Sponges associated with octocorals in the Indo-Pacific, with the description of four new species
Author
Calcinai, Barbara
Author
Bavestrello, Giorgio
Author
Bertolino, Marco
Author
Pica, Daniela
Author
Wagner, Daniel
Author
Cerrano, Carlo
text
Zootaxa
2013
3617
1
1
61
journal article
39041
10.11646/zootaxa.3617.1.1
6174b35e-3228-4d50-a6ed-844e244f8b64
1175-5326
248150
4DCCD152-65DA-44A3-AB19-59811384E1E7
Family
Esperiopsidae Hentschel, 1923
Genus
Amphilectus
Vosmaer, 1880
Amphilectus
sp.
(
Fig. 20
A–F)
Examined material. Sample Bugor 327:
Indonesia
, North Sulawesi, Siladen
Island
, Siladen Barat,
5 m
,
January 2007
.
FIGURE 20.
Amphilectus
sp. A, Sponge on several fragments of
Carijoa riisei
, the arrow indicates the massively encrusting portion of the sponge; B, Close up of the gelatinous, smooth surface, the arrows indicate larvae; C, Choanosomal skeleton of sinuous tracts of styles; D, Style; E, Sigma; F, Anchorate isochela and magnification of the crest.
Description. The sponge encrusts several branches of
Carijoa riisei
(up to
12 cm
long) as a thin film of about
0.5 mm
thick (
Fig. 20
A); on some branches the sponge becomes thicker and massively encrusting (
Fig. 20
A); in all the branches the anthocodiae are free to expand and retract (
Fig. 20
B). Consistency is gelatinous, surface smooth. Light yellow in ethanol (
Fig. 20
A, B). Numerous larvae and eggs are dispersed in the tissue (
Fig. 20
B).
Skeleton. The skeleton organisation is difficult to determine, due to the consistency of the sponge. Scattered, tangential styles are present on the sponge surface; sinuous tracts of styles, vaguely interconnecting and running without a clear direction, are present in the inner part of the sponge. Scattered spicules among tracts (
Fig. 20
C).
Spicules. Straight, smooth styles (
Fig. 20
D), 167.5 – (180.8 ± 9.1) – 195
x 2
– (2.4 ± 0.2) – 2.5 μm. Sigmas “C” shaped (
Fig. 20
E), 15 – (22.3 ± 8.5) – 40 μm. Anchorate isochelae with three narrow teeth and a groove along the dorsal margin of the spicule, forming a crest (
Fig. 20
F), 12.5 – (13 ± 1.1) – 15 μm.
Remarks. The species here described has chelae that remind of the arcuate, often unguiferate chelae typical of the genera
Strongylacidon
and
Chondropsis
(family
Chondropsidae
). However,
Strongylacidon
is characterised by strongyles as megascleres and by an ectosomal skeleton consisting of brushes of strongyles deriving from the choanosomal tracts (van Soest, 2002b). Moreover, sand grains and foreign material are conspicuous in this genus and have a structural role in the fibres. These features do not seem to characterise the present specimen. On the other hand, the skeleton is not clearly interpretable. The presence of an ectosomal skeleton of tangential styles, absent in species of
Chondropsis
, is here detectable but structural sand or foreign material (typical of
Chondropsis
) are not present. On the basis of these considerations we prefer to attribute this specimen to
Amphilectus
, taking choanosomal architecure as a better performing character than microsclere shape (Hajdu & van
Soest, 1996
).
The presence of styles, isochelae and sigmas characterizes the genera
Esperiopsis
and
Amphilectus
.
Amphilectus
is very close to
Esperiopsis
and the main discriminating characters are the size of the styles (<400 μm) and the absence of sigmas in
Amphilectus
(van
Soest & Hajdu 2002a
)
. However, at least one species of
Amphilectus
was described with sigmas (
A. glaber
Brøndsted, 1924
) and at least two species of
Esperiopsis
have styles <400 μm. In van
Soest & Hajdu (2002a)
these two genera are described as possessing a different skeleton:
Amphilectus
with regularly isodictyal, anisotropic skeleton, and
Esperiopsis
with irregularly anastomosing spicule tracts.
Amphilectus glaber
(
Brøndsted, 1924
)
,
A. munitus
Whitelegge, 1907
, and
A. unciger
(
Topsent, 1928
)
are all reported from the Indo-Pacific (van
Soest et al. 2011
).
Amphilectus munitus
and
A. unciger
do not have sigmas.
Amphilectus glaber
has larger styles (200 – 370
x 10
μm) and the choanosomal skeleton consists of a regular network of rectangular meshes. Numerous species of
Esperiopsis
are known from the Indo-Pacific (van
Soest et al. 2011
), but only two of these species have styles that are <400 μm:
E. diasolenia
Lévi, 1993
and
E. magnifolia
Lévi, 1993
(250–300 μm and 350–450 μm, respectively); nevertheless these species are devoid of sigmas, and chelae are longer (28–40 μm in
E. diasolenia
and 30 μm, and 40–60 μm in
E. magnifolia
). These species are clearly different from our Indonesian specimen, which is characterised by short styles (<400 μm) and by a single category of chelae and sigmas. This spicule complement, in particular the short styles, prompts us to attribute this specimen to the genus
Amphilectus
. Unfortunately the small size of the sample prevents a clear interpretation of the skeleton, and therefore we refrain from formally describing a new species from this material.