Sponge biodiversity of South Georgia island with descriptions of fifteen new species
Author
Goodwin, Claire
National Museums Northern Ireland, 153 Bangor Road, Cultra, Holywood, County Down, BT 18 0 EU & Shallow Marine Surveys Group, PO Box 598, Stanley, FIQQ 1 ZZ, Falkland Islands
Author
Brickle, Paul
Shallow Marine Surveys Group, PO Box 598, Stanley, FIQQ 1 ZZ, Falkland Islands & South Atlantic Environmental Research Institute, PO Box 609, Stanley, FIQQ 122, Falkland Islands
text
Zootaxa
2012
2012-11-07
3542
1
48
journal article
1175-5326
8D917062-2FC8-4EE9-83A0-FDDCB6A08F45
Clathria (Microciona) matthewsi
sp. nov.
(
Figure 8
)
Type material:
Holotype
:
BELUM
Mc
7606.
Sample
in 95% ethanol, tissue section and spicule preparation on slides;
Rosita Harbour Site
2,
South Georgia
(
54°00.649’S
,
37° 25.618’W
); depth
11.5m
; collected by
C. Goodwin
, J. Brown, and
S. Brown
,
20
th
November 2010
.
Paratypes
:
Samples
in 95% ethanol, tissue section and spicule preparation on slides
.
BELUM
Mc
7625.
Right Whale Bay
,
South Georgia
(
54°00.173’S
,
37° 40.856’W
); depth
18m
; collected by
C. Goodwin
,
J. Brown
and
S. Brown
,
21
st
November 2010
.
BELUM
Mc
7631 and
BELUM
Mc
7632.
Bird Sound Site
1,
South Georgia
(
54°02.058’S
,
38° 00.242’W
); depth
18m
; collected by
C. Goodwin
,
S. Cartwright
and
P. Brickle
,
22
nd
November 2010
.
BELUM
Mc
7667.
Husvik
,
South Georgia
(
54°10.285’S
,
36° 40.412’W
); depth
18m
; collected by
C. Goodwin
,
D. Poncet
and
P. Brewin
,
26
th
November 2010
.
BELUM
Mc
7678.
Green Island
,
Stromness
,
Site
1,
South Georgia
(
54°09.448’S
,
36° 39.752’W
); depth
17.4m
; collected by
C. Goodwin
,
P. Brickle
and
S. Cartwright
,
27
th
November 2010
.
Etymology:
Named for marine mammal biologist Dr Leonard Harrison Matthews who worked on
South Georgia
during the Discovery Antarctic Investigations.
External morphology:
In situ appearance:
Lemon
to custard yellow thinly encrusting (<
3mm
thick) sponge forming small patches, up to
15cm
maximum diameter, on bedrock. The surface of the sponge is smooth without obvious exhalent canals or oscules (
Fig. 8a
).
Preserved appearance:
Thin cream crust with a smooth surface.
Skeleton:
The choanosome is plumose with ascending choanosomal columns of primary acanthostyles very strongly echinated by secondary acanthostyles. Columns placed closely so that the ends of the echinating acanthostyles intermesh. The ectosomal skeleton consists of brushes of a separate category of ectosomal styles (
Fig. 8b
).
FIGURE 8.
Clathria (Microciona) matthewsi
sp. nov.
a)
In situ
appearance
specimen Mc7606, scale bar 5cm; b) Skeleton Mc7606, ectosome to top, scale bar 500µm; Spicules Mc7606 c) Primary acanthostyle, scale bar 100µm, d) Secondary acanthostyle, scale bar 10µm, e) ectosomal style, scale bar 10µm, f) toxa, scale bar 10µm, g) chelae, scale bar 10µm.
Spicules:
Measurements from Mc7606.
Primary acanthostyles:
244(354)432 by 15.8(18.3)24.5µm. Head not tylote. Spined only basally, to about 1/8 up shaft from the head, with small spines (
Fig. 8c
).
Secondary acanthostyles:
85(108)196 by 9.3(13.8)20.8µm. Entirely spined with large conical spines along their entire length, head not tylote (
Fig. 8d
).
Ectosomal styles:
168(217)254 by 7.6(9.2)11.5µm. Microspined on head (
Fig. 8e
).
Toxa:
59(86)121µm with spined ends (
Fig. 8f
).
Chelae:
9(10)11µm very abundant (
Fig.
8g
).
Remarks:
We have assigned these specimens to the subgenus
Clathria (Microciona)
on the basis of their encrusting growth form and plumose skeletal architecture (Hooper 2002). There are four species of
Clathria (Microciona)
which have been recorded from the Antarctic and South Atlantic:
C.antarctica
(
Topsent, 1917
)
,
C. basispinosa
(
Burton, 1934
)
,
C. tuberculata
(
Burton, 1934
)
, and
C. sigmoidea
(
Cuartas, 1992
)
. However, none of these possess chelae and therefore can be readily distinguished from our specimens.