Hymedesmia (Stylopus) alcoladoi, Van, Rob W. M., 2017

Van, Rob W. M., 2017, Sponges of the Guyana Shelf, Zootaxa 1, pp. 1-225 : 140-141

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.272951

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6D68A019-6F63-4AA4-A8B3-92D351F1F69B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5698698

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A80010-77DC-FF20-FF14-A5409163FDA7

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Hymedesmia (Stylopus) alcoladoi
status

sp. nov.

Hymedesmia (Stylopus) alcoladoi View in CoL sp. nov.

Figures 87 View FIGURE 87 a–d

Material examined. Holotype RMNH Por. 9956, Suriname, ‘ Snellius O.C.P.S. ’ Guyana Shelf Expedition, station G7, 7.28°N 56.7933°W, depth 64 m, bottom sand, 7 May 1966 GoogleMaps .

Description. Thinly encrusting on a dead oyster shell. Color in alcohol brown. Thickness less than 1 mm.

Skeleton. Hymedesmioid ( Fig. 87 View FIGURE 87 a), with long acanthostyles and short acanthostyles erect on the substratum, heads embedded in a basal spongin plate. Choanosome and surface skeleton composed of scattered tornotes.

Spicules. ( Figs 87 View FIGURE 87 b–d) Acanthostyles, tornotes.

Acanthostyles, in two size categories, both with heavily spined heads, (1) larger ( Figs 87 View FIGURE 87 b,b1) with spination gradually diminishing towards the pointed end, 135– 176 –213 x 9 – 12.2 –17 µm, and (2) smaller ( Fig. 87 View FIGURE 87 c) spined heavily all over, not infrequently provided with bifid pointed ends 62– 79 –121 x 6.5– 7.2 –9 µm.

Tornotes ( Figs 87 View FIGURE 87 d,d1), smooth, mucronate, slightly swollen pointed apices, almost symmetrical, but one end slightly thinner than the opposite end, 151– 179 –222 x 2 – 2.4 –4 µm.

Distribution and ecology. Guyana Shelf, on shells at 64 m depth.

Etymology. Named after Dr. Pedro M. Alcolado (Instituto de Oceanología, Havana, Cuba) in recognition of his lifelong dedication to ecology and taxonomy of the Cuban sponge fauna.

Remarks. No previous records of Hymedesmia (Stylopus) are known from the Central West Atlantic. Recently, a Phorbas species without chelae was described, P. aurantiacus Rützler, Piantoni, Van Soest & Díaz, 2014 . Theoretically, this could be considered close or conspecific as a more mature form of the present species. However, P. aurantiacus is clearly different in possessing styliform tornotes and three separate categories of acanthostyles. Moreover , both tornotes and acanthostyles reach much higher lengths (tornotes up to 590 x 10 µm, large acanthostyles up to 410 x 21 µm) than in the present material. This makes it quite unlikely that the two are conspecific.

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

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