Marine sponges (Porifera: Demospongiae) from the Gulf of México, new records and redescription of Erylus trisphaerus (de Laubenfels, 1953)
Author
Ugalde, Diana
Author
Gómez, Patricia
Author
Simões, Nuno
text
Zootaxa
2015
3911
2
151
183
journal article
42349
10.11646/zootaxa.3911.2.1
8baa9579-e863-47db-b025-7acc20458ac0
1175-5326
238815
5C32A1B4-E4AB-4BC3-8E8A-1BF435587D17
Agelas tubulata
Lehnert
& van
Soest, 1996
.
(
Figs. 16
A–D, 22B)
Selected synonymy:
Agelas tubulata
Lehnert
& van
Soest, 1996
:67; 1999:156;
Parra-Velandia
et al.
2014
:321.
Agelas conifera
;
Zea 1987
:212;
Gómez 2002
:75;
Diaz 2005
:470 (on diversity and distribution). Non
Agelas conifera
(
Schmidt, 1870
)
a valid species.
Material examined
.
CNPGG
–1315 Alacranes reef (
22º23’1.5”N
89º40’21.4”W
) and
CNPGG
1348 Alacranes reef (
22º23’1.5”N
89º40’21.4”W
), depth
12 m
,
3/VIII/2009
.
Description
. The sponge is a cluster of thick tubes arising from a common base (
Fig. 22
B). Size of the tubes are
12–20 cm
long,
3–12 cm
wide and
3–5 cm
in diameter. Apical pseudoscules are
1–3 cm
in diameter, oscules inside atrial wall
1–2 mm
in diameter and tiny oscules in the outer wall
3‒5 mm
in diameter. It is orange-yellow alive and orange-brown in alcohol. The sponge surface is entirely smooth; the body is easily compressible and pliable, tough to tear and cut.
Skeleton
. Anisotropic skeleton constituted by primary fibres 70–100 µm in diameter, cored by 5–6 acanthostyles and echinated by the same spicules as well, secondary fibres only echinated 20–60 µm in diameter, thinner towards the surface. Fibres forming a square grid (140–400 µm).
Spicules
. Acanthostyles are straight with 9–18 whorls per spicule and 4–8 spines per whorl; length 72.8–96–150.8 × 5.2–7.8–10.4 µm width.
Distribution and ecology
:
Bahamas
, East coast of Florida,
Jamaica
,
Belize
,
Panama
,
Colombia
,
Brazil
, from
7 to 37 m
depth (
Parra-Velandia
et al.
2014
). Inhabits in coral reef environments, on calcareous substrate,
12 m
depth. The species has been recorded in Xahuayxol (Mexican Caribbean;
Gómez 2002
) and
Cuba
(Alcolado 2002) both authors as
A. conifera
, this is the first record for the species as
A. tubulata
in the Gulf of
Mexico
.
Remarks:
Agelas tubulata
is a similar species to
A. conifera
(
Schmidt 1870
)
, and
A. cerebrum
Assmann
et al.
(2001) based on several characteristics such as color, pinacoderm, skeletal arrangement, and spicule geometry (
Parra-Velandia
et al.
2014
). Particularly,
A. tubulata
has been confused with
A. conifera
but the body size/conetube relation, is higher in
A. tubulata
and lower in
A. conifera
(
Parra-Velandia
et al.
2014
)
. More detailed features are discussed in the thorough study of
Agelas
from the greater Caribbean by
Parra-Velandia
et al.
(2014)
.