Diversity of marine bryozoans inhabiting demosponges in northeastern Brazil
Author
Almeida, Ana C. S.
Author
Souza, Facelucia B. C.
Author
Menegola, Carla
Author
Vieira, Leandro M.
text
Zootaxa
2017
4290
2
281
323
journal article
32714
10.11646/zootaxa.4290.2.3
eeec8306-8c71-4db6-834a-c70396d43a82
1175-5326
892719
0AE2706B-F77D-4903-B3A6-BB11891CD67B
Microporella curta
n. sp.
(
Figs. 66–71
;
Table 7
)
Material examined.
Holotype
:
UFBA
1580
,
Todos
os
Santos Bay
,
13°00’S
,
38°32’W
,
3–8 m
, coll. 2013 (on sponge
Callyspongia
sp.)
.
Paratype
:
UFBA
1582
,
Todos
os
Santos Bay
,
13°00’S
,
38°32’W
,
3–8 m
, coll. 2013 (on sponge
Callyspongia
sp.).
Type
locality.
Todos
os
Santos Bay
,
Bahia
State, NE
Brazil
.
Etymology.
From Latin
curtus
, short, alluding to the thin row of calcification around the primary orifice of non-ovicelled zooids.
Description.
Colony encrusting, uni- to multilamellar. Autozooids large, irregularly polygonal to hexagonal, separated by raised walls. Frontal shield slightly convex, with small rounded nodes and uniformly punctured by numerous rounded pseudopores except for the area between ascopore and orifice. Marginal pores more elongate than pseudopores. Primary orifice almost D-shaped, distal edge smooth and proximal border serrated with 12–18 triangular denticles. Autozooids with a thin row of calcification around the primary orifice, not obscuring it. Nonovicelled zooids with three or four oral spines. Ascopore situated proximal to orifice at a distance about half of orifice length, reniform, surrounded by a thin rim, with a rounded median process and a crescentic (C-shaped) lumen, margins with regularly spaced sharp denticles. Avicularium single, placed proximolateral and below to the orifice and ascopore, directing distolaterally and slightly upwards, rostrum narrowing distinctly distal to complete crossbar, forming a chute-like strucure in distal half, uncalcified area proximal to crossbar semicircular. Sometimes the avicularium reaches the neighboring zooid. Ovicelled zooids with no visible oral spines; ooecia personate, i.e. with tall and thin granular collar, distally adjacent to ascopore but not obscuring it, raised over orifice and distally joined to thin, smooth, almost straight rim on proximal edge of ooecium forming a complete peristome. Remarkably large marginal pores easily seen around ooecia. Ovicells prominent; ooecium globose, closed by zooidal operculum; endooecial surface similar to autozooidal frontal shield. Aperture in ovicelled zooids transversally oval to quadrangular.
FIGURES 66–71.
Microporella curta
n. sp.
, UFBA 1580, holotype, Bahia State, Brazil.
66,
Group of autozooids;
67,
Detail of autozooid with four oral spines and a single avicularium;
68,
Detail of D-shaped primary orifice and reniform ascopore;
69,
Detail of avicularium;
70,
Zooids with personate ovicells;
71,
Detail of ovicell. Scale bars: 66 = 200 µm; 67, 71 = 100 µm; 68, 69 = 50 µm; 70 = 250 µm.
Remarks.
Among the 92 valid
Microporella
species (
Bock 2016
),
Microporella curta
n. sp.
most resembles
Microporella browni
Harmelin, Ostrovsky, Cáceres-Chamizo & Sanner, 2011
,
Microporella collaroides
Harmelin, Ostrovsky, Cáceres-Chamizo & Sanner, 2011
,
Microporella dentilingua
Tilbrook, 2006
,
Microporella harmeri
Hayward, 1988
and
Microporella orientalis
(
Harmer, 1957
)
in having personate ovicells, a reniform denticulate ascopore, and a single avicularium placed the ascopore. Differences between
Microporella curta
n. sp.
and
M. browni
are the number of oral spines (
4 in
Microporella curta
n. sp.
and
3–7 in
M. browni
), and the primary orifice (with smooth distal edge and without condyles in
Microporella curta
n. sp.
, and with serrated distal edge and with low condyles in
M. browni
).
Microporella collaroides
is distinct in having an orifice with a wavy distal edge and lateral condyles (primary orifice smooth distally and without condyles in
M. curta
n. sp.
).
Microporella curta
n. sp.
differs from
M. dentilingua
in having polygonal autozooids (roughly hexagonal in
M. dentilingua
), 4 oral spines (
3 in
M. dentilingua
), and longer orifices (in
M. dentilingua
it is about
0.07 mm
long).
Microporella harmeri
is distinct in having 2–5 oral spines that disappear in later astogeny (4 conspicuous oral spines in
M. curta
n. sp.
), and a lanceolate avicularium mandible (setiform in
M. curta
n. sp.
).
Microporella orientalis
can be distinguished from
M. curta
n. sp.
in having 3 oral ephemeral spines (4 conspicuous in
M. curta
n. sp.
).
At least 12 species of
Microporella
are recorded in the
Western
Atlantic Ocean, three of which are reported from
Brazil
:
Microporella cucullata
Canu & Bassler, 1928a
,
Microporella proxima
Ramalho, Muricy & Taylor, 2011
and
Microporella umbracula
(
Audouin, 1826
)
.
Microporella curta
n. sp.
is distinct from
M. cucullata
in the secondary calcification around the orifice in the autozooids (in
M. cucullata
the secondary calficiation forms a hood-like structure), avicularia placement and direction (below the ascopore and obliquely directed in
M. curta
n. sp.
, and above the ascopore and laterally directed in
M. cucullata
), and smaller zooids (those from
M. cucullata
are
0.544 to 0.638 mm
long and 0.438 to 0.700 mm wide).
Microporella proxima
differs in the frontal and ovicell calcification (smooth in
M. curta
n. sp.
and pustulose in
M. proxima
), avicularia (placed laterally and below the ascopore in
M. curta
n. sp.
, and near zooidal margins in
M. proxima
), and in larger zooidal measurements (autozooids of
Mi. proxima
are
0.392 to 0.441 mm
long and
0.294 to 0.343 mm
wide, and orifices are
0.64 to 0.79 mm
long and 0.93 to
0.107 mm
wide).
Microporella umbracula
is readily distinguished from
M. curta
n. sp.
by the paired, upward directed avicularia.
We found large colonies of
M. curta
n. sp.
firmly attached to the basal surface of the sponge
Callyspongia
sp. Other
Microporella
species are commonly found encrusting shells, corals, algae and hydrozoans (e.g.,
Canu & Bassler 1928a
;
Marcus 1937
;
Winston 1984
,
2005
;
Harmelin
et al.
2011
;
Ramalho
et al.
2011
).
Distribution.
Atlantic:
Brazil
(
Bahia
).