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
10.11646/zootaxa.5318.2.1
1175-5326
8162357
88714F9C-0EE5-4295-9988-3CEEF242489D
Stelletta clarella
de Laubenfels, 1930
Figure 25
Material examined.
IZC00048471
, Inner Carmel Pinnacle (
36.55852
,
-121.96820
),
10–24 m
, 9/22/21.
Morphology.
Globular,
10 cm
across, with
5 mm
of spicule plush covering the outside and trapping copious debris. White alive and when preserved.
Skeleton.
Not investigated.
Spicules.
Oxeas, dichotriaenes, plagiotriaenes, oxyasters and spheroxyasters; abundant styles also present but presumed foreign.
Oxeas: 3881–4913–6118 x 15–35–63 μm (n=11).
Dichotriaenes: Shaft lengths 2444–4214–5549 x 54–71–91 μm (n=11); chord lengths 150–257–335 μm (n=14).
Plagiotriaenes: Shaft lengths 2334–3139–3944 x 23–57–76 μm (n=2); chord lengths 106–194–253 μm (n=6).
Oxyasters: 10–12–13 μm (n=9).
Spheroxyasters: Small and irregular, with minute spines. 4–5–7 μm (n=22).
Styles: Abundant but presumed to be foreign because they are not known from this species, and have not been seen in other samples examined by the authors. 162–187–216 x 4–5–6 μm (n=7).
Distribution and habitat.
Common in Northern and Central
California
, from the intertidal to deep water. Occurs as far north as southern
Alaska
. Additional work is needed to determine if
S. clarella
is also found in Southern
California
(see Remarks). Not known from artificial substrates.
Remarks.
Stelletta clarella
was described from Pescadero Point, near the Carmel Pinnacles where this sample was collected, and is the only
Stelletta
known from Central
California
. A second species,
S. estrella
de Laubenfels 1930
, was described from Southern
California
, but this species was proposed to be a junior synonym of
S. clarella
by
Bakus and Green (1987)
. Here we follow
Lee (2007)
and propose that
S. estrella
may be a junior synonym, but more work is needed to be sure.