Cladocroce reina, Aguilar-Camacho, Jose Maria & Carballo, Jose Luis, 2010

Aguilar-Camacho, Jose Maria & Carballo, Jose Luis, 2010, First record of Cladocroce (Porifera: Haplosclerida: Chalinidae) from the Eastern Pacific ocean with the description of Cladocroce reina sp. nov., Zootaxa 2603, pp. 65-68 : 65-67

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.275992

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5687477

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038A7402-B223-FFFB-FF78-FA7AFB9386A5

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cladocroce reina
status

sp. nov.

Cladocroce reina View in CoL sp. nov

Holotype: MNCN 1.01/630. 23 /10/2007, Parque de la Reina (Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico), 3 m 16°50’56.97’’N, 99°54’62.43’’W. Paratype: LEB-ICML-UNAM-1818 23/10/2007, Palao Isla La Roqueta (Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico), 3 m 16°49’24.49’’N, 99°54’22.58’’W.

Description: The holotype is a cushion-shaped sponge about 6 cm in diameter and 2 cm thick. The surface is smooth. Ostial orifices are 60–340 µm in diameter. Oscules are circular, 3–9 mm in diameter. They are elevated 1–2 mm and scattered. The consistency is compressible and somewhat fragile. Color in life is sky blue, and after preservation it becomes pale. The paratype is thinly-encrusting, 1–5 cm long and 1–2 cm thick ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 A). Ostial orifices measurements are as in the holotype, but in some cases the oscules are not so abundant; in contrast, the color in life is greenish.

Spicules and skeleton: Spicules are robust almost fusiform oxeas, sometimes slightly curved. Spicules with acerated tips and styloid are commonly present. Spicule measurements: 130–(151.7)–175 µm × 5–(6.6)–7.5 µm ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 B). The ectosomal skeleton is a tangential isotropic unispicular reticulation ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 C). The choanosomal skeleton is an irregular, isotropic unispicular reticulation, reinforced by ascending multispicular tracts that support the ectosome. The tracts form triangular or hexagonal meshes that delimit choanosomal spaces 150–350 µm wide. The ascending tracts are thick at the base of the sponge (60–150 µm in diameter) involving up to 16 spicules, and tapering towards the ectosome (30–50 µm in diameter). The spongin is scarce, cementing the tracts and the nodes of the isotropic reticulation ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 D).

Habitat: The sponge is commonly found in shallow water at 3–6 m depth, on top of and underneath rocks, and fragments of coral. The distribution is limited to Acapulco Bay. Several larvae were found in the holotype.

Etymology: The name “ reina ” comes from the type locality “El Parque de la Reina ” in the port of Acapulco.

Discussion: Cladocroce reina sp. nov constitutes the first record of the genus from the American coast. The other known shallow water species are C. aculeata , C. burapha and C. tubulosa . Besides the different geographical distribution, important morphological differences also exist between these species. C. aculeata is a tubular creamcolored sponge from the Great Barrier Reef; in contrast C. reina sp. nov is a cushion or thin-encrusting, green to sky blue sponge. The spicule measurements are similar in both species, but C. aculeata shows a great variety of strongyloid oxeas as well as oxeas with mucronate, hastate and asymmetrical tips. C. reina sp. nov has fusiform oxeas, sometimes ending in acerated tips and rarely transformed into styles. C. burapha is a white or blue tubular ramose sponge from the Gulf of Thailand. The principal difference with C. reina sp. nov., regardless of the form and color, is the thickness of the choanosomal spicule tracts; C. burapha has spicule tracts 23–59 µm wide while C. reina sp. nov has tracts 30–150 µm across. The other close species, C. tubulosa , is a yellow tubular sponge, from Mombasa ( Kenya), which differs from C.

reina View in CoL sp. nov in the form, color and spicule length; the oxeas are 64–74 µm long in C. tubulosa View in CoL and 130–175 µm in C. reina View in CoL sp. nov. The rest of Cladocroce View in CoL species were collected in deep waters, and they also have longer oxeas than C. reina View in CoL sp. nov (see Table 1 View TABLE 1 ). Recently, a Cladocroce View in CoL not indentified was described living on navigation buoys in Singapore ( Lim et al. 2009). This is an incrusting to massive sponge with oxeas in two categories. C. reina View in CoL sp. nov. has only one category, shorter than the oxeas of the Singapore specimens (162.5– 173.5–185 µm). The only similar species in form and color to C. reina View in CoL sp. nov in the Mexican Pacific coast is Haliclona turquoisia ( Laubenfels, 1954) View in CoL . However, Haliclona turquoisia View in CoL has a somewhat confused choanosomal skeleton, and the oxeas are clearly shorter (62.5–120 µm) than those of C. reina View in CoL sp. nov ( Gomez et al. 2002).

Species Shape Color Spicules Measures (µm) Type Locality Depth (m) We are grateful to the following sources of funding: CONABIO DJ007/26 and CONACYT SEP-2009 - 102239. This work was carried out under permission of SAGARPA (Permit numbers: DGOPA.02476. 220306 .0985 and DGOPA.06648.140807.3121). We thank Clara Ramírez Jáuregui for help with the literature.

MNCN

Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Haplosclerida

Family

Chalinidae

Genus

Cladocroce

Loc

Cladocroce reina

Aguilar-Camacho, Jose Maria & Carballo, Jose Luis 2010
2010
Loc

Haliclona turquoisia (

Laubenfels 1954
1954
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