Reef sponges of the genus Agelas (Porifera: Demospongiae) from the Greater Caribbean
Author
Parra-Velandia, Fernando J.
Author
Zea, Sven
Author
Van Soest, Rob W. M.
text
Zootaxa
2014
3794
3
301
343
journal article
45859
10.11646/zootaxa.3794.3.1
8f255bd6-4072-4dfc-ab35-d233e0766ff3
1175-5326
285997
51852298-F299-4392-9C89-A6FD14D3E1D0
Agelas cervicornis
(
Schmidt, 1870
)
Fig. 3
Etymology from Latin, meaning deer horn.
Chalinopsis cervicornis
Schmidt, 1870
: p. 60, pl. 5,
Fig. 2
a.
Agelas cervicornis
;
Assman 2000
: 37
, pl. 4, Figs. B–E; Zea
et al
., 2009.
Agelas longissima
Pulitzer-Finali, 1986
: 112
, Figs. 32, 34.
Agelas sceptre
;
Alcolado 1976
: 5
.
Agelas sceptrum
;
Alcolado 2002
: 61
.
[Non:
Agelas sceptrum
(
Lamarck, 1815
)
, a valid species]
Ectyon cylindricus
Carter, 1883
: 314
, Pl. XIII,
Figs. 4
a–e. [Non:
Agelas cylindricus
;
Alcolado 1980
: 3, 2002: 61, =
Agelas sceptrum
]
Agelas
sp. 4;
Pulitzer-Finali 1986
: 114, Fig. 32; Lehnert & van
Soest 1998
: 83.
Material and distribution.
Holotype
not examined, apparently lost (van Soest, 2002). Schmidt’s description mentions the Antilles as the collecting locality without any further comments. The material examined here includes (but is not restricted to):
Bahamas
(INV–
POR
929) and
Jamaica
(INV–
POR
1003, 1010).
This species seems to be present only in
the Bahamas
(
Pulitzer-Finali 1986
;
Assmann 2000
; Zea
et al
. 2009),
Cuba
(
Alcolado 1976
;
2002
) and
Jamaica
. Thus, we consider this species a Bahamian-Greater Antilles species. Our specimens were found from
14 to 30 m
in depth, abundant between 23 and
28 m
.
Description.
Typically, this species has a long (
Fig. 3
A), erect (
Fig. 3
B) and cylindrical to subcylindrical (
Fig. 3
E, 3H) body, generally branched. Its dimensions are
3–6 cm
in diameter and
50–100 cm
long. The external colour in is dark brown, and internal colour cream. When dry, dark brown to dark greyish brown. The surface is smooth like velvet, but the general aspect of the body is uneven.
The oscules are numerous, small (±
1.5 mm
) and evenly scattered, usually surrounded by a yellowish thin collar. Consistency is spongy, rigid, hard to tear or cut, tough in fresh, and hard when dry. The choanosome is dense, smooth and extremely compact with channels that do not exceed
3 mm
in diameter.
The skeleton has plumoreticulate architecture, not evident in alcohol but more clear when dry. The main fibres are 50–150 µm in diameter, echinated and cored by 1–4 spicules per cross section. The secondary fibres are 40–60 µm in diameter, abundantly echinated, rarely cored. The acanthostyles are straight with 4–5 spines per whorl; length 65–135 (96±15.4) µm, width 1–13 (7±2.4) µm and 6–16 (10±2.2) whorls per spicule. Detailed lengths, widths and average number of whorls are shown in
Table 2
.
Remarks.
This species was found in deep caves and on overhanging walls in
Jamaica
and in deep to medium slopes in
the Bahamas
. A superficial view could confuse this species with the
clavaeformis
(club shaped) form of
A. dispar
, but they differ by the solid choanosome in
A. cervicornis
and the cavernous choanosome in
A. dispar
.
Agelas longissima
(
Bahamas
)
and
Agelas
sp. 4 (
Jamaica
) as described by
Pulitzer-Finali (1986)
and the material under the same name from Lehnert & van
Soest (1998)
belong to this species. Their small spicule size coincides with that of our own material from both localities (see
Table 2
). After several clarifying discussions, we agreed with Dr. P.M. Alcolado that his records of
Agelas sceptrum
from
Cuba
(erroneously called
A. sceptre
), belongs to
A. cervicornis
, while what he called
A. cylindricus
belongs to
A. sceptrum
.
Ectyon cylindricus
Carter, 1883
is considered herein a junior synonym of
A. cervicornis
based on the original description.
The
holotype
of this species is apparently lost, as already stated by van Soest (2002), and our identification is based mainly on Schmidt’s (1870) description, and from description, specimens and photographs from Assman
et al.
(2001). Apart from the ZMA, we checked again unsuccessfully for the presence of the
holotype
at the Zoologisk Museum København in Copenhagen, where the other two
holotypes
(
A. conifera
and
A. clathrodes
) described in the 1870 Schmidt’s paper rest. We also queried without success the Natural History Museum in London, the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris, the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, and the Museum of Comparative Zoology in Cambridge (
USA
).
In his 1870 paper Schmidt described three specimens and at the Zoologisk Museum København there are also three specimens, two representing the above-mentioned two species, and another one without specific designation (identified as
A. citrina
by us). Those three species are all typical for the Southwestern and Southern Caribbean, whereas
A. cervicornis
is common at Bahamian and Greater Antilles.