Niphates luizae, Santos, George Garcia, Docio, Loyana & Pinheiro, Ulisses, 2014

Santos, George Garcia, Docio, Loyana & Pinheiro, Ulisses, 2014, Two new species of the family Niphatidae van Soest, 1980 from Northeastern Brazil (Haplosclerida: Demospongiae: Porifera), Zootaxa 3774 (3), pp. 265-274 : 270-273

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3774.3.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:77DB9ADC-8CD1-4D72-B01B-862C4DE43CFF

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5631977

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C7126473-AF49-FFB5-A5FD-F89EFD033D65

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Niphates luizae
status

sp. nov.

Niphates luizae View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figures 1 View FIGURE 1 , 4 View FIGURE 4 , 5 View FIGURE 5 ; Table 1 View TABLE 1 , 3 View TABLE 3 )

Type Locality: Brazil, Bahia State, Maraú, Taípus de Fora (near Camamu Bay).

Type Specimens: Holotype— UFPEPOR 690, Taípus de Fora (13º53’49”S, 38º55’45”W), Maraú (near Camamu Bay), Bahia State, Brazil, intertidal 0.5 m depth, col. U. Pinheiro, 20.V.2007. Paratype—UFPEPOR 694, Taípus de Fora (13º53’49”S, 38º55’45”W), Maraú (near Camamu Bay), Bahia State, Brazil, intertidal 0.5 m depth, col. M. Amorim, 25.XI.2007.

Diagnosis. Niphates luizae sp. nov. is the unique Niphates in the Atlantic with robust spicules (270 / 18 µm) that might be oxea (majority) or vary in strongyles to styles.

External morphology of holotype. Massive, with volcano-shaped oscular projections ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A), 2.2 x 1.1 cm (height x length). With terminal spiculo-spongin fibers forming minute conulose projections on the surface microconulose. Texture easy to compress but difficult to tear. Oscules apical usually 3 to 4 mm in diameter. Beigepink color in vivo and after preservation (ethanol 80%) is dark beige.

Paratype. Massive, with volcano-shaped oscular projections, 3.5 x 2.0 cm (height x length). Surface microconulose, oscules apical 3 mm (diameter) and beige-pink color in vivo and after preservation is dark beige.

Skeleton. Ectosome rather regular quadrangular or circular meshes of secondary multispicular fibers, surface protruded by upright spicule brushes originating from the choanosomal primaries ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 B–C). Choanosome with irregular reticulations of primary multispicular fibers with irregular branches ascending to surface. In some parts, primary fibers connect to secondary ones forming rounded to irregular meshes ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 D). Meshes average between 152–400 µm in largest diameter. Primary fibers are 60–144 µm in diameter, cored by 10–30 spicules. Secondary or interconnecting fibers are 35–60 µm in diameter, cored by 6–15 spicules. Abundant spongin may cover the spicules.

Spicules. Oxeas (155–270 / 7–18 µm). Slightly curved, smooth, stylote and strongylote forms are present ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 ). Juveniles may be smaller and thinner (100 / 3 µm).

Ecology. The species is sciophilous and it was collected at 0.5–1 m deep.

Distribution ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ). Northeastern coast of Brazil, Bahia State, Brazil. The distributions of others species of Niphates from Brazilian coast are available in Muricy et al (2011).

Etymology. The chosen specific name honors the senior author’s daughter Maria Luíza Alagão Pinheiro.

Remarks. The new species described here belongs to the genus Niphates as it is defined (see Desqueyroux- Faúndez & Valentine 2002). Niphates luizae sp. nov. differs from all four species recorded from Brazil ( N. alba ; N. amorfa ; N. erecta and N. lutea ) by the presence of long and robust oxeas which can vary for strongyles or styles. The beige-pink color in Niphates luizae sp. nov. is not found in other Brazilian species (see Table 3 View TABLE 3 ). The absence of microscleres differ Niphates luizae sp. nov. from the four species recorded in the Atlantic Ocean: N. amorfa ; N. caycedoi (Zea & van Soest, 1986); N. erecta and N. recondita ( Wiedenmayer, 1977) . Among these sponges, N. erecta is the one that most resembles Niphates luizae sp. nov. in the size of megascleres ( Tab. 3 View TABLE 3 ). However, N. erecta has a blue-green color, erect ramose shape, presence of sigmas and predominance of strongyles ( Tab. 3 View TABLE 3 ).

Species Locality Depth(m) Color Spicules(µm) References: (1) van Soest (1980); (2) Muricy et al. (2011); (3) Wiedenmayer (1977); (4) Zea & van Soest (1986); (5) de Laubenfels (1936); (6) Muricy et al. (2008); (7) Campos et al. (2005); (8) Zea 1987).

The presence of sigmas, even rare, is diagnostic of some Niphates (e.g.: N. amorfa , N. digitalis (Lamarck, 1814) , N. erecta and N. recondita ). In the case of N. erecta and N. digitalis , the rarity or non-existence of microsclera is normal (van Soest 1980). This presence or absence of sigma microscleres in Niphates is considered an unreliable generic character (see van Soest 1980; Fromont 1993). In this matter, the proposal of Niphates luizae sp. nov. is not only based on absence of this character, but it considers the difference in shape, color and spicule morphology, as well as the size of spicules among others species as discussed above.

This description of Niphates luizae sp. nov. increased to eight the number of Niphates for the Atlantic Ocean, becoming the more diverse ocean to this genus.

TABLE 3. Summary of characters of Atlantic sponges belonging to genera Niphates Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1864. Values are in micrometers (µm), expressed as follows: minimum – maximum or minimum – mean – maximum length / width. References are numbered in parentheses and listed after the table.

  Oxeas Thinoxeas Strongyles Microscleres
Niphates luizae sp. nov. Bahia State (Brazil) Intertidal beige-pink (in vivo) 155– 210.3 –270 / 7– 11.6 –18 and beige (fixed) - - -
Niphates alba (1) Puerto Rico 20–35 Grey white - - 169–190.9 / 5.5– 6.8 –9 - (strongyles-styles)
Niphates amorpha (1) (3) Bahamas (Bimini) (3) 400 (3) Purplish grey (3) 90– 149 –195 / 2– 3.4 –5 (3) - - 12– 15.4 –18 (thin sigmata) (1)
Niphates caycedoi (4) Islas San Bernardo (Colombian Caribbean) 4 Vivid blue to light 199– 238 –285 / 4.7– 14.5 –19.0 violet - - 11.5–16.9 (small toxa)
Niphates digitalis (5) Floridian not recorded Pale brown 105–155 / 6 (oxeas I) 120 / 3 (oxeas II) - - 17– 18.7 –22 (sigmata) (3)
Niphates erecta (2) (4) (6) U.S. Virgin Islands (2) (8) 62–72 (6) Pink or light blue (6) - - 165– 203.5 –256 (6) 13– 16.1 –20 (sigmas) (4) (8)
Niphates lutea (2) (7) Jamaica (Discovery Bay) (2) 72 (7) Light-brown (7) - - 160– 210.2 –250 / - 2.5– 4.9 –7.5 (7)
Niphates recondita (3) Turtle Rock (Western Bahamas) 6–10 Dark purplish-brow 100– 133 –160 / 1.5– 4.9 –7 or purplish-grey (oxeas-strongyles) - - 17– 29 –39 / 1– 2.5 –3.5 (stigmata)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Haplosclerida

Family

Niphatidae

Genus

Niphates

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