Clathrina brasiliensis, Sole-Cava, Klautau, Boury-Esnault, Borojevic & Thorpe, 1991

Klautau, Michelle & Valentine, Clare, 2003, Revision of the genus Clathrina (Porifera, Calcarea), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 139 (1), pp. 1-62 : 11

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1046/j.0024-4082.2003.00063.x

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5490050

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D5484C-D416-C356-FF10-FCB5FEB3FECD

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Clathrina brasiliensis
status

 

CLATHRINA BRASILIENSIS View in CoL SOLÉ- CAVA, KLAUTAU,

BOURY- ESNAULT, BOROJEVIC & THORPE, 1991

Type locality: Arraial do Cabo , Rio de Janeiro, Brazil .

Type: MNHN-LBIM.C. 1989.2 (holotype /alcohol). Arraial do Cabo (Enseada), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Collected by G. Muricy (16 December 1986) .

Citations: Klautau et al. (1994); Klautau & Borojevic (2001).

Colour: White in life and when preserved.

Description: Cormus massive, formed of thin, regular and tightly anastomosed tubes. Oscula are simple openings, surrounded by a thin membrane, and located on the top of short conical projections. They receive water from large water-collecting tubes.

The skeleton comprises three kinds of spicule: triactines, tetractines ( Fig. 7A View Figure 7 ) and tripods ( Fig. 7B View Figure 7 ). The triactines and tetractines are equiradiate and equiangular, with conical actines and blunt tips. The apical actine ( Fig. 7B View Figure 7 ) of the tetractines is shorter and thinner than the facial ones, and it is conical, sharp and covered with short spines. This actine is always projected towards the inside of the tubes. Tripods are more irregular than the triactines and tetractines, and frequently they are sagittal. They normally have their centre raised but sometimes look like large conical triactines. However, it is possible to distinguish them from large triactines because of the strong conical shape of their actines and because of their location. They are distributed on the surface of the external tubes in a monolayer, delimiting the cormus. Habitat is sciaphile.

Remarks: Specimens are morphologically very similar to those of C. cerebrum from the Mediterranean Sea. However, they were recognized as a distinct species after genetic studies ( Solé-Cava et al., 1991) showed that there was no gene flow between the two populations, resulting in a very low level of genetic identity. The only morphological differences found here were in the size of the spicules, which are a little longer and thinner in the Mediterranean population (triactines: 85 Mm (±7 Mm)/7 Mm (±1 Mm); tetractines: 83 Mm (±9 Mm)/7 Mm (±1 Mm); tripods: 89 Mm (±15 Mm)/11 Mm (±2 Mm)), and in the spines of the apical actine, which are also longer in C. cerebrum and very short in C. brasiliensis .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Calcarea

Order

Clathrinida

Family

Clathrinidae

Genus

Clathrina

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF