5
x
3
cm. Color in alcohol orange-brown or dark red-brown (from the discolored label the color of the latter specimen has likely been influenced by being part of a sample containing a verongid species). Surface smooth, but a feeling of friction is felt upon touch. Consistency firm.
Skeleton
. (Fig. 105b) At the surface the skeleton consists of erect brushes of tylostyles (pointed ends outward) surrounding open spaces covered by a membrane in which microscleres are crowded. Choanosomal skeleton a largely confused mass of tylostyles, consisting of a mixture of loose spicules and short bundles.
Spicules.
(Figs 105c–d) Tylostyles, spirasters.
Tylostyles (Figs. 105c,c1) curved, with faint tyles, characteristically with the pointed ends bluntly rounded, in a large size range but not divisible in size categories, 297–
432
–564
x 10
–
12.2
–15 µm.
Spirasters (Figs 105d), short, curved usually once, with the shaft provided with composite spines concentrated on the ends and on the outer curve, inner curve usually smooth or with low spines; rarely curved 1½ times; occasionally straight, not curved and then provided with spines along the shaft; 13–
14.9
–19 µm.
Distribution and ecology.Guyana
Shelf,
Belize
,
Bahamas
,
Dominican Republic
,
Puerto Rico
, NE
Brazil
,
4–65 m
depth (
Guyana
Shelf
51–65 m
).
Remarks.
The present specimens are singular and undivided fingers, not branching at the periphery and/or proliferating, like in many specimens shown in previous studies. Also the diversity of spirasters is less than shown in e.g. Rützler (2002). Despite these discrepancies, it is clear that the
Guyana
specimens fall within the observed variation of this common sandy bottom species.