Lissodendoryx (Ectyodoryx) Lundbeck, 1909 (Coelosphaeridae, Poecilosclerida, Demospongiae) from Southern Chile: new species and a discussion of morphologic characters in the subgenus
Author
Fernandez, Julio C. C.
Author
Cárdenas, César A.
Author
Bravo, Alejandro
Author
Lôbo-Hajdu, Gisele
Author
Willenz, Philippe
Author
Hajdu, Eduardo
text
Zootaxa
2016
4092
1
journal volume
10.11646/zootaxa.4092.1.4
f448a9b2-e7ab-4dbf-87a1-64d0338b8b95
1175-5326
266115
51F44763-E817-4E58-A4AC-525E63B6D27B
Genus
Lissodendoryx
Topsent, 1892
Massive, lobate, or flabelliform sponges, with irregular or clathrate surface.
Ectosomal skeleton with smooth ectosomal tornotes, tylotes or strongyles forming tangential tracts and surface brushes; choanosomal skeleton an isodictyal reticulation of single spicules, an anisotropic reticulation, or a plumo-reticulation, composed of smooth or acanthose choanosomal styles, sometimes oxeas or strongyles, alone or in combination
; echinating spicules may be present; microscleres are arcuate isochelae, sigmas, and raphides in trichodragmata. Cosmopolitan distribution, many species (emended from van Soest, 2002a).
In the molecular phylogeny proposed by Redmond
et al.
(2013),
Lissodendoryx
is a polyphyletic taxon. More specifically,
L.
(
Lissodendoryx
) forms a relatively well established clade (Bootstrap = 89). Then, one only finds 80% Bootstrap again for a large clade including
Chondropsis
(Chondropsidae)
,
Desmapsamma
(Desmacididae)
,
Forcepia
(Coelosphaeridae)
,
Myxilla
(Myxillidae)
and
Tedania
(Tedaniidae)
.
Lissodendoryx
(
Ectyodoryx
)
, with only two species evaluated in their analysis did not cluster together. But, as Bootstrap support for the inner branches of the larger clade including both species is too weak (below or barely above 50%), nothing can be said so far about the status of the subgenus, and of its most likely phylogenetic relations to other
Poecilosclerida
. Species of
Lissodendoryx
(
Acanthodoryx
)
clustered together with 100% Bootstrap support, but the clade might contain only a single species, if the included
L.
(
A.
) sp. ever proves to belong in
L.
(
A.
)
fibrosa
(100% 18S rDNA similarity). Again, Bootstrap support at more inclusive clades is less than 50%, so affinities of the subgenus must remain obscure.
A combined analysis of 18S and 28S rDNA fragments permitted Morrow
et al.
(2013) to recover with 100% Bootstrap support the following relationships for a polyphyletic
Lissodendoryx
: (
Lissodendoryx
,
Forcepia
,
Myxilla
,
Tedania, Trachytedania
) and (
Lissodendoryx
,
Crella
,
Higginsia
,
Hymedesmia
,
Plocamionida
). The first of these clades clusters
Lissodendoryx
with an additional taxon in the
Coelosphaeridae (
Forcepia
)
, and the poeciloclerid families
Myxillidae
and
Tedaniidae
, thus including taxa bearing arcuate chelae (
Lissodendoryx
and
Forcepia
) and taxa bearing anchorate chelae (
Myxilla
). The second clade with 100% support, aside from the interordinal relationship to the Axinellida (
Higginsia
), clusters
Lissodendoryx
together with
Crellidae
and
Hymedesmiidae
, and only includes taxa bearing arcuate chelae. But, if a more inclusive clade with 98% support is considered instead, than
Myxilla
,
Phorbas
(as
Stylostichon
) and
Spanioplon
are included too, anchorate chelae come into play again. Similar relations had already been envisaged based on morphological analysis alone by van Soest (1984) and Desqueyroux-Faúndez & van Soest (1996).
In part, our taxonomic results suggest a closer relationship between
Lissodendoryx
and
Hymedesmiidae
.
Lissodendoryx
(
E.
)
ballena
sp. nov.
has a plumo-reticulated skeleton and ectosomal tornotes, rather than a reticulate skeleton and ectosomal tylotes as observed in other species of
Lissodendoryx
, such as
L.
(
E.
)
corrugata
sp. nov.
and
L
. (
E
.)
coloanensis
sp. nov.
described here, and a few additional species reported by van Soest (2002a). In addition, the morphology of the two largest categories of arcuate isochelae in
L.
(
E.
)
ballena
sp. nov.
is quite similar to the morphology of the isochelae in some species of
Hymedesmiidae
; cf.
Phorbas areolatus
(Thiele, 1905)
in Fernandez
et al
. (
in prep.
). It is also important to mention that a plumo-reticulate architecture is typical of
Phorbas
(see review in van Soest, 2002b). Thus,
Lissodendoryx
(
E.
)
ballena
sp. nov.
appears indeed closer to
Hymedesmiidae
rather than to the additional
Lissodendoryx
spp. described here. Interestingly,
Lissodendoryx
(
E.
)
jenjonesae
Picton & Goodwin, 2007
recorded from the
Northern Ireland
and
L.
(
E.
)
arenaria
Burton, 1936
recorded from the
South Africa
, the two species in the subgenus analysed by Morrow
et al.
(2013) in their molecular phylogeny, also share features found in
Hymedesmiidae
. Specifically, a few images observed in Picton & Goodwin (2007: 1449,
Figs 6
A–E) record of
L.
(
E
.)
jenjonesae
acanthostyles with slightly swollen bases, as commonly observed in various species of
Hymedesmia
, arcuate isochelae slightly bent backwards (cf.
Phorbas areolatus
), and a surface with structures that resemble
Hymedesmiidae
pore fields (cf. van Soest, 2002b). Burton (1936) recorded a skeleton with embedded grains echinated by acanthostyles for
L.
(
E.
)
arenaria
, which resembles the embedded polychaete tubes echinated by acanthostyles found in
L.
(
E.
)
ballena
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 3
G).
As
in
L.
(
E.
)
jenjonesae
,
L.
(
E.
)
ballena
sp. nov.
has small holes scattered on the surface, which are reminiscent of pore fields. In
Hymedesmiidae
, pore fields are shallow and have walls supported by diactines (van Soest, 2002a), while the small holes in
L.
(
E.
)
ballena
sp. nov.
are narrow, single, deep, and their walls are surrounded/supported mainly by microscleres (
Fig. 3
D). If we think of a hypothetical ancestor with holes similar to those in
L.
(
E.
)
ballena
sp. nov.
, where such structures have become shallower and their ectosomal diactines have invaded the choanosome, we would be very close to sponges currently classified in
Hymedesmiidae
(cf. van Soest, 2002b). In this way, the phylogenetic relations retrieved by Morrow et al. (2013) might make sense in a morphological context after all.
A reticulate choanosomal architecture and ectosomal tylotes with microspined
ends
are rather common characters of species of
Myxilla
Schmidt, 1862
(van Soest, 2002c). Based on these observations,
L
. (
E
.)
corrugata
sp. nov
.
and
L.
(
E.
)
coloanensis
sp. nov.
seem more closely related to
Myxilla
, than
L.
(
E.
)
ballena
sp. nov.
, and its
Hymedesmiidae
characters (cf. above).
Lissodendoryx
(
E
.)
diegoramirezensis
sp. nov.
, however, has an architecture of intermediate morphology between reticulate and plumose. Additionally, the latter species’ isochelae are quite distinct from those found in the other species described, and to the best of our knowledge, rather similar only to those of
L.
(
E.
)
anacantha
.
The shape of tylotes and the spination pattern of the extremities of these ectosomal diactines occur in congruence in part of the new species. These characteristics are most likely reflecting phylogenetic signal in a more inclusive level within
Lissodendoryx
. For example, thorns arranged as a crown (
L
. (
E
.)
corrugata
sp. nov
and
L
. (
E
.)
coloanensis
sp. nov.
) and randomly arranged thorns (
L
. (
E
.)
diegoramirezensis
sp. nov.
and
L.
(
E
.)
anacantha
) might be suggesting these may be evolutionarily species-pairs. The latter pair of species might still be closer to
L
. (
E
.)
corrugata
sp. nov
.
and
L
. (
E
.)
coloanensis
sp. nov.
, which share similar ectosomal tylotes, rather than to
L.
(
E.
)
ballena
sp. nov.
, which has tornotes. Widening the comparison, one cannot dismiss the possibility that the tylotes of
L.
(
E
.)
diegoramirezensis
sp. nov.
and
L
. (
E.
)
anacantha
might be close relatives of those found in some
Myxilla
spp.,
e.g.
Myxilla
(
Burtonanchora
)
araucana
Hajdu, Desqueyroux-Faúndez, Carvalho, Lôbo-Hajdu & Willenz, 2013. Accordingly, it appears clear to us that the set of morphologic characters commonly assessed to describe species in the
Poecilosclerida
, is likely to permit various phylogenetic reinterpretations of boundaries for higher taxa, among which are those building up in the form of clades in the molecular phylogenetics literature (
e.g.
Redmond
et al.
2013). In the absence of pre-established phylogenetic frameworks, still, these characters can and should be used to propose primary hypothesis of relationships, as we have done above for
L.
(
E.
)
ballena
sp. nov.
This species seems to share a series of characters with
Hymedesmiidae
sponges: small openings on the surface possibly homologous to porefields, as well as arcuate isochelae and acanthostyles with morphology commonly found in this family, thus suggesting that alternative classification scenarios at the family level might be considered for the
Poecilosclerida
.