Sponges of the Guyana Shelf
Author
Van, Rob W. M.
text
Zootaxa
2017
1
1
225
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.272951
e2c88f4c-3ac2-45f9-95e4-99b75561a081
1175-5326
272951
6D68A019-6F63-4AA4-A8B3-92D351F1F69B
Polymastia agglutinans
Ridley & Dendy, 1886
Figures 74
a–e
Polymastia agglutinans
Ridley & Dendy, 1886
: 488
;
Ridley & Dendy 1887
: 212
, pl. XLI fig. 6,
XLII
figs 1–3;
Boury-Esnault 1987
: 35
, fig. 2.
Material
examined.
RMNH
Por. 9311,
Suriname
, ‘
Snellius O.C.P.S.
’
Guyana
Shelf Expedition, station E62,
6.51°N
56.255°W
, depth
38 m
, small dredge,
12 May 1966
;
RMNH
Por. 9393,
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
.
Description.
(
Fig. 74
a) Sponges buried in a shelly-stony substratum, the body only detectable by the presence of long, whitish, semi-transparent papillae sticking out far beyond the surface. Body 6
x 4
x
2
cm; papillae
2–4.5 cm
long, flattened in preserved condition,
4–8 mm
in diameter, rounded ends mostly closed, but occasionally the end is open.
Skeleton.
The main body has a rather confusedly arranged skeleton with individual spicules and some vague bundles carrying the surface debris. The skeleton of the papillae in cross section (
Fig. 74
b) consists of an outer palisade of tylostyles, the smallest megasclere category, 100–200 µm in thickness, erected upon a 100–200 µm thick layer of tangentially arranged intermediate styles. The inner skeleton of the papillae consists of longitudinal bundles of subtylostyles, oval in cross section and consisting of about 40 spicules each, diameter varying from 400–700 µm.
Spicules
. (
Figs 74
c–e) Subtylostyles, styles, tylostyles.
Subtylostyles (
Figs 74
c,c1), largest megascleres, straight, fusiform, with characteristic subapical elongate tyle, 606–
807
–978
x 13
–
17.9
–21 µm.
Styles (
Figs 74
d,d1), intermediate sized megascleres, fusiform but less so than the larger subtylostyles, no tylote swelling, often slightly curved, 294–
445
–558
x 7
–
12.1
–15 µm.
Tylostyles (
Figs 74
e,e1), smallest megasclere, with prominent apical tyle, usually curved, in a large size range, 91–
151
–189 x 2.5–
4.0
–5 µm.
Distribution and ecology
.
Guyana
Shelf, if correctly identified widespread in the North Atlantic; soft bottom, at
34–38 m
depth (
Guyana
Shelf), down to
800 m
elsewhere.
Remarks.
This identification is made with some hesitation. The species has been reported over a large area of the North Atlantic, including the
Azores
,
Western
Europe, and
West
Africa, and from depths of
15–800 m
(Boury-
Esnault, 1987
). The common feature for all the records is the cover of debris of the surface of the sponge in combination with few transparent papillae. Variation of spicule sizes and depth, added to the widespread records, indicate a possible complex of species. Among all the records of the species, the above described specimens stand out by the much longer papillae, length up to
4.5 cm
against an average of
1–1.5 cm
in the other records. Ridley & Dendy’s (1887) material from
800 m
off the
Azores
had papillae of
1.3 cm
in length, and had longer subtylostyles (up to 1200 µm, against up to 978 µm in the present material).
The present specimens appear closest to Lévi’s (1960) description of the species from Senegal: subtylostyles 475–1000 µm, intermediate styles 200–400 µm, and tylostyles 80–120 µm. The Senegal material originated from
25–
30 m
. More to the south,
Burton (1956)
reported the species from
32–55 m
off
Sierra Leone
, but he did not provide a description other than that there were several specimens of typical form.
FIGURE 74.
Polymastia
agglutinans
Ridley
& Dendy
, 1886
, a, habitus of RMNH Por. 9393 (scale bar = 1 cm), b, light microscopic cross section of papilla, showing three-layered skeleton with outer palisade of tylostyles, intermediate layer of tangential styles and bundles of subtylostyles, c–e, SEM images of spicules, c, subtylostyle, c1, details of c, d, style, d1, details of d, e, tylostyle, e1, detail of e.
Polymastia
species from NE
Brazil
and the Caribbean are
P. janeirensis
(
Boury-Esnault, 1973
)
,
P. nigra
Alcolado, 1984
,
P. tenax
Pulitzer-Finali, 1986
and
P. fordei
Lehnert & Van Soest, 1999
. These species differ significantly in shape (no cover of debris, shorter papillae and differences in spicule sizes). The
type
of
P. janeirensis
, originally described unrecognizably by Boury-Esnault as
Suberites
, but subsequently emended (Boury- Esnault
et al.
1994), has been pictured by Muricy
et al.
2011: fig. 9b, and this shows the absence of debris on the surface and the clearly different size and color of the papillae.