Protosuberites sp.

Turner, Thomas L., Rouse, Greg W., Weigel, Brooke L., Janusson, Carly, Lemay, Matthew A. & Thacker, Robert W., 2024, Taxonomy and phylogeny of the family Suberitidae (Porifera: Demospongiae) in California, Zootaxa 5447 (1), pp. 1-28 : 21-22

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5447.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C1AF0239-3A39-426D-AAFB-8DE26F6DEACF

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11123279

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8D08AC7A-F006-EC23-FF70-F8B31B4101C9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Protosuberites sp.
status

 

Protosuberites sp.

Figure 1–2 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 , 10 View FIGURE 10

Material examined. TLT443, Elwood Reef, Santa Barbara, (34.41775, -119.90150), 9–15 m, 10/23/19.

Morphology. Thinly encrusting on a small (~ 1 cm) blade of red algae. Bright yellow alive.

Skeleton. Not investigated; the entire sample was consumed for DNA extraction and spicule preparation.

Spicules. Tylostyles, straight or weakly curved. Often with well-formed terminal heads, but a high frequency of heads that are sub-terminal or slightly lumpy. Longer spicules are gently tapering for much of their length, but shorter spicules have a consistent width until tapering sharply at tip. Highly variable in length, but distribution is unimodal. 103–246–474 x 2–4–7 μm (n=43).

Distribution and habitat. Found at a single location, Elwood Reef, a shallow, rocky reef with kelp forest cover near Santa Barbara, California.

Remarks. Thinly encrusting Suberitidae are currently placed in either Terpios or Protosuberites ( Morrow & Cárdenas 2015; van Soest 2002). Though we did not examine the skeleton of this small sponge, we think it is more likely to be in Protosuberites due to the shape of the tylostyles and the lack of gelatinous consistency. DNA supports this placement, as the species falls into a clade containing a worldwide sample of other Protosuberites .

With only a single sample that was consumed without investigating the skeleton, and noting how variable we found spicule lengths to be in S. lambei , we conservatively leave this sample as an unknown for the time being.

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