Sponges of the Guyana Shelf
Author
Van, Rob W. M.
text
Zootaxa
2017
1
1
225
journal article
37320
10.5281/zenodo.272951
e2c88f4c-3ac2-45f9-95e4-99b75561a081
1175-5326
272951
6D68A019-6F63-4AA4-A8B3-92D351F1F69B
Hymerhabdia kobluki
sp. nov.
Figures 72
a–e
Hymerhabdia
sp.
Kobluk & Van Soest 1989
: 1215
.
Material examined.
Holotype
RMNH
Por. 9844,
Guyana
, ‘
Snellius O.C.P.S.
’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station H57,
7.595°N
56.8767°W
, depth
94 m
, bottom coarse sand shells,
11 May 1966
.
Additional material.
ZMA
Por. 12584,
Caribbean Netherlands, Bonaire
, W coast N and S of
Kralendijk
,
12.15°N
68.278°W
, framework cavities, depth
24–30 m
, coll.
D.R. Kobluk
#BO-84-12, 1988
;
ZMA
Por. 22017,
Colombia
, Cartagena, Islas del Rosario, Isla Pavitos
, SCUBA,
25 m
depth, coll. M. Kielman #82,
11 October 1990
.
Description.
(
Fig. 72
a) Microlobate sponge encrusting a piece of limestone. The small lobes are separated by thin grooves. Surface microhispid, no oscules are visible (preserved state, likely contracted). Lateral expansion about 3
x
2
cm, thickness
2–3 mm
. Color (in alcohol) dull yellow to beige (probably orange in life, because the additional Colombian specimen ZMA Por. 22017 was reported to be orange in life). Consistency firm.
Skeleton.
(
Fig. 72
b) The small lobes are V-shaped, dense masses of erect styles, heads buried in a lateral, confused, mass of oxeas.
No
special ectosomal skeleton.
Spicules.
(
Figs 72
c–e) Styles, oxeas.
Styles (
Figs 72
c–d), straight or slightly curved, predominantly just below the head, in a large range of length and thickness, incompletely sorted into (1) larger thick styles (
Figs 72
c,c1) 632–1176
x 12–36
µm, (2) short thick styles 498–570
x 24–31
µm, and (3) short thin styles (
Fig. 72
d1) 264–387
x 9–18
µm, presumed to be thin growth stages. Overall size of styles 264–
736
–
1176 x 9
–
24.1
–36 µm.
Oxeas (
Figs 72
e,e1), mostly provided with a sharp bend in the middle or slightly excentrally, usually sharply pointed at both ends, but strongylote forms are present, 264–
424
–601
x 9
–
14.9
–19 µm.
FIGURE 72.
Hymerhabdia kobluki
sp. nov.
,
a, habitus of holotype RMNH Por. 9844 (scale bar = 1 cm), b, cross section of skeleton, c–e, SEM images of spicules, c, large thick styles, c1, details of c, d, short styles, d1, thin growth stage of d, e, angularly bent oxeas, e1, apices of e.
Distribution and ecology.
Guyana
Shelf,
Bonaire
, Colombian Caribbean, in reef caves at
24–30 m
depth (
Kobluk & Van Soest 1989
) and on sandy bottom at
94 m
depth (
Guyana
Shelf).
Etymology
. Named after the late Professor D.R. Kobluk of the University of Toronto Mississauga, who collected the first specimen of the species from
Bonaire
.
Remarks.
This species was previously reported by
Kobluk &
Van Soest
(1989)
from
Bonaire
.
Apart from this find,
Hymerhabdia
species have so far not been reported from the
Central West
Atlantic. The genus is known mostly from the
Mediterranean-Atlantic region
, with a single species,
H. oxeata
(
Dendy, 1924
)
(p. 349, originally as
Bubaris oxeata
) recorded from
Northern
New Zealand
.
This species shows considerable similarity with the present new species, virtually the only difference being the smaller size of the oxeas, given as 270
x 12
µm by Dendy, remeasured later by
Alvarez &
Van Soest
(2002)
as 180–310
x 5–10
µm.
The
structure and the great size range of the styles is almost exactly that of the
Guyana
species
.
The
New Zealand
species was made the
type
of the genus
Uplexoa
De Laubenfels, 1936
, subsequently synonymized with
Hymerhabdia
by
Alvarez &
Van Soest
(2002)
(p. 752).
Because
now two species with closely similar properties are found to exist it might be in order to revive the genus
Uplexoa
.