Sponges of the Guyana Shelf
Author
Van, Rob W. M.
text
Zootaxa
2017
1
1
225
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.272951
e2c88f4c-3ac2-45f9-95e4-99b75561a081
1175-5326
272951
6D68A019-6F63-4AA4-A8B3-92D351F1F69B
Topsentia ophiraphidites
(
De Laubenfels, 1934
)
Figures 117
a–e
Restricted synonymy:
Ƒiles ophiraphidites
De Laubenfels, 1934
: 13
.
Topsentia ophiraphidites
;
Díaz
et al.
1993
: 290
, figs 6, 12 (with further synonyms and records).
FIGURE 117.
Topsentia
ophiraphidites
(De Laubenfels, 1934)
, a, habitus of RMNH Por. 9827 (scale bar = 1 cm), a1, habitus of RMNH Por. 9303 (scale bar = 1 cm), b–e, SEM images of the spicules, b, large oxea, b1, details of b, c, middle-sized oxea, c1, details of c, d, small oxea, e, crooked middle-sized oxea.
Material examined.
RMNH
Por. 9303,
Suriname
, ‘
Snellius O.C.P.S.
’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station G56,
7.26°N
56.6667°W
, depth
67–68 m
, Agassiz trawl,
10 May 1966
;
RMNH
Por. 9771, 9827,
Suriname
, ‘Luymes’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station 1,
7.1667°N
53.5833°W
, depth
104–130 m
, bottom sandy calcarenite,
24 August 1970
.
Description.
Fistular fragments (
Fig. 117
a), which presumably represent the tops of larger masses that remained uncollected, and one small globular sponge with cut-off projection (
Fig. 117
a1). The fragments are up to
6.5 cm
high,
2–4 cm
at their base,
1 cm
at their apices, the globular sponge is
4.5 cm
diameter and high, with the projection
1.5 cm
in diameter. The sponge samples are rather divergent in shape, but spiculation is identical. Color (in alcohol) pale yellowish beige to dark brown. Consistency firm, rough to the touch.
Skeleton.
Largely confused mass of spicules, with vague tracts of the larger spicules running perpendicularly to the surface. Smaller spicules are more frequent at the surface.
Spicules.
(
Figs 117
b–e) Oxeas only.
Oxeas, usually straight or slightly curved, intermediate and smaller oxeas occasionally angularly curved or crooked, in a wide range of shapes and sizes, divisible in overlapping size ranges, (1) large and fat (
Figs 117
b,b1), fusiform,
1050–1348
x 34
–63 µm, (2) intermediate (
Figs 117
c,c1), with gradually tapering sharp points, some crooked forms occur, 546–858
x 16–26
µm, and (3) small (
Fig. 117
d), likewise with sharp points, including a few crooked forms (
Fig. 117
e), 295–452
x 7–10
µm; overall oxea size 295–
837
–
1348 x 7
–
28.7
–63 µm.
Distribution and ecology.
Guyana
Shelf, Greater Caribbean, NE
Brazil
, in a wide depth range,
1–130 m
(
Guyana
Shelf
67–130 m
).
Remarks.
The identification is made on the basis of the key to the Central West Atlantic species of
Topsentia
and description in
Díaz
et al.
(1993)
. The present material matches their treatment of
T. ophiraphidites
closely in spiculation and skeletal structure. Specimens of
T. ophiraphidites
are known to possess fistular outgrowths and are diverse in size and shape. The depth range of the species, previously known down to
55 m
, is extended here considerably down to
130 m
.
Two other recognizably described species are present in the region,
T. bahamensis
Díaz, Pomponi & Van Soest, 1993
, which is shaped differently and its spicules do not exceed 800 µm in length, and
T. pseudoporrecta
Díaz, Pomponi & Van Soest, 1993
, which has coarser texture and spicules up to 1800 µm in length.
The WPD lists
Pellina profunditatis
Schmidt, 1870
from
532 m
off Florida as a
Topsentia
. The encrusting sponge apparently had a skeleton of oxeas of very variable size, the thickness given as 6–77 µm. This is insufficient to characterize the species. Type material consists of a slide in the BMNH collection, 1870.5.3.102 (source
Desqueyroux-Faúndez & Stone, 1992
, p. 54) and a 70% alcohol specimen in the MCZ collection, reg.nr. PORb- 122. Neither was recently redescribed.
Gammill
(1997)
uses
Topsentia amorpha
as a name for a sponge from
the Bahamas
.
He
ignored the rules of the
ICZN
by not indicating and keeping
type
material and his description is unrecognizable. The name is a clear
nomen nudum
and through that is unavailable.