Mycale (Carmia) amiri, Van & Aryasari & De, 2021

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 : 54-57

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.4464340

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/361087A7-FFF0-FF98-55AB-FD405106CCB8

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Mycale (Carmia) amiri
status

sp. nov.

Mycale (Carmia) amiri View in CoL sp.nov.

Figs 33 View FIGURE 33 a–h, 34a–h

Material examined. Holotype ZMA Por. 09737, Indonesia, Sulawesi, SW Salayar, E of N point Pulau Bahuluang , 6.4667°S 120.4417°E, sea grass bed on coral branch, depth 0–2 m, snorkeling, coll. R. W.M. van Soest, Indonesian-Dutch Snellius II Expedition stat. 171, field nr. 171/18, 1 October 1984 (live color green). GoogleMaps

Paratype ZMA Por. 06542, Indonesia, Sulawesi, SW Salayar, E of N point Pulau Bahuluang, 6.4667°S 120.4417°E, sea grass bed on coral branch, depth 0–2 m, snorkeling, coll GoogleMaps . R. W.M. van Soest, Indonesian-Dutch Snellius II Expedition stat. 171, field nr. 171/04, 1 October 1984 (brown); paratype ZMA Por. 06544, Indonesia, Sulawesi, SW Salayar, E of N point Pulau Bahuluang, 6.4667°S 120.4417°E, sea grass bed on coral branch, depth 0–2 m, snorkeling, coll GoogleMaps . R. W.M. van Soest, Indonesian-Dutch Snellius II Expedition stat. 171, field nr. 171/06, 1 October 1984 (yellow-green) ;

Non-type material: ZMA Por. 07966, Indonesia, Nusa Tenggara, NE coast of Sumba , E of Melolo, 9.9167°S 120.75°E, reef flat, depth 1–4 m, snorkeling, coll GoogleMaps . R. W.M. van Soest, Indonesian-Dutch Snellius II Expedition stat. 052, field nr. 052 / II/05 , 14 September 1984 (dark brown) .

Description. Small crusts and patches on dead corals ( Figs 33a View FIGURE 33 , 34a View FIGURE 34 ), branching octocorals and other marine invertebrates. Surface microlobate, smooth, slimy. In preserved condition no visible openings. Live colors dark yellow green or brown. Size of individual patches dependent of substratum, 1–1.5 cm long, 0.5 cm thick. Consistency soft.

Skeleton ( Fig. 33b,b View FIGURE 33 1 View FIGURE 1 ). Thin, lax tracts of megascleres, 30–60 µm in diameter (5–8 spicules in cross section) run through the choanosome ending at the surface with brushes of spicules. Overall, the skeleton has a low spicular density, except microscleres, which are abundant in the surface membrane and throughout the choanosome. Rosettes of anisochelae I are small (up to 75 µm diameter) and have only 5–8 spicules. The tissue of all specimens shows a dense mass of refractile granules. One specimen (ZMA Por. 07966) is packed with multicellular cyanobacteria ( Fig. 34h View FIGURE 34 ).

Spicules ( Figs 33 View FIGURE 33 c–h, 34b–g). Mycalostyles, three categories of anisochelae, and two categories of sigmas.

Mycalostyles ( Figs 33c,c View FIGURE 33 1 View FIGURE 1 , 34b,b View FIGURE 34 1 View FIGURE 1 ), thin, with barely developed elongate heads and pointed opposite ends, 205– 275.3 –351 x 2.5– 3.6 – 5 µm.

Anisochelae I ( Figs 33d,d View FIGURE 33 1 View FIGURE 1 , 34c View FIGURE 34 ), well-developed elongate shape, free part of the shaft 30–40% of spicule length, with upper median alae extended outward, lower median alae squarish, 24– 31.4 – 35 µm.

Anisochelae II ( Fig. 33e View FIGURE 33 , 34d,d View FIGURE 34 1 View FIGURE 1 ), similar to anisochelae I in shape, 16– 19.0 – 23 µm.

Anisochelae III ( Figs 27f View FIGURE 27 , 28e View FIGURE 28 ), reduced lateral alae, upper and lower median alae nearing each other, 9– 11.4 – 15 µm.

Sigma I ( Fig. 33g View FIGURE 33 , 34f View FIGURE 34 ), narrow-shaped, thickness 1.5–3 µm, asymmetrical, with incurved endings, 48– 56.5 – 66 µm.

Sigma II ( Fig. 33h View FIGURE 33 , 34g View FIGURE 34 ), thin, symmetrical, 12– 17.8 – 21 µm.

Distribution and ecology. Indonesia. In sea grass meadows and on reef flats, often on other marine invertebrates, down to 4 m.

Etymology. Named after the late Ichsan Amir, formerly of the Research and Development Centre for Oceanology, Indonesian Institute of Sciences, Jakarta, Indonesia, in recognition of his work on Indonesian sponges (cf. Amir 1992). Ichsan unfortunately died from an accident preventing him from pursuing his intended studies on the Indonesian sponge fauna.

Remarks. The specific features of the new species are the three categories of anisochelae and two of sigmas in combination with lack of toxas and trichodragmas and the abundance of refractile granules in the tissue.

We excluded ZMA Por. 07966 from the type material because of its dark brown live color and the possibly related presence of numerous multicellular cyanobacteriae. The lower alae of anisochelae III in this specimen are slightly different from those of the type specimens and sigma II appear more robust. Nevertheless, the tissue with refractile granules and the overall shape and size of the spicules is similar to the other three specimens, which were all from the same locality. The slight differences between the type material and ZMA Por. 07966 may be due to differences in habitat.

ZMA

Universiteit van Amsterdam, Zoologisch Museum

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Poecilosclerida

Family

Mycalidae

Genus

Mycale

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