Deep-water sponges (Porifera) from Bonaire and Klein Curaçao, Southern Caribbean
Author
Van Soest, Rob W. M.
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Department of Marine Zoology, P. O. Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands.
Author
Meesters, Erik H. W. G.
Institute for Marine Resources and Ecosystem Studies (IMARES), Wageningen UR, P. O. Box 57, 1780 AB Den Helder, The Netherlands. E-mail: erik. meesters @ wur. nl
Author
Becking, Leontine E.
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Department of Marine Zoology, P. O. Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands. & Institute for Marine Resources and Ecosystem Studies (IMARES), Wageningen UR, P. O. Box 57, 1780 AB Den Helder, The Netherlands. E-mail: erik. meesters @ wur. nl & University of California Berkeley, Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management (ESPM), 130 Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720 - 3114, USA. E-mail: lebecking @ gmail. com
text
Zootaxa
2014
2014-10-29
3878
5
401
443
journal article
5247
10.11646/zootaxa.3878.5.1
5247e933-3152-40d5-ae19-cce84a3dad7f
1175-5326
4948908
11145FA0-2CB5-460A-B7A6-9A634C778982
Geodia curacaoensis
new species
Figures 8a–k
Geodia
aff.
megastrella
sensu
Van Soest & Stentoft, 1988: 14
, pl. 11 figs 1–4, text-fig. 4 (not:
Carter, 1876
, nec sensu Topsent, 1911, 1928)
Material examined
.
Holotype
:
RMNH
Por. 9260,
Caribbean Netherlands
,
Klein
Curacao
, off SW coast (Dive 1),
11.9821°N
68.6452°W
, on a coral rock wall at
156 m
, coll.
L.E. Becking
&
E. Meesters
, field nr. CURASUB13-09/
BDR005
,
27 May 2013
.
For
comparison:
Geodia
cf.
megastrella
sensu
Van Soest & Stentoft, 1988
,
ZMA
Por. 05272,
Barbados
, off
Paynes Bay
,
144–153 m
,
11 August 1978
.
Description
.
Small sphere (
Fig. 8a
) of
5.5 cm
diameter (two fragments were preserved, one of 5 x 2.5 x
2 cm
, a second of 4 x 2.5 x
2 cm
). Surface generally smooth but with patches of long hair-like spicules distributed over the entire surface. Oscules crowded on top in a sieve plate. Color white grey around, but with upper half and sieveplate dark red. Cortex can crack easily, and choanosome is pulpy.
Skeleton
.
Cortex (
Fig. 8b
) consisting of a layer of sterrasters
300–500 µm
in thickness, carried by the cladi of radially arranged ortho/plagiotriaenes, anatriaenes and oxeas. Small short oxeotes and abundant small asters are distributed in the peripheral regions of the cortex among the cladi of the triaenes. Choanosomal skeleton a confused mass of oxeas and small aster microscleres.
Spicules
.
Ortho/plagiotriaenes, anatriaenes, oxeas, cortical oxeotes, sterrasters, oxyasters, strongylasters.
Ortho/plagiotriaenes (
Fig. 8c
), (cladi curved downwards, so technically they are closer to orthotriaenes than to plagiotriaenes, but the cladi are not exactly at right angles to the shaft). They are not very common and were invariably broken in the slides. From measurements from thick sections it appeared that the shaft length is up to approximately
4200 µm
(usually smaller), shaft width
50–90 µm
, cladomes
320–550 µm
, cladi 160–270 x
60 µm
.
Anatriaenes (
Figs. 8d, 8d
1
), shaft length
1500–2000 µm
, shaft width 20–
25
–
30 µm
, cladomes 120–
152
–
180 µm
, cladi 70–
93
–
120 µm
x 20–
28
–
50 µm
.
Oxeas (
Fig. 8e, 8e
1
), usually broken in the slides, they are mostly around
4000 µm
x
30 µm
(thick section measurements).
Cortical oxeotes (
Fig. 8f, 8f
1
), slightly different at both ends, 320–
380
–480 x 7.5–
10
–12.5.
Sterrasters (
Fig.
8g
), slightly oval, 70–
94
–110 x 70–
78
–85, individual rosettes approximately
5 µm
in diameter with larger spines numbering 4–6.
Large oxyasters (
Figs. 8h–i
), diameter 15–
22
–
28 µm
, number of rays 6–8.
Small oxyasters (
Figs. 8h, 8j
), diameter 10–
12
–
18 µm
, number of rays 6–12.
Strongylasters (
Figs. 8h, 8k
), diameter 5–
6.7
–
10 µm
.
Ecology and distribution
.
One specimen collected on carbonate rock wall just below the mesophotic zone at Klein
Curaçao
.
Etymology
.
Named after the
type
locality, (Klein)
Curaçao
.
Remarks
.
It is likely that this species was recorded from
Barbados
by
Van Soest & Stentoft (1988: 14)
as
Geodia
cf.
megastrella
Carter, 1876
. We reexamined this material. It differs from Carter’s Portuguese material in the presence of short cortical oxeas and the size of the oxyasters, which are only half the size in the
Barbados
specimen (and in our new species). The shape of the
Barbados
material differs from that of the
holotype
of our new species in being more elaborate and irregular, but its size is also larger (10 x 10 x
7 cm
) and it is not unusual for geodiid species to have a globular shape when young and more irregular when older. In the spiculation of the
Barbados
specimens only one feature seemed to differ, the length of the cortical oxeotes, given as 150 x
3–4 µm
in
Van Soest & Stentoft (1988: 14)
. When we reexamined this, we found that variation is large and many of the cortical oxeotes were in the range of 200–300 x
5–6 µm
and only few were as small as
150 µm
. We assume that the
Barbados
material and the present specimen are conspecific as all other features match closely.
On paper our new species appears rather close to
Geodia gibberosa
Lamarck, 1814
as extensively redescribed by
Cárdenas
et al.
2009
, but habit, length of the oxeas and the form, ray number and ornamentation of the oxyasters are clearly different in the two species.
G. gibberosa
was also reported from deep water (
Barbados
, cf.
Van Soest & Stentoft 1988
).
Of the
Geodia
species
recorded from the Central West Atlantic,
G. tumulosa
Bowerbank, 1872
appears close to our new species, but it differs in overall shape and in having protriaenes in addition to ortho- and anatriaenes. Furthermore the sterrasters are about half the size of those of our new species, and the largest oxyasters are twice as large as those of our new species. Most other species reported from the region differ more clearly by lacking cortical oxeas (
G. australis
Da Silva & Mothes, 2000
,
G. riograndensis
Da Silva & Mothes, 2000
,
G. splendida
Da Silva & Mothes, 2000
,
G. pachydermata
(
Sollas, 1886
)
,
G. thomsonii
Schmidt, 1870
,
G. apiarium
(
Schmidt, 1870
)
and
G. tylastra
Boury-Esnault, 1973
), having dichotriaenes (
G. spherastrea
Lévi, 1964
), or having much shorter structural oxeas (
G. gibberosa
,
G. papyracea
Hechtel, 1965
,
G. corticostylifera
Hajdu
et al.
1996
,
G. neptuni
Sollas, 1886
, and
G. vosmaeri
Sollas, 1886
). Deep water species from the opposite side of the Atlantic differ likewise from our new species:
G. divaricans
Topsent, 1928
has dichotriaenes,
G. glariosa
(
Sollas, 1886
)
has oxeas less than
2 mm
in length, and
G. ramosa
(
Topsent, 1928
)
and
G. globus
Schmidt, 1870
lack cortical oxeas.