Mycale (Carmia), 1867

Van, Rob W. M., Aryasari, Ratih & De, Nicole J., 2021, Mycale species of the tropical Indo-West Pacific (Porifera, Demospongiae, Poecilosclerida), Zootaxa 4912 (1), pp. 1-212 : 86-87

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4912.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9536C1CF-4AEF-47F8-959B-48CD7A5392D8

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4464447

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/361087A7-FF90-FFF6-55AB-FD2C554FC972

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Mycale (Carmia)
status

 

Mycale (Carmia) View in CoL spec.

Mycale (Carmia) View in CoL sp. 1; Kelly et al. 2003: Appendix

Material (not examined). QM 317358, Guam, identified by Michelle Kelly. Listed only, no description has been published .

Key to the species of Mycale (Carmia) of the region

Remark. The subgenus contains twentyone named and described species from the tropical Indo-West Pacific of which we had only nine species in the collection. Of the remaining twelve species we were able to study type material of an additional two species, leaving ten species unexamined. This affects the quality of the key below. We have doubts about the distinctness of Mycale (Carmia) suezza , M. (C.) madraspatana , M. (C.) militaris , M. (C.) relicta and M. (C.) mytilorum . These might not all turn out to be valid species after they will have been re-examined in the near future. For completeness sake we attempted to key them out nevertheless. We omitted Mycale (Carmia) spec. material from Guam as a description is not available.

1 Sponge habitus ramose........................................................... Mycale (Carmia) vermistyla View in CoL

- Sponge not ramose, encrusting or massive.................................................................. 2

2 Sponge growing intertwined with living octoral Tubipora musica View in CoL forcing the coral to form tubes with deep central cavities....................................................................... Mycale (Carmia) tubiporicola View in CoL sp.nov.

- Not growing with Tubipora musica View in CoL ....................................................................... 3

3 Microscleres include toxas and/or raphidotoxas............................................................. 4

- No toxas or raphidotoxas.............................................................................. 13

4 Microsclere complement quite diverse, including three size categories of anisochelae, two size categories of sigmas, toxas, raphidotoxas and trichodragmas............................................... Mycale (Carmia) tydemani View in CoL sp.nov.

- Less diverse microsclere complement..................................................................... 5

5 Next to anisochelae and sigmas there are exclusively raphidotoxas; no proper toxas................................. 6

- Toxas present, with or without raphidotoxas................................................................ 8

6 Sigmas I robust, up to 105 x 5–7 µm ...................................................................... 7

- Sigmas I rare, thin, up to 52 x 1 µm ........................................... Mycale (Carmia) tenuichela View in CoL sp.nov.

7 Spicule tracts thin, wispy, up to 30 µm diameter; sigma II absent........................ Mycale (Carmia) rhaphidotoxa View in CoL

- Spicule tracts thick, up to 110 µm diameter; sigma II present.......................... Mycale (Carmia) raphidiophora View in CoL

8 Both toxas and raphidotoxas present................................................ Mycale (Carmia) confundata View in CoL

- Only proper symmetrical toxas, no raphidotoxas............................................................. 9

9 Only small toxas present (up to 40 µm)............................................. Mycale (Carmia) stegoderma View in CoL

- Toxas> 40 µm, in a large size range, up to 200–350 µm ..................................................... 10

10 Anisochelae I 40–50 µm ............................................................................... 11

- Anisochelae I only 10–20 µm .................................................... Mycale (Carmia) aff. toxifera View in CoL

11 Color dark grey (alcohol)............................................................. Mycale (Carmia) suezza View in CoL

- Color brick red...................................................................................... 12

12 Anisochelae I in rosettes....................................................... Mycale (Carmia) madraspatana View in CoL

- Anisochelae I not in rosettes......................................................... Mycale (Carmia) militaris View in CoL

13 No sigmas present................................................... Mycale (Carmia) monomicrosclera View in CoL sp.nov.

- Sigmas present...................................................................................... 14

14 Three size categories of anisochelae.............................................. Mycale (Carmia) amiri View in CoL sp.nov.

- Only two or a single category of anisochelae............................................................... 15

15 Two categories of anisochelae.......................................................................... 16

- A single category of anisochelae........................................................................ 18

16 Raphides and/or trichodragmas present................................................................... 17

- No raphides or trichodragmas..................................................... Mycale (Carmia) phyllophila View in CoL

17 Trichodragmas large, up to 80 µm, fusiform in shape; growing on the coral Fungia View in CoL (unkown whether this is obligatory).......................................................................... Mycale (Carmia) fungiaphila View in CoL sp.nov.

- Trichodragmas in small straight packages (18–30 µm)................................ Mycale (Carmia) cockburniana View in CoL

18 Massive sponge, thickness at least 1 cm .................................................................. 19

- Sponge a thin crust of 1 mm or less...................................................................... 21

19 Basal mass with long erect fistules................................................... Mycale (Carmia) fistulifera View in CoL

- No fistules or long outgrowths.......................................................................... 20

20 Massive, irregular, anisochelae distorted................................................. Mycale (Carmia) relicta View in CoL

- Massively encrusting on other invertebrates, anisochelae normal shaped..................... Mycale (Carmia) lissochela View in CoL

21 Sponge pale pink in life........................................................... Mycale (Carmia) maunakea View in CoL

- Sponge brick red................................................................. Mycale (Carmia) mytilorum View in CoL

Global diversity and distribution of the subgenus Mycale (Carmia)

We queried the World Porifera Database (Van Soest et al. 2020) and added the above results from our Indo-West Pacific Mycale (Carmia) study to arrive at the current tentative estimate of known accepted species, which numbers 61. Their distribution over the world oceans summarized as the numbers of species found in Marine Ecoregions of the World (cf. Spalding et al. 2007) is presented in Fig. 54 View FIGURE 54 . The subgenus is widespread in warmer and temperate waters, with only very few polar species, and with the highest species density in Indonesia, the Seychelles and the Mediterranean-Atlantic regions. This is likely an effect of collecting efforts. Taken together, the species of this subgenus are representative for the distribution pattern of the entire genus Mycale (cf. also below Fig. 130 View FIGURE 130 ).

QM

Queensland Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Poecilosclerida

Family

Mycalidae

Genus

Mycale

Loc

Mycale (Carmia)

Van, Rob W. M., Aryasari, Ratih & De, Nicole J. 2021
2021
Loc

Mycale (Carmia)

Gray 1867
1867
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