Acarnus innominatus Gray, 1867

Ugalde, Diana, Fernandez, Julio C. C., Gómez, Patricia, Lôbo-Hajdu, Gisele & Simões, Nuno, 2021, An update on the diversity of marine sponges in the southern Gulf of Mexico coral reefs, Zootaxa 5031 (1), pp. 1-112 : 52-53

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5031.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CC3A59D1-E09E-407E-93F4-4796FD3D7C19

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/110587B3-4D38-4825-FF53-FED04FD1347C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Acarnus innominatus Gray, 1867
status

 

Acarnus innominatus Gray, 1867 View in CoL

Tables 6, 7; Figs. 46A–I View FIGURE 46 , 58A View FIGURE 58

Synonymy and references: Acarnus innominatus Gray (1867: 544) , and Muricy et al. (2011: 145); Fonteia anomala Gray (1867: 544) ; Acarnus carteri and Acarnus (Acarnus) innominatus : see references compiled in Muricy et al. (2011: 145).

Type locality. St. Vincent .

Material examined. CNPGG-2393, Hornos reef (19.19083°N, 96.11777°W), 2.7 m depth, coll. Diana Ugalde, 27 August 2018.

Description. Encrusting habit ( Fig. 58A View FIGURE 58 ); overall size 4 × 1.5 × 0.6 cm. The surface is microhispid, with scattered pores and without visible oscules. Orange color in vivo, turning to beige when preserved in ethanol. The consistency is flexible.

Skeleton. Ectosome is formed by paratangential tylotes, with cladotylotes in tufts ( Fig. 46A View FIGURE 46 ). The choanosomal skeleton consists of a reticulation of multispicular tracts of styles, echinated by cladotylotes ( Fig. 46C View FIGURE 46 ). Microsclere; chelae and toxas; scattered throughout the choanosomal and ectosomal region ( Fig. 46B View FIGURE 46 ).

Spicules. Megascleres: Styles stout, slightly curved and smooth ( Fig. 46D View FIGURE 46 1 View FIGURE 1 ); 320– 364.3 (27.3)–410/20– 19.1 (3.8)–22.5 µm. Tylotes slender, straight and smooth, with microspined ends ( Figs. 46E–F View FIGURE 46 ); 187– 223.5 (25.3)– 270/4.5– 5.3 (0.6)–6 µm. Large cladotylotes with a smooth shaft and smooth rounded basal tyle and apical clads ( Fig. 46G View FIGURE 46 ); 180– 244.8 (20.4)–270/8– 10.8 (1.5)–14 µm, and cladome with 20– 36.4 (5.6)–40 µm in diameter. Small cladotylotes with a sparsely spined shaft, and smooth, rounded basal tyle and apical clads ( Fig. 46H View FIGURE 46 ); n=5, 96– 100.8 (5.4)–110/2.2– 2.8 (0.3)–3 µm, and cladome with 10– 16 (4.7)–20 µm in diameter. Microscleres: Palmate isochelae ( Fig. 46D View FIGURE 46 – 4 View FIGURE 4 ); 10– 12.9 (1)–14 µm in length. Oxhorn-shaped toxas ( Fig. 46I View FIGURE 46 ); 52– 66 (10.8)–80 µm in length. Wing-shaped toxas ( Fig. 46D View FIGURE 46 – 2 View FIGURE 2 ); 18– 34.3 (5.2)–40 µm in length. Accolada-shaped toxas ( Fig. 46D View FIGURE 46 – 3 View FIGURE 3 ); 170– 363 (153.7)– 600 in length.

Distribution. Mexico (current records), Bahamas, US (Florida), Cuba, other countries in the Caribbean Sea, and Brazil ( Zea 1987; Muricy et al. 2011).

Remarks. The present specimen conforms to A. innominatus well enough based on Hooper’s (2002) redescription of the type material. However, it differs in some aspects from Zea’s (1987) description of Colombian materials, where spicule measurements are often larger: styles 404–461 × 10–21 µm, tylotes 237–313 × 3.3–4.7 µm, large cladotylotes 233–299 × 8–10.9 µm, small cladotylotes 133–138 × 4.7 µm, and occurrence of five instead of four apical clads on cladotylotes. However, these traits are within the known variation of the species. Acarnus innominatus has a widespread occurrence in the Caribbean region, but this is its first record for the GoM.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Poecilosclerida

Family

Acarnidae

Genus

Acarnus

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