Iphiteon panicea Bowerbank, 1869

Diaz, Maria Cristina, Nuttall, Marissa, Pomponi, Shirley A., Ruetzler, Klaus, Klontz, Sarah, Adams, Christi, Hickerson, Emma L. & Schmahl, G. P., 2023, An annotated and illustrated identification guide to common mesophotic reef sponges (Porifera, Demospongiae, Hexactinellida, and Homoscleromorpha) inhabiting Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary and vicinities, ZooKeys 1161, pp. 1-68 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1161.93754

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4CE0D6C5-C304-4F74-8387-FCC71F8F8AC0

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D963189C-E422-572C-BE5E-45EFFBF61AEB

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Iphiteon panicea Bowerbank, 1869
status

 

Iphiteon panicea Bowerbank, 1869 View in CoL View at ENA

Fig. 65 View Figure 65

Diagnostic features.

Massive, flabellate, white, glass sponge, attached to a rock. The white elongated zoanthid, Vitrumanthus schrieri Kise et al., 2022, was partially overgrowing its surface. The skeleton study of the white hexactinellid (GFOE- 23) revealed a dictyonal, siliceous, rectangular to triangular framework, and spicules that agree with Iphiteon panicea as described by Reiswig (2002: 1299). What appears to be a portion of this specimen with a bright yellow color in life turned dark purple in alcohol, and it was stored as a different sample (GFOE3- 23A). Under a light microscope, the bright yellow hexactenillid appears to be a Dactylocalycidae skeletal framework, covered by thin tissue with no fibers or spicules (Fig. 51B, C View Figure 51 ). The color pattern in life and in alcohol and the type of cells and chambers suggest that this yellow tissue might represent a skeleton-less verongiid of the family Ianthellidae . The hexactinellid portion of yellow color area lacked any microscleres; this would suggest that the hexactinellid might have been dead, which would make the yellow species a potential epibiont for this hexactinellid. More study is required to clarify the identity of this apparent yellow hexatinellid. The trabecular surface is evident on the deck photograph (Fig. 65B View Figure 65 ) with round to elongate pits or grooves (2-10 mm in diameter), possibly exhalant apertures ( Reiswig 2002).

Similar species.

When zoanthids are extended the species can look like the hexactinellid Verrucocoeloidea liberatorii Reiswig & Dohrmann, 2014.

Distribution and abundance.

This species has a northwestern Caribbean distribution (88-1957 m deep). At FGBNMS the species was collected once at Elvers Bank.

Ecology.

Lower mesophotic reefs, sandy bottoms. The zoanthid Vitrumanthus schrieri ( Parazoanthidae ) was originally described in association with the glass sponge Verrucocoeloidea liberatorii . In this sample, the identity of the zoanthid was obtained by barcoding data (28S gene) (Iris Segura, pers. comm., 2022).

Identification.

MCD.

References.

Kise et al. 2022; Reiswig and Dorhrmann 2014; Reiswig 2002.