Oceanapia carotta ( Schmidt, 1870 )

Van, Rob W. M., 2017, Sponges of the Guyana Shelf, Zootaxa 1, pp. 1-225 : 45-46

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.272951

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6D68A019-6F63-4AA4-A8B3-92D351F1F69B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5698591

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A80010-777B-FF81-FF14-A76794D8FF4E

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Plazi (2017-01-14 15:53:28, last updated 2024-11-25 22:58:23)

scientific name

Oceanapia carotta ( Schmidt, 1870 )
status

 

Oceanapia carotta ( Schmidt, 1870) View in CoL

Figures 28 View FIGURE 28 a–e

Rhizochalina carotta Schmidt, 1870: 36 View in CoL , pl. IV fig. 2; Topsent, 1920: 4.? Rhizochalina fibulata Schmidt, 1880: 76 .

Oceanapia carotta View in CoL ; De Laubenfels 1936: 72.

Oceanapia oleracea View in CoL ; Van Soest 1980: 89, pl. XIV fig. 2, text-fig. 33.

(?Not: Rhizochalina oleracea Schmidt, 1870 ; nec sensu Wilson 1902, De Laubenfels 1947, Wells et al. 1960, Little 1963)

Material examined. RMNH Por. 6300, Suriname, ‘ Luymes O.C.P.S. ’ Guyana Shelf Expedition, station K101B, 7.3783°N 54.3583°W, depth 93 m, rectangular dredge, 17 April 1969 GoogleMaps .

Description. ( Fig. 28 View FIGURE 28 a) About ten small rounded specimens, 1–2 cm in diameter and some fragments of larger fistules, 4–5 cm long, up to 1 cm in diameter, with branching apices. Color pinkish light brown.

Skeleton. Ectosomal skeleton of the main body consists of intercrossing single oxeas forming a feltwork-like skin. That of the fistules ( Fig. 28 View FIGURE 28 b) is a double layered single spicule reticulation supported by long subectosomal spicule tracts. The choanosomal skeleton of the main body ( Fig. 28 View FIGURE 28 c) is an irregular system of very thick tracts, 120–180 µm in thickness (15+ spicules in cros section) inbetween which is a confused mass of single spicules.

Spicules. ( Figs 28 View FIGURE 28 d–e) Oxeas, sigmas.

Oxeas ( Fig. 28 View FIGURE 28 d), curved, abruptly pointed, in a large size range, but no clear spicule categories, 105– 180 –241 x 4 – 8.1 –11 µm.

Sigmas ( Figs 28 View FIGURE 28 e), symmetrical, shallowly incurved, in a large size range, 15– 23.1 –33 µm.

Distribution and ecology. Guyana Shelf, Florida? (no locality known), Barbados?, Puerto Rico, Brazil?, muddy sand bottoms at 72–93 m depth.

Remarks. The possession of large numbers of sigmas conforms to Topsent’s (1920) redescription of Rhizochalina carotta . The size of the present specimens and fragments is here interpreted as juveniles, because Schmidt’s illustration (1870, pl. IV fig. 2) is of a much larger individual. O. carotta is here revived, from a suggested junior synonymy with Oceanapia oleracea ( Schmidt, 1870) , which ignores the importance of the presence of microscleres (e.g. Van Soest 1980). The only author who so far studied the type material of both species, Topsent (1920), listed sufficient differences to throw doubt on this synonymy.

Schmidt’s (1880) Rhizochalina fibulata from Barbados is a possible synonym of this species, as he mentioned the presence of numerous sigmas. The specimen was collected at considerable depth, 518 m.

De Laubenfels, M. W. (1936) A discussion of the sponge fauna of the Dry Tortugas, in particular, and the West Indies in general, with material for a revision of the families and orders of the Porifera. Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication, 467 (Tortugas Laboratory Paper, 30, 1 - 225.

Little, F. J. Jr. (1963) The sponge fauna of the St. George's Sound, Apalache Bay, and Panama City Regions of the Florida Gulf Coast. Tulane Studies in Zoology, 11 (2), 31 - 71.

Schmidt, O. (1870) Grundzuge einer Spongien-Fauna des atlantischen Gebietes. Wilhelm Engelmann, Leipzig, iii - iv, 88 pp.

Schmidt, O. (1880) Die Spongien des Meerbusen von Mexico (Und des caraibischen Meeres). Heft II. Abtheilung II.

Topsent, E. (1920) Spongiaires du Musee Zoologique de Strasbourg. Monaxonides. Bulletin de l'Institut oceanographique, Monaco, 381, 1 - 36.

Van Soest, R. W. M. (1980) Marine sponges from Curacao and other Caribbean localities. Part II. Haplosclerida. In: Hummelinck, P. W. & Van der Steen, L. J. (Eds.), Uitgaven van de Natuurwetenschappelijke Studiekring voor Suriname en de Nederlandse Antillen. No. 104. Studies on the Fauna of Curacao and other Caribbean Islands, 62 (191), 1 - 173. Avaliable from: http: // www. repository. naturalis. nl / document / 550028 (Accessed 11 Jan. 2017)

Wells, H. W., Wells, M. J. & Gray, I. E. (1960) Marine sponges of North Carolina. Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society, 76 (2), 200 - 245.

Wilson, H. V. (1902) [1900] The sponges collected in Porto Rico in 1899 by the U. S. Fish Commission Steamer Fish Hawk. Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission, 2, 375 - 411.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 28. Oceanapia carotta (Schmidt, 1870), a, habitus of various specimens registered as RMNH Por. 6300 (scale bar = 1 cm), b – c, light microscopic images of skeleton, b, skeleton of a fistule, c, skeleton of main body, d – e, SEM image of spicules, d, oxea, e, sigmas.

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Haplosclerida

Family

Phloeodictyidae

Genus

Oceanapia