Johannesia reticulosa ( Thiele, 1905 )

Cóndor-Luján, Báslavi, Arteaga, Alvaro, Polo, Christian, Arroyo, Yessenia, Willenz, Philippe & Hajdu, Eduardo, 2023, Shallow Suberitida (Porifera, Demospongiae) from Peru, Zootaxa 5264 (4), pp. 451-489 : 468-471

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5264.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:675A2650-4738-4DDB-8970-1FE4307F6B3C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7843089

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/21073958-9F69-FFF4-3BD9-15C8FD177A25

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Johannesia reticulosa ( Thiele, 1905 )
status

 

Johannesia reticulosa ( Thiele, 1905) View in CoL

( Figure 6 View FIGURE 6 , Table 6)

Synonyms: Vosmaeria reticulosa Thiele (1905) : 423, Fig. 45a–c; Erpenbeck & van Soest (2002): 815. Johannesia reticulosa: Gerasimova et al. (2008) : 19, Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 –12; Polo et al. (2022): 330–331, Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3

Material examined. Nine specimens. MNRJ 11493 View Materials and MNRJ 11496 View Materials , Don Martin Island, Huacho , Lima (1101′11.14″S 7740′08.78″W), 11 and 1.8 m depth, respectively, coll. B. Cóndor Luján, Y. Hooker & Ph. Willenz, 23.X.2007 . MNRJ 12073 View Materials , ENAPU Pier, Ilo, Moquega (1738′43.00″S 7129′04.60″W), 18.3 m depth, coll. Y. Hooker, Ph. Willenz & M. Ríos. 08.XI.2008 . MNRJ 12161 View Materials and MNRJ 12171 View Materials , Inlet north of Quilca, Quilca , Arequipa (1642′06.10″S 7226′54.00″W), 9.2 and 4.4 m depth, coll. Y. Hooker, M. Vilchez & Ph. Willenz. 30.XI.2008 and 01.XII.2008 . MNRJ 12198 View Materials , El Avion Islet , San Juan de Marcona, Ica (1523′26.20″S 7510′45. 20″W), 18.9 m depth, coll. Y. Hooker, M. Vilchez & Ph. Willenz, 05.XII.2008 . MNRJ 12845 View Materials , MNRJ 12846 View Materials and MNRJ 12852 View Materials , Bocana, Laguna Grande, Paracas , Ica (1409′31.10″S 7614′55.90″W), 5.6, 5.7 and 4.8 m depth, coll. Y. Hooker & Ph. Willenz, 12.XII.2008 .

Description. Encrusting, massively spreading, lobate, ridged, lamellate or slightly tubiform. Dimensions can exceed 5 cm in thickness and 50 cm in largest diameter. Oscula circular (diam = 1–2 mm), flat, or more often apical with short membranes. Differentiable and detachable ectosome. Surface slightly reticulated, as observed in some underwater images. Compressible consistency.

Colour. Light yellow to orange, greenish and/or with brownish spots in life and beige in ethanol ( Fig. 6A, B View FIGURE 6 ).

Skeleton. Ectosomal, a dense, criss-crossed layer of subtylostyles forming loose brushes, slightly piercing the surface. Few oxeas were also observed in the ectosome, mostly laying tangentially ( Fig. 6C View FIGURE 6 ). Choanosomal, much less dense, composed of paucispicular to multispicular tracts of oxeas, irregular, loosely reticulated, overlaid by subtylostyles disposed in confusion. Large subectosomal lacunae were also seen ( Fig. 6D View FIGURE 6 ).

Spicules. Megascleres. Oxeas, slightly to markedly curved, and with acerate tips. (166–840 x 5–22 µm, Fig. 6E–G View FIGURE 6 ). Subtylostyles, mostly slightly curved but also straight, faintly pronounced heads, and with acerate tips (129–465 x 4–13 µm, Fig. 6H–J View FIGURE 6 , Table 6).

Ecology. This species was found associated with the sponge Plicatellopsis expansa ( Thiele, 1905) and with the holdfast of Lessonia trabeculata ( Polo et al. 2022) . The specimens analysed were found occurring associated to anemones (Anthotoe chilensis), polychaetes (e.g. Sabellid), the brachyopod Discinisca lamellosa , cirripeds, mytilids, schrimps, and other sponges ( Clathrinidae ). Some specimens were found underneath rocks or in shaded habitats. Some crabs were observed living in galleries of the largest sponge specimen.

Geographic and bathymetrical distributions. SE Pacific: From central Peru (Huacho, Lima, 11°S, this study) to northern Chile (Iquique, 20°S, Thiele 1905) including intermediate localities (Paracas, Marcona and Quilca, this study, Gerasimova et al. 2008; Polo et al. 2022). MEOW in Peru: Central Peru and Humboldtian ecoregion ( Spalding et al. 2007). From 2 m (this study) to 30 m (Iquique, Thiele 1905).

Remarks. The analysed specimens conform to Johannesia reticulosa from Chile in external morphology and internal anatomy. Although slight differences in spicule dimensions were observed in specimens from Laguna Grande (Paracas, Ica) as they bear smaller oxeas and subtylostyles ( Table 6), this can be attributed to the species geographic variation. Previously, Gerasimova et al. (2008) reported significant spicule size differences in Peruvian specimens, when compared to the type material.

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