Mycale (Zygomycale) sibogae, Van & Aryasari & De, 2021

Van, Rob W. M., Aryasari, Ratih & De, Nicole J., 2021, Mycale species of the tropical Indo-West Pacific (Porifera, Demospongiae, Poecilosclerida), Zootaxa 4912 (1), pp. 1-212 : 187-190

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4912.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9536C1CF-4AEF-47F8-959B-48CD7A5392D8

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4464427

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/361087A7-FF7F-FF1D-55AB-FC685333CC6B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Mycale (Zygomycale) sibogae
status

sp. nov.

Mycale (Zygomycale) sibogae View in CoL sp. nov.

Figs 122 View FIGURE 122 a–d, 123a–g

Material examined. Holotype ZMA Por. 02901, Indonesia, Papua, Aru Islands, Pearl Banks, anchorage off Pulau Jedan , 5.4134°S 134.6677°E, depth 13 m, bottom sand and shells, coll. Siboga Expedition stat. 273, field nr. SE1599 IIA, 23 December 1899. GoogleMaps

Description ( Fig. 122a View FIGURE 122 ). Bumpy, lobate mass of 2.5 x 2 x 2 cm. Surface optically smooth, but microhispid. No visible openings in preserved state, color beige-brown in alcohol. Consistency firm, compressible.

Skeleton ( Figs 122 View FIGURE 122 b–d). Compact, with main choanosomal spicule tracts of 60–80 µm diameter running at right angles to the surface ( Fig. 122b View FIGURE 122 ) at distances of 300–550 µm, frequently interconnected by thinner tracts of about 30 µm diameter. The reticulation is dense but irregular ( Fig. 122c View FIGURE 122 ). Just below the surface the main tracts form brushes of single megascleres carrying the tangential surface skeleton ( Figs 122 View FIGURE 122 b–c), but also penetrating the surface membrane causing a short microhispidation. The ectosomal skeleton is of the aegogropila-type, intercrossing tracts of 20–30 µm diameter, tight-meshed, but rather irregular, also with some loose single spicules ( Fig. 122d View FIGURE 122 ), with meshes of 100–150 µm in widest expansion. Rosettes of anisochelae I, 70–100 µm in diameter, occur on the intersections of the skeletal tracts, and in places clusters of toxodragmas ( Fig. 122d View FIGURE 122 arrow) are found.

Spicules ( Figs 123 View FIGURE 123 a–g). Mycalostyles, two categories of anisochelae, isochelae, a single category of sigmas, toxas.

Mycalostyles ( Fig. 123a,a View FIGURE 123 1 View FIGURE 1 ), often slightly curved, comparatively short and fat, with elongated heads and barely visible subterminal constriction, with opposite end sharply pointed, 186– 213.4 –233 x 4.5– 5.4 – 6.5 µm.

Anisochelae I ( Fig. 123b View FIGURE 123 ), well-developed, with free part of the shaft 35–40% of spicule length, with upper median alae extended outwards, lower alae comparatively small, 29– 34.1 – 37 µm.

Anisochelae II ( Fig. 123c View FIGURE 123 ), well-developed, narrow-shaped, free part of the shaft 25–30 % of spicule length, with upper median alae only slightly extended, almost parallel to the shaft, lower median alae with upward directed protrusion, 17– 19.2 – 22 µm.

Isochelae ( Figs 123d View FIGURE 123 ), well-developed, comparatively robust, with median alae slightly extended outwards, usually slightly asymmetrical, 10– 11.8 – 13 µm.

Sigmas ( Figs 123 View FIGURE 123 e–f), thin (1 µm or less thick), mostly asymmetrical, but the smaller ones almost symmetrical, with sharply pointed endings, comparatively variable in size, 13– 22.0 – 28 µm, but not clearly distinguishable in size categories.

Toxas ( Figs 123g View FIGURE 123 ), thin, shallow-, evenly curved, occasionally single, but predominantly in dragmata, and very often in ‘double’ dragmata resembling those of Mycale (Kerasemna) humilis (cf. above.), 27– 32.4 –39 x 2– 3.4 – 7 µm.

Distribution and ecology. Indonesia, reef and sand bottom in shallow-water.

Etymology. Named after H.M.S. ‘Siboga’ to commemorate the 1899–1900 expedition carried out from the ship.

Remarks. The new species is close to Mycale (Zygomycale) isochela Hentschel, 1911 in several aspects, e.g. it shares the absence of robust sigmas with that species. A difference is the apparent absence of anisochela I in M. (Z.) isochela , as it possesses only a single anisochela of 17–20 µm, which has the size of anisochelae II of our new species, and the presence of trichodragmata of 20 µm, absent in our new species. Further more detailed differences with our new species are the shape of the anisochelae, with upper median alae almost overlapping with the lower alae, no mention is made of rosettes, and the toxas are 45–50 µm, clearly in excess of those of our new species.

The new species differs from M. (Z.) parishii in the absence of anisochelae III, absence of robust sigmas (sigma I) next to small thin sigmas (sigma II), and the absence of trichodragmata. From M. (Z.) pectinicola it differs in lacking micracanthoxeas, robust sigmas I, and possessing most toxas in dragmata. The anisochelae I of that species are 40–45 µm, clearly in excess of those of our new species.

Addittional Mycale (Zygomycale) species from the region

ZMA

Universiteit van Amsterdam, Zoologisch Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Poecilosclerida

Family

Mycalidae

Genus

Mycale

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