South African Latrunculiidae (Porifera: Demospongiae: Poecilosclerida): descriptions of new species of Latrunculia du Bocage, Strongylodesma Lévi, and Tsitsikamma Samaai & Kelly
Author
Samaai, Toufiek
Author
Gibbons, Mark J.
Author
Kelly, Michelle
Author
Davies-Coleman, Mike
text
Zootaxa
2003
371
1
26
journal article
51240
10.5281/zenodo.156901
dee4aba8-8b9f-431f-8e28-4f29f0c3c3a8
11755326
156901
Strongylodesma algoaensis
sp. nov.
(
Figs 3
D, 5E, 6D)
Holotype
material.
BMNH
1996.7.3.3: Algoa Bay, Port Elizabeth,
South Africa
,
33° 50' S
,
25° 45'E
, collected by P. Coetzee, University of Port Elizabeth,
15 April 1994
,
15 m.
Paratype
material.
SAM
H
4964: Algoa Bay, Port Elizabeth,
South Africa
,
33° 50'S
,
25° 45'E
, collected by Dr P. Coetzee, University of Port Elizabeth,
15 April 1994
,
15 m.
Description.
Spherical to semispherical sponge, up to
6 cm
high and
6 cm
wide (
Fig. 3
D). Texture soft, compressible, fleshy. Surface smooth, with numerous scattered large vaseshaped membranous oscules, 2–
4
x
2–6 mm
wide and high, and fungiform areolate porefields
1 mm
high and
3–5 mm
wide. Sand particles are present in the sponge surface. Exterior and interior colour in life oak brown, in ethanol, dark chocolate brown. Contain biologicallyactive pyrroloquilonine alkaloids, discorhabdins A, D & H and 3dihydrodiscorhabdins (M. DaviesColeman pers. comm. 2001).
Spicules. Megascleres —
Anisostrongyles (
Fig. 6
D): smooth, with a distinctive axial canal, 328 (307–355)
x 9
(7.2–9.6) m.
Skeleton.
The choanosomal skeleton consists of an irregular polygonalmeshed reticulation of wispy tracts of anisostrongyles approximately
95–100 m
thick (
Fig. 5
E). Towards the surface the tracts are perpendicular to the surface of the sponge, diverging just beneath the ectosome into fine plumose brushes
120–150 m
thick. The subectosome is composed of a loose feltwork of paratangential anisostrongyles approximately
120–200 m
deep, above which these spicules become erect or oblique and pierce the surface. Anisostrongyles form a compact palisade around the opening of the papillae.
Ecology.
Moderately rugged rocky bottom, patches of sand between rocks, together with coral and other sponges,
15 m
.
Etymology.
Named for Algoa Bay, Port Elizabeth, the location of discovery for this new species.
Remarks.
Strongylodesma algoaensis
sp. nov.
is very similar to species of
Latrunculia
in the field, with areolate porefields, a soft, inflated, compressible texture, and typical brownish colouration. It is only at the histological level that the genus and this species is distinguishable, by a lack of microscleres.
Strongylodesma algoaensis
sp. nov.
differs from the genus
holotype
S. areolata
Lévi
by the larger size of the megascleres ((299 (282–319)
x 6
(5–7) um in the
holotype
MNHN VEM 131DCL 1425), and in the possession of smooth strongyles (as opposed to faintly terminally spined strongyles in the
holotype
). The subectosomal skeleton of the
holotype
is a clear band of collagenous mesohyl
227–270 m
thick, the base of which is a thin band of paratangential strongyles (
20 m
deep) (see Samaai and Kelly, 2002; Samaai, 2002). This clear region is absent in
S. algoaensis
sp. nov
.. The areolate porefields of
S. algoaensis
sp. nov.
are fungiform while those of the
holotype
are flat and circular or elliptical.