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
Niphates erecta
Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1864
Figures 20
a–d
Restricted synonymy:
Niphates erecta
Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1864: 93
, pl. 21 fig. 3;
Wiedenmayer 1977
: 96, pl. 20 figs 7–8, pl. 21 figs 1–4, textfig. 119 (with additional synonyms);
Van Soest 1980
: 35, pl. V figs 2–4, text-fig. 12;
Zea 1987
: 81, figs 21, 249 (with review of of spicule data);
Campos
et al.
2005
: 8, figs 5A–D; Muricy
et al.
2011: 105 (with further
Central
West
Atlantic records).
Niphates digitalis
forma
amorpha
Wiedenmayer, 1977
: 98
, pl. 19 fig. 4
Niphates amorpha
Van Soest, 1980
: 39
, pl. VI fig.3.
Material
examined.
RMNH
Por. 9864,
Suriname
, ‘
Snellius O.C.P.S.
’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station F45,
6.4417°N
56.5467°W
, depth
34 m
,
Van Veen
grab,
7 May 1966
;
RMNH
Por. 9877, 9887, 9895, 9902, 9905, 9912,
Suriname
, ‘
Snellius O.C.P.S.
’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station G7,
7.28°N
56.7933°W
, depth
64 m
, bottom sand,
7 May 1966
;
RMNH
Por. 9890,
Guyana
, ‘
Snellius O.C.P.S.
’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station H58,
7.4233°N
56.9067°W
, depth
66–69 m
, bottom coarse sand,
11 May 1966
;
RMNH
Por. 10506,
Suriname
, ‘
Snellius O.C.P.S.
’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station F46,
6.312°N
56.57°W
, depth
25–29 m
, bottom sand,
7 May 1966
.
Description.
More than a dozen short erect branches (
Fig. 20
a,a1) with irregular outline, up to about
10 cm
long,
2–4 cm
in diameter. Color in alcohol red-brown. Flush or slightly raised oscules,
2–3 mm
in diameter, scattered over the uneven punctate or irregularly conulose surface. Some branches have large numbers of zoanthids. Consistency firmly compressible.
Skeleton.
(
Fig. 20
b) The ectosomal skeleton is an irregular three-dimensional reticulation of spongin-encased spicule tracts that form brushes fanning out over the surface, forming meshes of 200–300 µm diameter. The choanosomal reticulation is formed by thick spicule tracts, 90–120 µm in diameter (7–15 spicules in cross section) connected by thinner cross tracts, making irregular squarish meshes of 300–500 µm diameter. Many loose spicules.
Spicules
. (
Figs 20
c–d) Oxeas and sigmas, the latter not found or rare in many specimens. Oxeas (
Fig. 20
c), robust, curved, length and thickness subject to considerable variation, 213–
251
–288
x 7
–
13.1
–19 µm.
FIGURE 20
.
Niphates erecta
Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1864
, a, habitus of RMNH Por. 9895 (scale bar = 1 cm), a1, of RMNH Por. 9877 (scale bar = 1 cm), b, light microscopic image of cross section of peripheral skeleton of RMNH Por. 9905, c–d, SEM images of spicules, c, oxeas, d, sigma.
Sigmas (
Fig. 20
d), if present, rather elongated, often provided with a faint central tyle, occasionally malformed, 14–
15.6
–18 µm.
Distribution and ecology.
Guyana
Shelf, Greater Caribbean, NE
Brazil
, on reefs and on soft bottoms in deeper water down to
94 m
(
Guyana
Shelf
25–69 m
).
Remarks.
This is a common species all over the
Central
West
Atlantic, showing considerable variation in spicule sizes and shapes, no doubt because of the wide ecogeographic range of the species. The
Guyana
Shelf specimens stand out by their robust oxeas, which is shared by specimens from the Colombian Caribbean (
Zea 1987
), but only seldom reported from other regions. Some of the records may concern encrusting specimens, usually understood as
Niphates amorpha
.
Wiedenmayer (1977)
(p. 98) erected the forma
amorpha
, which falls as an infrasubspecific taxon outside the ruling of the ICZN as it was proposed after 1961 (see ICZN art.15.2). When
Van
Soest (1980
: 39) decided to elevate the forma
amorpha
to species rank, he unintentionally became the author of the name, despite the fact that no (holo)
type
was elected. The necessity to do so became mandatory only from 1999. The taxon, although first erected by
Wiedenmayer (1977)
, thus changed authorship to Van Soest. The matter of the
type
material was proposed to be settled in the World Porifera Database (
Van Soest
et al.
2016
), as the collections of the Smithsonian Institution's retained four specimens from Wiedenmayer's work only one of which was preserved in alcohol. The specimen, USNM 30331, has the field number B834, cited as one of four specimens by
Wiedenmayer (1977)
(p. 99). Assuming that Van Soest’s treatment of
N. amorpha
included Wiedenmayer’s material, it is proposed to elect USNM 30331 as the
lectotype
of
Niphates amorpha
. However, many authors do not distinguish this as distinct from
N. erecta
, and I now concur with that by formally assigning
N. amorpha
to
N. erecta
as a junior synonym.
Sigmas were present in six of the ten samples collected on the
Guyana
Shelf, a high proportion compared to Hechtel’s (1965) (
1 in
6) and Van Soest’s (1980) (
5 in
22) data.