Amphimedon dinae, Helmy, Tamer, Van, Rob W. M. & Soest, 2005

Helmy, Tamer, Van, Rob W. M. & Soest, 2005, Amphimedon species (Porifera: Niphatidae) from the Gulf of Aqaba, Northern Red Sea: Filling the gaps in the distribution of a common pantropical genus, Zootaxa 859, pp. 1-18 : 7

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.170840

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6266284

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AD0E87ED-FFE9-C031-8C4A-9E5DFD454838

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Amphimedon dinae
status

sp. nov.

Amphimedon dinae View in CoL sp.nov. ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 D, 3A–C)

Material examined. Holotype ZMA Por. 17341, Ras Um El Seed, 8m, coll. T. Helmy, 25­07­2000.

Description. Colour: Brown. Shape: Massively encrusting, 2 cm high, 0.5–1 cm thick with clear well distributed oscula 2–4 mm wide. Surface: punctate due to regularly distributed subdermal cavities. ( Figure 3A View FIGURE 3. A ). Texture: Compressible, corky, can be torn but not easily.

Skeleton. Ectosomal skeleton ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3. A B) is a paratangential reticulation of spongin fibres forming rounded meshes 40­175­430 µm. Fibres variable in diameter, 9–80 µm. Coring rare or absent. Choanosomal skeleton ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3. A C) is an anisotropic reticulation of primary fibres 42–80 µm and secondary fibres 5­11­16 µm forming polygonal meshes of 60–585 µm wide. Coring rare or absent, overall spicular presence low.

Spicules: Thin oxeas ( Figure 1 View FIGURE 1 D), 52­57­ 61 x 1 –1.5 µm.

Etymology. Named after Dina Helmy , Ismailia, Egypt, for her continuous help during many stages of Tamer Helmy's work.

Ecology: Attached to dead corals or other solid rocky substratum in the coral reef community, in the vicinity of algal mats. When torn off, a mucilaginous substance is found in parts connected to the rocks.

Distribution. It was found in several sites in the Gulf of Aqaba including Ras Um El Seed and Ras Nusrani (pers. obs. T.H.).

Remarks. Amphimedon chloros and Amphimedon specimens described below differ from the new species in having abundant spicules as opposed to the rare almost vestigial spiculation of A. dinae sp.nov.. Our specimen is closest to specimens of the Caribbean Amphimedon complanata (Duchassaing, 1850) as redescribed by Van Soest, 1980. Like A. dinae sp.nov. this has a reticulation of spongin fibres cored sparsely with thin spicules. It differs in being much more elaborate of form with a strong tendency towards a flabelliform habit. It has an irregular surface, and the colour is dark purple to black. We examined the specimens in ZMA (a.o. the type of Duchassaing's Spongia complanata , ZMA Por. 2095) and found that it has rectangular meshes of 50–300 µm formed by paucispicular primary fibres 30–70 µm which contain 0–8 spicules and secondary paucispicular fibres 8–30 µm with 0–4 spicules. Spicules of Amphimedon complanata are exclusively strongylote oxeas 70–120 x 0.5–3 µm. Our new species has clearly shorter spicules and appears to have a coarser spongin fibre skeleton.

ZMA

Universiteit van Amsterdam, Zoologisch Museum

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