Monanchora quadrangulata ( Lévi, 1958 ), Levi, 1958

Calcinai, Barbara, Bavestrello, Giorgio, Bertolino, Marco, Pica, Daniela, Wagner, Daniel & Cerrano, Carlo, 2013, Sponges associated with octocorals in the Indo-Pacific, with the description of four new species, Zootaxa 3617 (1), pp. 1-61 : 17-18

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3617.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4DCCD152-65DA-44A3-AB19-59811384E1E7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6156073

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B7DE6C-8A3F-F866-FF38-C442FC7BC291

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Monanchora quadrangulata ( Lévi, 1958 )
status

 

Monanchora quadrangulata ( Lévi, 1958) View in CoL

( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 A–D)

Examined material. Sample YO-257 O’ahu: Hawai’i, O’ahu Island, 30 m, May 2005.

Description. Pulpy sponge encrusting the body wall of Carijoa riisei ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 A) up to the anthocodiae. The sample consists of a single fragment of octocoral about 20 cm long. The sponge is about 1 mm thick. Surface smooth and gelatinous, pinkish in ethanol ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 A). Numerous larvae are dispersed in the tissue ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 A).

Skeleton. The ectosome is a thin gelatinous dermal membrane with pores and scattered spicules, sometimes organized in paucispicular thin tracts ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 B). The choanosomal skeleton is confused, with few, paucispicular (2–4 spicules across), interconnecting, sinuous tracts and scattered spicules ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 C).

Spicules. Very thin subtylostyles, with ovoid head ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 D) and evident black axial canal, 210 – (223 ± 12) – 250 x 2 μm. The spicules look like needles under SEM ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 D).

Distribution and remarks. This is a new record for Hawai’i and the second record of this species after its original description from the Red Sea. Lévi (1958) described M. quadrangulata as encrusting, with a skeleton of long and curved tracts of spicules and with styles characterised by a roughly rectangular head. The species is an atypical Monanchora (as it lacks microscleres) but is well characterised by the particular shape of its tylostyles. Our specimen fits well with the species of Lévi in its general morphology (encrusting, pulpy), in having a skeleton organized in thin tracts of styles, and in the shape and size of its megascleres (225 x 2 – 3 μm).

As discussed for Batzella aurantiaca (see above), also M. quadrangulata was here recorded very far from its type locality. Further studies will have to clarify its cryptogenic nature.

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