Marine sponges (Porifera: Demospongiae) from the Gulf of México, new records and redescription of Erylus trisphaerus (de Laubenfels, 1953)
Author
Ugalde, Diana
Author
Gómez, Patricia
Author
Simões, Nuno
text
Zootaxa
2015
3911
2
151
183
journal article
42349
10.11646/zootaxa.3911.2.1
8baa9579-e863-47db-b025-7acc20458ac0
1175-5326
238815
5C32A1B4-E4AB-4BC3-8E8A-1BF435587D17
Chelonaplysilla aff
.
erecta
Tsurnamal, 1967
(
Fig. 21
A–C)
Selected synonymy:
Chelonaplysilla erecta
Tsurnamal, 1967
:96
; van
Soest 1978
:71.
Material examined
.
CNPGG
–1413 Alacranes reef (
22°23’42.7”N
,
89°42’20”W
) depth
5 m
,
01/VIII/2009
.
Description
. Thinly encrusting a dead coral,
1 to 7 mm
thick (
Fig. 21
A). The sponge surface is strongly conulose, with long and acute conules
1–3 mm
apart,
1–2 mm
high, and reinforced by a neat reticulation of sand grains embedded in a very thin ectosome in which pores are included. It is of black color in life and deep purple in alcohol, leaving a reddish-purple exudate in alcohol.
Skeleton
. The ectosomal skeleton is a delicate, rounded network composed of sand grains embedded in tracts, 16–50 µm thick, arranged in a regular mesh pattern 160–270 µm wide (
Fig. 21
B). The choanosomal skeleton consists of dendritic fibres, 60–140 µm in width (
Fig. 21
C), of the same color as the exudate; these appear to be pithed but the sheathed fibres typical of the family produce this effect (van
Soest 1978
).
Distribution and ecology
.
Curaçao
,
Puerto Rico
(van
Soest 1978
) and eastern Mediterranean (
Tsurnamal 1967
); probably
Brazil
(
Hajdu
et al.
2011
). This is the first record for the Gulf of
Mexico
and Mexican coast.
Remarks
. Specimens assigned to
Chelonaplysilla erecta
from the western Atlantic awaits thorough revision, due to the difficulty to discern
C. erecta
, from eastern Mediterranean (
Tsurnamal 1967
) from another form found in the Red Sea (Row 1911, as
Megalopastas erectus
). These two homonym names need to be reviewed to determine if they represent the same or different species. For the moment, only one undisputed
Chelonaplysilla
species has been reported in the western Atlantic, viz.
C
.
betinensis
Zea
& van Soest 1986. Specimens recorded in
Cuba
lack the ectosomal fiber network composed of sand grains (Alcolado 2002), which is a characteristic feature of
Chelonaplysilla
cf
erecta
, most probably because they were collected from mangrove roots close to the sea surface.