The Sponges of the Carmel Pinnacles Marine Protected Area
Author
Turner, Thomas L.
Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology Department, University of California, Santa Barbara.
Author
Lonhart, Steve I.
0000-0002-5559-792X
Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, National Ocean Service, NOAA, Santa Cruz, California, USA. steve. lonhart @ noaa. gov; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 5559 - 792 X
steve.lonhart@noaa.gov
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-07-19
5318
2
151
194
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5318.2.1
journal article
56269
10.11646/zootaxa.5318.2.1
85d55564-632a-4561-8028-a7a8cf3f5de7
1175-5326
8162357
88714F9C-0EE5-4295-9988-3CEEF242489D
Hymeniacidon fusiformis
sp. nov.
Figures 18
&
20
Material examined.
Holotype
:
CASIZ236657
/
IZC00048452
, Inner Carmel Pinnacle, (
36.55852
,
-121.96820
),
10–24 m
, 9/22/21.
Etymology.
Named for its slightly fusiform styles.
Morphology.
Growing as an irregular mass, thickly encrusting with many projecting fingers and lobes, heavily fouled by hydroids and other animals. Sampled portion is
1 cm
thick, but sponge was thicker in life. Firm and barely compressible; oscules and pores not evident.
Skeleton.
Choanosome a chaotic halichondrid reticulation with vague multispicular tracts meandering towards the surface. Spicule density high; spongin not apparent. Ectosome a dense mat of tangential styles approximately 200 μm thick, unstructured in some regions, and patterned into a semi-regular mesh in other regions. Large subectosomal spaces present, bridged by spicule tracts to support ectosome.
Spicules.
Styles: most are very slightly fusiform, so that they are thicker in the center than near the head of style. Length and width are both highly variable; distributions are continuous but bimodal, 186–281–409 x 4–10–18 μm (n=345), length modes 260 and 330 μm, width modes 8 and 13 μm. When spicule preps are done separately for ectosome and choanosome, no differences are found in spicule sizes by domain: ectosome 217–286–372 x 4–11–18 μm (n=68), choanosome 206–285–370 x 6–10–18 μm (n=62), Wilcoxon rank-sum test p = 0.863.
FIGURE 20
.
Hymeniacidon fusiformis
.
A: field photo. B: cross-section at sponge surface. C: ectosomal skeleton. D: oxea. All images of holotype.
Distribution and habitat.
Known only from the Carmel Pinnacles.
Remarks.
Of the three
Hymeniacidon
known from the region,
H. actites
(
Ristau, 1978
)
and
H. ungodon
de Laubenfels 1932
have much smaller spicules, with less variation in spicule dimensions.
Hymeniacidon perlevis
(
Montagu, 1818
)
have spicules of similar length, and also have high variation in spicule length. However,
H. perlevis
spicules vary little in width and are not fusiform. The new species also differs from
H. perlevis
in coloration: though
H. perlevis
can be yellow, orange, or red, it is not known to occur in white. Finally,
H. perlevis
spicules differ in having a unimodal distribution for both length and width, and being significantly smaller in the ectosome than the choanosome. These species are also genetically differentiated at the
28S
locus, as shown in figure 18. It is unlikely that this species can be identified in the field.