Shallow-water Demospongiae (Porifera) from Sodwana Bay, iSimangaliso Wetland Park, South Africa
Author
Samaai, Toufiek
Author
Pillay, Ruwen
Author
Janson, Liesl
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-04-23
4587
1
1
85
journal article
26978
10.11646/zootaxa.4587.1.1
30b2e4dc-5996-46b6-8be8-7bccdd041563
1175-5326
2651448
CC6CDA5A-E283-49AD-9F31-CE95C123A379
Spheciospongia ndabazithe
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 6
A–G)
Material examined
.
Holotype
.
SAMC–A24731
(cross-reference TS 888 & Saf 03-Sod 05),
Ramsay
reef,
Sodwana Bay
(
27,4466°S
;
32,7152°E
),
South Africa
, 0
3 October 2003
, collected by
T. Samaai
, depth
18 m
.
Type
locality.
Ramsay
reef,
Sodwana Bay
, east coast of
South Africa
.
Description
. Vase-shaped sponge, 150 × 180 ×
40 mm
in diameter (
Fig. 5A
). Surface smooth with oscules,
2 mm
in diameter, scattered randomly on the inner side of the vase. Texture tough, firm and rubbery to the touch, barely compressible. Lip area of vase, thick with vein-like appearance. Surface membrane visible in preserved specimen. Colour in life dirty yellow with dark brown interior; in preservative, exterior grey, interior dark grey to brown.
Skeleton
(
Fig. 5
B–D). Choanosomal skeleton consists of a dense, irregular reticulation of bundles of tylostyles and styles. Spirasters scattered randomly throughout the choanosome. Subdermal cavities present filled with sand and lined with a confused reticulation of tylostyles. The ectosomal skeleton is composed of a dense, confused paratangential reticulation of tylostyles and a few spirasters. Tylostyles occasionally protrude through the ectosome.
Spicules. Megascleres
(
Fig. 5E, F
).Tylostyles, smooth, slightly sinuous with variable proximal head shape, distal end hastate to fusiform: 428 (398–499) × 6 (6) µm, n = 10. Styles, smooth, slightly sinuous with distal end fusiform: 388 (326–432) × 7 (7) µm, n = 10.
Microscleres
(
Fig. 5G
). Spirasters, C-shaped with spines on the outer curve: 18 (17–19) µm, n = 10.
Substratum, depth range and ecology.
The sponge is found on exposed rocky/sandy area at a depth of
18 m
.
Etymology
. Named in honour of David
Smith
, who rescued the author TS’s son from drowning while he was out collecting sponges in Sodwana Bay. Ndabazithe is David’s Zulu name which means ‘respect’.
Remarks.
This sponge has a skeletal arrangement typical of the genus
Spheciospongia
, and its surface is lined with pore sieves. The spicules are clearly those of the family
Clionaidae
. The genus
Spheciospongia
is well defined (
Rützler 2002
) with currently seven species described from the WIO [(
S. vagabunda
(
Ridley 1884
)
,
S. excentrica
(
Burton 1931
)
,
S. florida
(
Lendenfeld 1897
)
,
S. inconstans
(
Dendy 1887
)
,
S. globularis
(
Dendy 1922
)
,
S. poterionides
(
Vacelet & Vasseur 1971
)
,
S. mastoidea
(
Keller 1891
)
], two of which also occur in South African waters:
S. excentrica
and
S. vagabunda
. A third species,
S. capensis
, was described by
Carter (1882)
from Port Elizabeth on the south coast of
South Africa
.
Spheciospongia excentrica
(
Burton, 1931
)
is a non-stipitate cup-shaped sponge possessing centrotylote oxeas and tylotes and no spirasters, whereas
S. ndabazithe
sp. nov.
is massive, vase-shaped with numerous spirasters but no centrotylote oxeas present.
Spheciospongia excentrica
has smaller tylostyles (
320 µm
) oppose to those found in
S. ndabazithe
sp. nov.
Pulitzer-Finali’s (1993)
description of
S. excentrica
from
Mombasa
differs from
Burton’s (1931)
type
in being stipitate, have spirasters (although only two recorded) and smaller tylostyles, (
260–460 µm
). Whether Pulitzer-Finali’s species from
Mombasa
is
S. exentrica
is questionable.
Spheciospongia florida
described from
Zanzibar
and widely distributed within the WIO, is columnar in shape and differs in spiculation and spicule dimensions to
S. ndabazithe
sp. nov.
and
S. vagabunda
(
S. florida
holotype
200–650 µm
& spirasters
5–15 µm
;
S. vagabunda
holotype
tylostyles 600
x
20
µm & spirasters
32 µm
;
S. ndabazithe
sp. nov.
tylostyles,
398–499 µm
& spirasters
17–19 µm
).
Spheciospongia capensis
differs from
S. ndabazithe
sp. nov.
in being semicircular, flat and having contorted spirasters with four bends as oppose to being c-shaped as in the new species.
Spheciospongia ndabazithe
sp. nov.
has long thin c-shaped spirasters with spines only on the outer curve, sinuous tylostyles and styles, and the tylostyles project through the ectosome. The presence of subdermal cavities within the choanosome, a paratangential reticulation of tylostyles and a confused reticulation of tylostyles in the choanosome have not been observed in
S. excentrica
,
S. florida
and
S. globularis
.
This may be a diagnostic feature of
S. ndabazithe
sp. nov
.
FIGURE 6.
Spheciospongia ndabazithe
sp. nov.
A.
In situ
; B, C & D. Skeletal architecture (B, x5; C, x10; D, x40); E. Primary tylostyles; F. Auxiliary styles; G. Spirasters.
Key diagnostic characters.
• Sponge vase-shaped.
• Oscules found on the on the inner side of the vase.
• C-shaped with spines on the outer curve.
• Subdermal cavities filled with sand