Mycale jasoniae, Lehnert, Helmut, Stone, Robert & Heimler, Wolfgang, 2006

Lehnert, Helmut, Stone, Robert & Heimler, Wolfgang, 2006, New species of deep­sea demosponges (Porifera) from the Aleutian Islands (Alaska, USA), Zootaxa 1250, pp. 1-35 : 23-27

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.173010

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6253514

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD8C18-FF9A-8E19-FEC8-F920D9E22900

treatment provided by

Plazi (2016-04-04 10:54:08, last updated 2024-11-27 05:29:00)

scientific name

Mycale jasoniae
status

sp. nov.

Mycale jasoniae View in CoL sp. nov.

( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 a–f)

Material

Holotype: USNM 1084238 (51° 19.808' N, 179° 30.658' W, Amchitka Pass, 208 m depth, 0 3. 0 8. 2004).

Description

The holotype consists of two large and one small, yellow colored tubes ( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 a), basally connected. The surface is bulbous and the consistency rather soft, easily torn, fibrous. After freezing the specimen is now ( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 b), about 23 x 16 x 14 cm with irregularly distributed, conical processes. The color now is a darker yellow, with darker and lighter areas, some almost white. The specimen was attached to a cobble at the base.

Skeleton: The ectosome is a tangential arrangement of short spicule tracts and single spicules with many microscleres in between.The choanosome consists of rather short spicule tracts, 60–95 µm in diameter which are frequently branching off side tracts and are running in all directions. This pattern is obscured by many single mega­ and microscleres in between without any recognizable orientation.

Spicules: Megascleres are tylostyles ( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 c), 405–460 x 10–12 µm. Microscleres are anisochelae I ( Figs. 14 View FIGURE 14 d, e), 80–100 µm, anisochelae II ( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 f), 40–60 µm, rhaphides ( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 f), 42–65 µm.

Discussion

With its “mycalostyles”, two size categories of anisochelae and rhaphids this species has the characteristic spiculation of the genus Mycale . There are 17 species of Mycale known to occur in the area. M. jasoniae differs from all of them in the combination of two size categories of anisochelae with rhaphids. M. loveni ( Fristedt, 1887) with its spicule set of tylostyles and two size categories of anisochelae is the most similar species. It differs from M. jasoniae in its stalked, funnel shaped growth, in lacking the rhaphids, in having tylostyles (350–509 x 13–16 µm) and large anisochelae (72–111 µm) of a larger size range and the small category of anisochelae (31–54 µm) is smaller. All other sympatric species of Mycale have sigmas among the microscleres or only one or three categories of anisochelae or have an additional category of microsclere. For a detailed comparison of all species of Mycale of the area with all spicule measurements included we refer to Lehnert, Stone & Heimler (2006: 20, table 4).

Distribution

Known only from the type locality.

Fristedt, K. (1887) Sponges from the Atlantic and Arctic Oceans and the Behring Sea. Vega-Expeditionens Vetenskap. Iakttagelser (Nordenskiold), 4, 401 - 471, pls. 22 - 31.

Lehnert, H., Stone, R. & Heimler, W. (2006) New species of Poecilosclerida (Porifera, Demospongiae) from the Aleutian Islands, Alaska, USA. Zootaxa, 1155, 1 - 23.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 14. Mycale jasoniae sp. nov. a, Holotype in situ at 208 m depth in Amchitka Pass b, Holotype after collection. c, Spicules overview, Subtylostyles, large and small anisochelae and rhaphids. d, Front­, side­ and backview of large anisochelae. e, side view of large anisochela, note top view on (broken) small end of anisochela f, Small category of anisochela and rhaphides.

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Poecilosclerida

SubOrder

Myxillina

Family

Mycalidae

Genus

Mycale