The genus Clathria from the Gulf of Mexico and Mexican Caribbean, with redescription and resurrection of Clathria carteri (Poecilosclerida: Microcionidae)
Author
Gómez, Patricia
text
Zootaxa
2014
3790
1
51
85
journal article
36866
10.11646/zootaxa.3790.1.3
6e418488-0a69-434a-872d-bbd01345d08d
1175-5326
285913
CB58F85A-924D-4148-AAC4-CDBD041EB3CD
Clathria
(
Thalysias
)
virgultosa
(Lamarck, 1814)
(
Fig.17–19
,
20
F, Tab. 6)
Spongia virgultosa
Lamarck, 1814
.
Tenacia clathrata
Schmidt, 1870
:56
,
Wilson 1902
:397
.
Clathria copiosa
Topsent, 1889
:40
.
Clathria jugosa
Wilson, 1902
:37
.
Thalysias juniperina sensu
de
Laubenfels 1936a
:105
,
Wiedenmayer 1977
:142
.
Microciona prolifera sensu
Green 1977
:93
.
Rhaphidophlus juniperinus sensu
van
Soest 1984
:109
.
Clathria
(
Thalysias
)
virgultosa sensu
Hooper 1996
:411
,
Gómez 2007
:58
.
Material examined.
CNPGG
–040 Blanquilla reef Veracruz
19º12’55”N
96º6’W
,
25/V/1966
(as
Microciona prolifera
;
Green 1977
) bushy habit
14–15 m
depth.
CNPGG
–205 Puerto Morelos, Quintana Roo
20º48’N
86º51’W
,
25/IV/1979
, 10 m depth, incrusting habit, red alive.
CNPGG
–240 Puerto Morelos, Quintana Roo
20º48’N
86º51’W
,
24/IV/1992
, incrusting habit.
CNPGG
–268 Punta Mocambo, Veracruz
19º9’18”N
96º5’25”W
,
2/VII/ 1989
, 5 m depth, windward, bushy habit, orange alive.
CNPGG
–498
Isla
Verde Veracruz
19º12’3.1”N
96º3’58”,
25/VII/1987
, 2 m depth, incrusting habit, red alive.
CNPGG
–933 Campeche
19º45’12”N
91º46’18”W
,
6/IV/1983
, 47 m depth, bushy habit, limestone bottom.
CNPGG
–1174 Boca Paila, Quintana Roo,
20º0’N
87º28’W
,
24/IV/ 1992
incrusting habit, red alive.
CNPGG
–1179 Ingleses Cay Campeche Bank
21º47’5.18”N
91º59’58.59”W
,
13/ XI/2006
, 15 m depth, flabellate habit, red alive.
CNPGG
–1182 Alacranes reef Yucatan
22º23’17.9”N
89º42’8.8”W
,
5/VIII/2009
bushy habit, red alive.
CNPGG
–1184 Yucatan Channel
21º49.6’N
86º48.4’W
25/IV/1985
, bushy habit at
30 m
depth, sand bottom.
CNPGG
–1193 Yucatan Channel
23º22.8’N
87º46.3’W
,
30/IV/1985
, bushy habit
104 m
depth.
CNPGG
–1194 Blanquilla reef Veracruz
19º12’N
96º6’W
,
18/V/1979
.
CNPGG
–1200 Alacranes reef Yucatan
22º22’01.4”N
89º40’30.4”W
,
3/VIII/2009
, encrusting habit.
CNPGG
–1250 Tampico, Tamaulipas
22º16’37.2”N
97º46’39.59”W
,
5/VI/1981
, bushy habit
24 m
depth.
CNPGG
–1436 Alacranes reef
22°23’12.89”N
89°40'44.72"W
,
25/II/2012
, 12 m depth.
CNPGG
–1437 Alacranes reef
22°23’38.89”N
89° 40’0.90”W
,
26/II/2012
, 15m depth.
FIGURE 17.
Clathria
(
Thalysias
)
virgultosa
(Lamarck, 1814)
: A. Bushy habit from Alacranes reef, Yucatan (CNPGG–1182). B) Irregular and fused branches from Campeche (CNPGG–933). C. Flabellate habit from Campeche Bank (CNPGG–1179). D. Incrusting specimen from Veracruz (CNPGG–205). E. Incrusting specimen from Alacranes reef, Yucatan (CNPGG–1200). F. Bushy specimen from Veracruz (CNPGG–268). Scale bars: A, B, C, F, 2 cm; D, E, 1 cm.
FIGURE 18.
Clathria
(
Thalysias
)
virgultosa
(Lamarck, 1814)
skeletal arrangement: A. Ectosome formed of auxiliary styles in brushes in an ill-defined layer (upper side). B. Choanosomal skeleton in transverse section showing an irregular accretive reticulation of cored and echinated fibers. Scale bars: A, B, 500 µm.
FIGURE 19.
SEM depiction of spicules from
Clathria
(
Thalysias
)
virgultosa
(Lamarck, 1814)
: A. Thick styles, B. Thin auxiliary styles, C. Echinating acanthostyles three from bushy habit at left, two from incrusting habit to the right. D. Detail of auxiliary style head. E. Micro-isochelae, F. Normal palmate isochelae, G. Micro-toxa, H. oxhorn toxa, I. Rhaphidiform toxa. Scale bars: A, B, I, 50 µm; C, H, 20 µm; D, F, 5 µm; E, 3 µm; G, 5 µm.
Additional material examined.
Microciona microchela
Hechtel (1965)
holotype
YPM
5040 Rasta’s Wreck,
Jamaica
,
May 24, 1961
;
paratype
USNM
24498
Jun/24/1961
Jamaica
.
Description.
Two morphotypes characterize the present species, an incrusting, and a bushy habit, with the latter predominant. From a small basal plate arise several convoluted branches giving a range of bushy shapes, some samples with little free branchlets on top, others with single and irregular branches fused laterally, sometimes making a trellis of branches or a coalescence of branches in a flabellate outline. The total height is
8.5–28 cm
, widest extension
6.5–20 cm
, single branches
5–10 mm
in diameter. Samples may have a basal plate of adhesion or not: the latter case can grow up directly from the substratum; the former case grows like a low stem up to
2.5 cm
high,
1.5–3 cm
wide. Incrusting sponges are
10 cm
2 by
5 mm
high including protruding ridges. The surface is rugose or bearing irregular ridges, being microhispid all over, but soft to the touch. Commonly red
in vivo
or occasionally orangey-red, it is pale yellow in spirit; consistency slightly compressible, resilient. No oscula were seen.
Skeleton.
The ectosome is a thin layer of auxiliary styles in tufts, with points directed outwards (
Fig. 18
A), with scattered isochelae intermingled; this layer is covered by a delicate translucent whitish dermis which is adhered to the wall and lost when taken out of the water. The choanosomal skeleton is an irregular accretive reticulation of amber fibers 40–150 µm in diameter cored by up to seven styles and echinated acanthostyles at the same time, profusely echinated in the deep choanosome, some flat fibers resembling plates enclose acanthostyles while others just echinate the edge; all fibers are interconnected by uncored thinner ones or one spicule cored. In addition, abundant spicules are strewn in confusion throughout the mesohyl (
Fig. 18
, B).
Spicules.
(
Fig. 19
A–I) Auxiliary thin styles in two size categories with smooth and microspined heads: I, 70.2–312 × 1–5.4 µm; II, 101.4–361 × 2.3–11 µm; thick smooth styles III, main megascleres 93.6–340 × 5.2–25 µm, acanthostyles strongly spined mostly at the ends of the shaft, and smooth in the middle 28.6–80.6 × 1.3–12.5 µm, palmate isochelae 8.3–18.3 µm, micro-palmate isochelae 3.3–7.9 µm, oxhorn toxas 16–96.2 × less than one µm, micro-toxa 3.3–16 µm, and rhaphidiform toxa 52.5–400 × less than one µm (Measurements in Table 6).
Remarks.
Two morphotypes are evident in
C.
(
T.
)
virgultosa
, the most common being bushy-ramose and the least common encrusting. The different morphs are represented in the material studied and conform to
C.
(
T.
)
virgultosa
in all traits (shape, color, skeletal arrangement, and size and geometry of spiculation). All have a peculiar acanthostyle markedly spined on distal parts, as also described in the literature. Acanthostyles with both heavy spination and small spination are exhibited in any given sample, but necessarily they are spined on distal parts; either for incrusting or bushy habit. This acanthostyle is markedly different from those of other
Clathria
(
Thalysias
)
species even of other West Indies
Clathria
.
Smaller microscleres, even difficult to see under light microscopy, were encountered within every specimen in the present material, whether in bushy or in encrusting habit. These are considered a second category of palmate isochelae (4.8 µm average length) and a third category of toxa (7.7 µm average length). Both categories of microscleres are markedly different from the regular microscleres, and have a stable presence in different environments. However, they are easily overlooked, because they are so small and thin.
These very small microscleres necessitated a comparison with
Microciona microchela
(
Holotype
YPM 5040 and
paratype
USNM 24498), now corresponding to
C.
(
T.
)
hechteli
Hooper, 1996
, whose minute isochelae and toxas are its distinctive feature, 4–7 µm, and 5–13 µm respectively. However,
C.
(
T.
)
hechteli
is quite different from
C.
(
T.
)
virgultosa
in many other aspects: it is a very thin encrustation (
1 mm
thick) and rarely is a repent branch attached at several places, and it is pink with orange
in vivo
. Moreover, its acanthostyles include smaller spines placed all over the shaft and are larger and thinner (49–117 × 5–8 µm) than those of
C.
(
T.
)
virgultosa
. The main style is thinner as well (7.5–10.6 µm in diameter), and above all the skeletal arrangement is fully leptoclathriid and fibro-reticulated for the branched specimen. It differs also in
type
of environment, being common in shallow water (
1.5–2.6 m
) near a mangrove-fringed inlet at Rasta’s Wreck,
Jamaica
. Nevertheless, the two species are certainly closely related.
Microciona prolifera sensu
Green (1977)
is recorded for La Blanquilla Reef, West side of the Gulf of
Mexico
, it corresponds to
C.
(
T
.)
virgultosa
in accordance with the examined material. The study area and other records from the GoM warm waters have not yielded any
C.
(
C.
)
prolifera
. The other tropical records of this species need to be re-examined and are expected to belong to a different species (van Soest
et al.
2014).
The
Clathria
(
T
.)
virgultosa
holotype
could not be located for the purpose of comparison. Nevertheless our interpretation can be confident since our material matches the literature assignments.
Distribution.
Campeche, Tampico, Yucatan, Quintana Roo, Veracruz,
Mexico
. Other locations:
Puerto Rico
, West Florida,
Cuba
, Bimini,
Curaçao
.