Coping with brackish water: A new species of cave-dwelling Protosuberites (Porifera: Demospongiae: Suberitidae) from the Western Mediterranean and a first contribution to the phylogenetic relationships within the genus
Author
Melis, Paolo
Author
Riesgo, Ana
Author
Taboada, Sergio
Author
Manconi, Renata
text
Zootaxa
2016
4208
4
349
364
journal article
37400
10.5281/zenodo.208344
7109ca32-dd6d-438b-a6fe-60325a4c9e48
1175-5326
208344
B827BB02-8D58-42E0-AD3A-AFBBCB2F6853
Protosuberites mereui
Manconi
sp. nov.
Figs 1–4
;
Tables 1
,
3
,
4
Material examined
.
Holotype
:
MSNG
59362
, BUEMARCAVE 21,
Bue Marino Cave
,
40°14'48.19" N
,
9°37'22.76"E
, southern branch, mixohaline pool ‘
Lago degli Specchi’
,
Eastern Sardinia
,
western Tyrrhenian Sea
, ca.
0.30–1 m
of depth,
R. Manconi
legit,
vi.2008
.
Paratypes: MSNG 59363, BUEMARCAVE 22, ibid.; MSNG 59364, BUEMARCAVE 30, ibid.; BMNH 2016.10.28.1, PROTOBM 0 3, ibid.; BMNH 2016.10.28.2, PROTOBM 0 4, ibid.; BMNH 2016.10.28.3, PROTOBM 0 5, ibid.; BMNH 2016.10.28.4, PROTOBM 0 6, ibid.; BMNH 2016.10.28.5, PROTOBM 0 7, ibid.; BMNH 2016.10.28.6, PROTOBM 0 8, ibid., P. Melis legit,
viii.2013
.
Other material: PROTOBM01, 0 2, 0 9, ibid., P. Melis legit; BUEMARCAVE, several specimens, slides and stubs, ibid., Daniela Demurtas legit, R. Manconi’s collection at DIPNET.
Comparative materials.
Details of all material studied from other comparable
Protosuberites
species and from the literature are given in
Table 1
. In addition,
Protosuberites
cf.
epiphytum
(Lamarck, 1815)
was studied from the
Mediterranean Sea G.
Pulitzer-Finali Collection at DISTAV, slides: TRI.274, Porto Tricase,
Apulia
, conglomerates,
30 m
depth,
24.ix.1970
;
PC.125, Taranto, Mar Piccolo,
Apulia
, encrusting on stone,
0.5 m
depth,
18.vii.1973
;
GAR.74, Gargano,
Baia di Campi
,
Apulia
, rocks and mud,
2–10 m
depth,
15.ix.1971
.
FIGURE 2.
Protosuberites mereui
sp. nov.
A. Encrusting specimen (dry) on a rocky fragment, with branched subdermal canals leading to small, scattered oscules. The serpulid
Ficopomatus enigmaticus
is evident on the right. B. Magnification of an osculum. C. Specimen on a plastic fragment (ethanol).
FIGURE 3.
Protosuberites mereui
sp. nov.
Spicules and skeleton (SEM). A. Smooth tylostyle with suboval head. B-C. Head of tylostyles. D. Skeletal architecture with hispidation due to erect tylostyles. E. Detail of the osculum with tylostyles loosely arranged in bundles in the thicker portions of the thinly encrusting sponge.
FIGURE 4.
Protosuberites mereui
sp. nov.
Resting bodies (gemmule-like). A. Suboval resting body (LM) with a flat base and unarmed protective theca filled by a mass of totipotent cells (centre); empty theca of transparent spongin (left). A1. Theca of sublayered compact spongin and a single, distal, evident foramen bearing a well-developed collar (LM). B. Schematic drawing of a resting body (lateral view). B1. Foramen detail with protruding collar (top), and closed foramen lacking collar (bottom). B- B1 by courtesy of R. Pronzato.
Description. Growth form
encrusting, very thin (
ca
.
1–2 mm
in thickness) in patches (from a few cm² up to
1 m
²) on rocky substrata.
Colour
light yellow
in vivo
, whitish after preservation in ethanol (
Fig. 2
).
Consistency
firm.
Surface
hispid due to tips of spicules, with subdermal canals and scattered oscules.
Ectosomal
skeleton lacking special architecture, with distal tips of spicules supporting the dermal membrane.
Choanosomal skeleton
of erected brushes of tylostyles from single in thinner portions to loosely arranged as tylostyles bundles/tufts in the thicker portions (
Fig. 3
d).
Basal spongin plate
well developed in the surroundings of resting stages and in general armed by tylostyles heads.
Megascleres
tylostyles 100(295.3)650
x 3
(5.03)10 µm (n=200;
Table 3
) belonging to three length size classes 130–180 µm; 280–330 µm; 380–430 µm, straight to slightly bent, frequently sinuous, entirely smooth, with heads from rounded to suboval (4–11 µm in width,
Fig. 3
a, b, c). Very rare small tylostyles with mushroom-like head, sinuous thin and short shaft (110–232 x 0.5–1 µm) also present. Very rare subtylostyles also present (
Table 3
).
Resting bodies
(gemmule-like) suboval, flat, firmly adhering to the substratum and scattered singly or in small groups (2–3) (
Fig. 4
).
Theca
of resting bodies as sublayered compact spongin (
ca
. 12 µm in thickness) with a smooth outer surface not armed by spicules (
Fig. 4
a1).
Active resting bodies
with evident
Species Spicule Length x Thickness Resting Geographic Presence in References
TABLE 3
. Genus
Protosuberites
. Comparative list of spicular complement morphotraits for species with the strongest affinities with
P. mereui
sp. nov.
Minimum, average (in bold), and maximum length x thickness of spicules are given when available.
type µm bodies range brackish
water
mereui
sp. nov.
Tylostyles (100–
295.3
–650) x (3–
5.03
–10) YES W-Mediterranean Sea YES Present Paper
(very rare
subtylostyles)
rugosus
(
Topsent, 1893
) Tylostyles (200–1200)
x 8
(shaft)
x 12
(head) NO Mediterranean Sea NO
Topsent, 1893
prototipus
Tylostyles
(162–417) x (5–7) NO Black Sea NO
Swartschewsky, 1905 Swartschewsky, 1905
denhartogi
Tylostyles
(110–
258.7
–456) x (4–
6.3–
11) NO N-Atlantic Ocean NO
Soest &Kluijver, 2003 Soest & Kluijver, 2003
(rarely 600)
Ackers
et al
., 1992
ectyoninus
Subtylostyles
(97–
204.97
–320) x (2.5–
4.71–
9.5) NO N-Atlantic Ocean NO Present paper
Topsent, 1900
) Tylostyles (145–400) x (7–13) Mediterranean Sea
cf.
epiphytum
Tylostyles
(100–300) x (4–7) NO N-Atlantic Ocean NO Topsent,
sensu
Topsent, 1900
)
1900
P. Denhartogi
modestus
Tylostyles (400–1050) x (8–14) NO N-Atlantic Ocean NO Pulitzer-Finali, 1978 Pulitzer-Finali, 1978) Mediterranean Sea
incrustans
Tylostyles
(225–
320.7
–477) x NO N-Atlantic Ocean NO Present paper
Hansen, 1885
) (7.38–
10.02–
15.11) Mediterranean Sea
ferrerhernandezi
Tylostyles (135.3–
510.1
– 965.6) x NO N-Atlantic Ocean NO Boury-Esnault & Lopes, Boury-Esnault & Lopes, 2.7–
8–
20.7 1985 1985)
aquaedulcioris
Tylostyles
, 330
x 5
YES Bay of Bengal YES
Annandale, 1914 Annandale, 1914
) subtylostyles, S-Atlantic Ocean
oxeas (rare bent
centrotylotes)
collaris
Tylostyles
±800 NO Laut Banda YES
Annandale, 1924 Annandale, 1924
) Laut Jawa
Wallacea
lacustris
Tylostyles
(560–580)
x 8
YES Bay of Bengal YES
Annandale, 1915 Annandale, 1915
) Subtylostyles Indian Ocean
single foraminal aperture and collar closer to the distal part of the suboval theca (430 µm, total length with collar) (
Fig. 4
).
Foramen
with well-developed, thin-walled, transparent collar (ca. 80 µm in length) (
Fig. 4
).
Inactive resting bodies
present in the same specimens with no foraminal aperture and no collar, but bearing a small area apparently devoid of cells closer to the distal part of the longer axis of the suboval theca (
Fig. 4
).
Habitat and topographic distribution.
The population of
Protosuberites mereui
sp. nov.
occurs as scattered
facies
(up to
1 m
²
covered area) in mixohaline pool water within the totally dark main tunnel of the estuarine/ anchialine southern branch of the Bue Marino Cave. In this part of the cave, salinity varies from 24 ‰ up to 39.6 ‰, depending on the point, depth and date of sampling. Substrata range from vertical limestone walls and large boulders to artificial substrata (plastic) at
0.5–1 m
of depth. The new species share the same microhabitat with the serpulid
Ficopomatus enigmaticus
(Fauvel, 1923)
and sometime with unidentified haplosclerid sponges. The kamptozoan
Barentsia gracilis
M. Sars, 1835
was strictly associated with the suberitid sponges.
Geographic range.
Protosuberites mereui
sp. nov.
is only known from the
type
locality Bue Marino Cave in the central-eastern Sardinian Karst, western Tyrrhenian Sea.
Etymology.
The species is dedicated to the Sardinian speleologist and photographer Luigi Mereu, who died prematurely during the exploration of a terrestrial cave, in recognition of his key contribution in the present research.