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
Cornulum johnsoni
(
De Laubenfels, 1934
)
Figures 80
a–e
Coelosphaerella johnsoni
De Laubenfels, 1934
: 21
.
Cornulum johnsoni
;
Van Soest 1984
: 75
;
Van Soest
et al.
1994
: 186
;
Hooper 2002b
: 419
;
Rützler
et al.
2014
: 56
, fig. 31.
FIGURE 80
.
Cornulum johnsoni
(De Laubenfels, 1934)
, a, light microscopic image of the surface skeleton, b–c, SEM images of spicules, b, microspined tylote, b1, details of b, c, twisted palmate isochela, d–e, light microscopic images of toxas (outlines artificially enhanced), d, large toxa, e, small toxa.
Material
examined.
RMNH
10545
,
Suriname
, ‘
Snellius O.C.P.S.
’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station B23A,
7.297°N
55.3883°W
, depth
99–101 m
,
Van Veen
grab,
27 April 1966
.
Examined for comparison.
Slide of holotype of
Coelosphaerella johnsoni
, USNM 22364, First Johnson- Smithsonian Deep Sea Expedition stat. 81, coll.
26 February 1933
, depth 200–400 fathoms.
Description.
Tiny, elongately fistular sponge enveloping a piece of dead black coral. Size less than
3x
1 mm
. Surface provided with several tiny projections less than
1 mm
in height. Color (alcohol) white. Consistency fragile.
Skeleton.
(
Fig. 80
a) Tangential intercrossing tylotes cover the organic skin of the fistular body.
No
trace of choanosomal tracts was observed.
Spicules.
(
Figs 80
b–e) Tylotes, palmate isochelae, toxas.
Tylotes (
Figs 80
b,b1), with strongly microspined apices, shaft curved, 225–
236
–249 x 4.5–
6.2
–7 µm.
Palmate isochelae (
Fig. 80
c), in majority twisted, 15.5–
17.1
–19 µm.
Toxas (rare), in two size classes, (1) larger (
Fig. 80
d) (n=2) 123–148 µm, and (2) smaller (
Fig. 80
e) (n=3) 18–54 µm.
Distribution and ecology.
Guyana
Shelf, Puerto Rican Deep, soft bottom and shallow cryptic habitats, in a wide depth range,
1–720 m
(
Guyana
Shelf
99–101 m
).
Remarks.
Due to the scanty material and the toxas being relatively rare (these were not found on the SEM stub, only in the slide for light microscopy) the illustration is rather deficient. Nevertheless the toxas appeared to occur in larger and smaller sizes conforming to those of the
type
material from
Puerto Rico
.
The
type
is much bigger (
14 mm
in diameter), but the skeleton and the spicules of the present specimens are almost the same.
De Laubenfels
(1934)
gives the size of the tylotes as 9 by 420 µm, which is likely a misprint for 9 by 240 µm (observed in the
type
slide and in the present specimen), because in his remarks below the description of
C. johnsoni
he cites the
Philippine
species
Coelosphaera
(=
Cornulum
) toxifera
Wilson
, 1925
as having ‘much larger megascleres’ at 16 by 360 µm.
Rützler
et al.
’s (2014)
images and spicule measurements of a specimen from Belize are also virtually identical to the present specimen.