Clathria (Microciona) spinosa ( Wilson, 1902 )

Gómez, Patricia, 2014, The genus Clathria from the Gulf of Mexico and Mexican Caribbean, with redescription and resurrection of Clathria carteri (Poecilosclerida: Microcionidae), Zootaxa 3790 (1), pp. 51-85 : 69

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3790.1.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CB58F85A-924D-4148-AAC4-CDBD041EB3CD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6143962

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CF87CC-B845-FFCD-FF5F-FCE4FDD2F890

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Clathria (Microciona) spinosa ( Wilson, 1902 )
status

 

Clathria (Microciona) spinosa ( Wilson, 1902) View in CoL

( Fig. 13–14 View FIGURE 13 View FIGURE 14 , 20 View FIGURE 20 D, Tab. 4 View TABLE 4 )

Microciona spinosa Wilson, 1902:396 View in CoL , Wiedenmayer 1977:141.

Axociella spinosa sensu de Laubenfels 1936a:113.

Clathria (Microciona) spinosa sensu van Soest 1984:959, Zea 1987:167, Hooper 1996:225.

Material examined. CNPGG −072 Serpientes reef Yucatan 21º26’ 22.29N 90º28’25.39”W, 13/VI/2011, 14 m depth. CNPGG −1181 and CNPGG −1190 Madagascar reef Yucatan, 21º26’16.6”N 90º16’39”W, 7/VI/2011, 9– 10.5 m depth. CNPGG −1186 Madagascar reef Yucatan, 21º26’17”N 90º16’38.2”W, 8/VI/2011, 9 m depth.

Description. Massively incrusting sponge 15 cm long, 9 cm wide, 5–6 cm in thickness, covering a gorgonian stem ( Fig.13 View FIGURE 13 A); sample CNPGG–1190 is adhered to a scleractinian 10 cm long, 5 cm wide, 1–3 cm thick. Out of water it expels some kind of mucus and is easily torn. It is bright orange in vivo turning to red upon dying, fading to beige in spirit. It is stiff in consistency when alive, has a coarse conulose surface by means of spiny bumps up to 5 mm round and from less than 1 mm up to 2 mm high. Oscula not seen.

Skeleton. ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 B) The choanosomal skeleton is made up of dendritic fibers that anastomose here and there. These fibers 300–450 µm in diameter are cored by thick styles and subtylostyles, scarcely echinated at the same time. Single fibers measure 130–220 µm, closely beset with spine-like radiating processes at the surface due to fiber endings in tufts.

Spicules. ( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 A–F) Subtylostyles straight and slender 169–330 × 1.6–4.9 µm; thick styles with smooth heads, sometimes very minutely spined 131.5–366 × 5.2–18 µm; palmate isochelae 13–16.3 µm; toxa I wing shaped 13–31.2 µm; toxa II lightly oxhorn shaped 45.7–65 µm; large oxea tending to toxiform 286–390 × 1.6 µm (Measurements in Tab. 4 View TABLE 4 ).

Remarks. There is no difference between the thin incrustation of the original description and the massive incrustation; both shapes have the same irregular skeletal arrangement with dendritic columns irregularly anastomosed, but chiefly composed of dendritic tracts. Spiculation is also within the size range of that recorded by Wilson (1902) and Zea (1987).

Clathria (M.) spinosa can be compared with C. (M.) echinata since they share similar skeletal architecture, spiny surface and spiculation composition. However C. (M.) spinosa is more spiny, lacks the presence of cleistochelae, and the spicules are smaller, particularly the megascleres, toxiform oxeote and palmate isochelae.

Distribution. Yucatan 9–10 m, Mexico. Other locations: West Florida 15 m; Puerto Rico; West Bahamas 10 m; Curaçao 2–4 m; Colombia 6– 9 m.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Poecilosclerida

Family

Microcionidae

Genus

Clathria

Loc

Clathria (Microciona) spinosa ( Wilson, 1902 )

Gómez, Patricia 2014
2014
Loc

Clathria (Microciona) spinosa sensu

Hooper 1996: 225
Zea 1987: 167
Soest 1984: 959
1984
Loc

Axociella spinosa sensu

Laubenfels 1936: 113
1936
Loc

Microciona spinosa

Wiedenmayer 1977: 141
Wilson 1902: 396
1902
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