Neopetrosia carbonaria (Lamarck, 1814)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5264.3.10 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:12D73CA9-7609-4DDE-8C19-3C69E26E45B7 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7838481 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/44751D4F-FF97-B740-7AAF-FACE45344831 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Neopetrosia carbonaria (Lamarck, 1814) |
status |
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Neopetrosia carbonaria (Lamarck, 1814) View in CoL View at ENA
( Figures 2–4 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 , Table 1 View TABLE 1 )
Spongia carbonaria Lamarck, 1814: 375 .
Thalysias carbonaria Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1864: 83–84 View in CoL .
Pachychalina carbonaria Arndt, 1927: 152–153 .
Phloeodictyon carbonaria Topsent, 1930: 26–27 .
Adocia carbonaria Hechtel, 1965: 26 View in CoL ; Hechtel, 1969: 9; Hechtel, 1976: 252 (non Adocia carbonaria sensu Rocha, 1995 View in CoL [= Haliclona (Soestella) melana View in CoL ]).
Pellina carbonaria De Laubenfels, 1936: 68–69 View in CoL ; Van Soest, 1980: 83; Pulitzer-Finali, 1986: 159; Zea, 1987: 125.
Xestospogia carbonaria Lehnert & Van Soest, 1998: 93 ; Ŗtzler et al., 2000: 238; Díaz, 2005: 470.
Neopetrosia carbonaria View in CoL Ŗtzler et al., 2009: 304; Zea et al., 2014; Pérez et al., 2017: 10.
Neopetrosia aff. carbonaria Rocha et al., 2021: 262 View in CoL View Cited Treatment .
Collected material (six specimens). Northeastern Brazil, Paraíba State: UFPEPOR 1637, Carapibus beach (7°17′57.66″ S, 34°47′52.93″ W), Paraíba State , Brazil, 1 m depth, coll. G. G. Santos, 31 January 2014 GoogleMaps ; UFPEPOR 1853, 1854, 1855, Carapibus beach (7°17′57.66″ S, 34°47′52.93″ W), Paraíba State, Brazil, 1 m depth, coll. G. G. Santos, 21 February 2015 GoogleMaps . Northeastern Brazil, Pernambuco State: UFPEPOR 1458, 1472, Enseada dos Corais beach (8°19′23″ S, 34°56′57″ W), Cabo de Santo Agostinho Municipality, Pernambuco State , Brazil, 1 m depth, colls. U. Pinheiro and G. G. Santos, 26 November 2012 GoogleMaps .
Additional examined material (15 specimens). Northeastern Brazil, Ceará State: MNRJ 17400 View Materials , Icaraizinho de Amontada , intertidal, coll. Rômulo Farias Kyria Santiago, November 2013; MNRJ 17866 View Materials , Mundaú beach
(3.17418º S, 39.35723º W), Trairí city, 1 m depth, coll. M. Carvalho, 29 March 2014; MNRJ 17741 View Materials , MNRJ 17766 View Materials , Mundaú beach (3.17418º S, 39.35723º W), Trairí city, 1 m depth, coll. E. Hajdu, 29 and 31 March 2014 GoogleMaps ; MNRJ 17777 View Materials , Mundaú beach (3.17418º S, 39.35723º W), Trairí city, 1 m depth, coll. A. Bispo, 29 March 2014 GoogleMaps ; MNRJ 17832 View Materials , Mundaú beach (3.17418º S, 39.35723º W), Trairí city, 1 m depth, coll. S. Salani, 29 March 2014 GoogleMaps ; MNRJ 17782 View Materials , 17783 View Materials , Flecheiras beach (3.21858º S, 39.26344º W), 1 m depth, coll. A. Bispo, 30 March 2014 GoogleMaps ; MNRJ 17840 View Materials , Flecheiras beach (3.21858º S, 39.26344º W), 1 m depth, coll. S. Salani, 30 March 2014 GoogleMaps ; MNRJ 17887 View Materials , Flecheiras beach (3.21858º S, 39.26344º W), 1 m depth, coll. M. Carvalho, 30 March 2014 GoogleMaps . Northeastern Brazil, Rio Grande do Norte State : MNRJ 18033 View Materials , Parrachos de Maracajaú, Maxaranguape City (5.40114º S, 35.29677º W), depth not recorded, coll. S. Salani, 6 April 2014 GoogleMaps . Northeastern Brazil, Bahia State : MNRJ 18690 View Materials , Abrolhos Bank, Pedra de Leste , 3 m depth, coll. F. Moraes, 30 June 2014 . Northeastern Brazil, Alagoas State : MNRJ 4713 View Materials , Ponta Verde beach (9.65000º S, 35.68333º W), Maceió city, 0.5–1 m depth, coll. E. Hajdu, 3 September 2001 GoogleMaps ; MNRJ 17035 View Materials , Ponta do Meirim beach (9.70000º S, 35.76667º W), Maceió city, 0.5–1 m depth, coll. A. Bispo, 10 January 2012 GoogleMaps .
Comparative material. Spongia carbonaria Lamarck, 1814 , Holotype MNHN-LBIM-DT 545, Schyzotype MNRJ 21834. Adocia carbonaria Hetchel, 1976 , YPM IZ 8960, Piedade reef, near Recife city, Pernambuco State, Brazil, coll. Jacques Laborel, 21 November 1961. Neopetrosia carbonaria, MNRJ 9405, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Bocas del Toro, 1 m depth, coll. G. Muricy, 15 August 2005.
New diagnosis. Neopetrosia carbonaria is a thick encrusting to repent or ramose sponge, with reddish brown to brown color or dark green to black color in vivo, two categories of oxeas as megascleres and rare raphidiform toxas as microscleres.
External morphology ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). Thickly encrusting ( Fig. 2A–D View FIGURE 2 ) to repent ( Fig. 2E–F View FIGURE 2 ) or ramose growth form ( Fig. 2G–H View FIGURE 2 ), up to 7.5 x 3.5 x 1.5 cm (length x width x thickness). The surface is smooth to rough, uneven, easily detachable. The subdermal spaces are visible. The oscules have a lighter-colored rim and may be flush with the surface or raised on volcano-like to tubular projections up to 1 cm high, 0.5–4.0 mm in diameter. The consistency is hard and crumbly. The color in vivo varies from reddish brown ( Figs. 2A–B and 2E–F View FIGURE 2 ) to brown ( Fig. 2G–H View FIGURE 2 ) or dark green ( Fig. 2C View FIGURE 2 ) to almost black ( Fig. 2D View FIGURE 2 ) and becomes dark brown or black, when preserved. The preservation alcohol turns bluish or greenish black when the sponge is placed in it, becoming black after a while.
Skeleton ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ). The ectosomal skeleton is a tangential isodictyal reticulation of single oxeas I, overlying a subsuperficial reticulation. The dermal membrane is pierced by pores with 17–38 μm in diameter. Spongin is abundant inside the ectosomal meshes and at the nodes of spicules in the isodictyal ectosome ( Fig. 3A–B View FIGURE 3 ). Short pauci- to multispicular perpendicular tracts support the surface and form the regularly distributed subdermal spaces, with 200–1.000 μm in diameter ( Fig. 3C View FIGURE 3 ). The choanosome is a dense mass of oxeas I forming vague, rounded meshes (100–800 μm in diameter), which are largely obscured by longitudinal, thick tracts ( Fig. 3C View FIGURE 3 ). In the deeper region of the choanosome there are more spicules strewn in confusion, especially oxeas II ( Fig. 3C View FIGURE 3 ). Dark brown, almost black, pigmented cells are common.
Spicules ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ) (average of all specimens; individual measurements in Table 1 View TABLE 1 ). Two categories of oxeas were observed: (1) Oxeas I, smooth, stout, slightly curved, usually with conical ends, but acerate, blunt, mucronate, strongylote and stylote ends are common ( Figs. 4A–B View FIGURE 4 ). Their shape is rather uniform, but the spicules have a large size range (160–226–281 / 6–12–23 μm). (2) Oxeas II, thin, smooth, slightly curved or double bent, with acerate ends (111–177–245 / 1–3–9 μm) ( Fig. 4C View FIGURE 4 ). The oxeas II could be developmental stages. Microscleres are very thin toxas, with a central swelling, variable in shape, some with low and straight axis, similar to raphides, and others with high and curved axis: 21–46–77 μm ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 D’–D’). These toxas were observed only in nine of the 22 specimens examined.
Bathimetric distribution and ecology. Neopetrosia carbonaria is an intertidal and shallow water species, found between 0.5–3 m depth. It is often found in reef environments, on the under-surfaces of dead corals or buried in muddy sediment. The specimens from Northeastern Brazil has been observed growing among the bryozoans of the genus Stylopoma Levinsen, 1909 , the zoanthid Palythoa caribaeorum Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1860 , other sponges and calcareous algae.
Distribution. U.S. Virgin Islands (Duchassaing & Michelotti 1864), Florida ( Van Soest 1980), Gulf of Mexico (Ŗtzler et al. 2009), Curaçao ( Van Soest 1980; Arndt 1927), Jamaica ( Hechtel 1965; Pulitzer-Finali 1986), Barbados ( Hechtel 1969), Dry Tortugas ( de Laubenfels 1936), Puerto Rico ( Van Soest 1980; Pulitzer-Finali 1986), Colombia ( Zea 1987; Zea et al. 2014), Bocas del Toro ( Díaz 2005), Belize (Ŗtzler et al. 2000), Martinique ( Pérez et al. 2017). Northeastern Brazil: Ceará, Rio Grande do Norte, Paraíba, Pernambuco, Alagoas and Bahia States ( Hechtel 1976; present study).
Taxonomic remarks. Neopetrosia carbonaria is defined here by the thick encrusting to repent or ramose growing form, with reddish brown to brown color and dark green to black color in vivo, two categories of oxeas as megascleres and rare raphidiform toxas as microscleres. Despite the presence of oxeas larger than 200 μm, which approach this species to the genus Xestospongia , the studied specimens were assigned to Neopetrosia based on its skeletal arrangement that is somewhat irregular, with poorly defined multispicular tracts, but with a well-developed subdermal layer.
Some studied specimens showed similar features with the holotype of Neopetrosia carbonaria , such as the thickly encrusting shape, with oscular projections, the very dark color, the presence of a subdermal layer and pigmented cells in the skeleton, and stout and fusiform oxeas, with similar sizes (Topsent 1930). However, new morphological features and spicules types were revealed in some Brazilian populations of N. carbonaria , such as the presence of raphidiform toxas as microscleres and a wide range of color, including reddish brown, brown and dark green color.
We found toxas in nine of the 21 studied specimens from the Northeastern Brazil, in some pictures of spicule slides of Neopetrosia carbonaria sensu Hechtel, 1976 (as Adocia carbonaria, YPM IZ 8960) from Pernambuco State, Northeastern Brazil, and in one specimen from Bocas del Toro, Panama (MNRJ 9405) ( Tab. 1 View TABLE 1 ). These microscleres can be quite rare and occur in both black and brown sponges. Despite the absence of toxas in the fragment of N. carbonaria holotype reexamined here (MNRJ 21834, Tab. 1 View TABLE 1 ), these microscleres were reported in some populations of N. carbonaria from the Caribbean coast of Colombia, as toxiform raphides ( Zea 1987; Zea et al. 2014). Due the absence and rarity of raphidiform toxas in some specimens analyzed, unrelated to its color, we agree with Zea (1987) and assume that these differences are intraspecific. However, all the records of Neopetrosia carbonaria need a revaluation, since the presence of toxas among microscleres can be easily overlooked.
In the field, reddish brown and brown specimens of N. carbonaria could be confused with N. subtriangularis and Calyx podatypa ( De Laubenfels, 1934) . Neopetrosia subtriangularis can be distinguished from N. carbonaria by its smaller and thinner oxeas (104–120–144 / 2–3–4 μm versus 160–226–281 / 6–12–23 μm in N. carbonaria ) and C. podatypa has a more regular choanosomal skeleton, with well-defined uni- to paucispicular tracts, forming triangular to polygonal meshes, without a subdermal layer ( Zea et al. 2014). In addition, none of these species has toxas and the dark green to black color of N. carbonaria .
Specimens examined | Locality | Color | Oxea I | Oxea II | Toxas |
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MNHN-LBIM-DT 545 (Holotype) | American Seas | Black | 182–215–238/6– 10–13 | 115–181–205/2– 4–5 | – |
UFPEPOR 1637 | Paraíba, NE Brazil | Dark green | 205–233– 245/10–15–20 | 150–187–210/2– 4–9 | 45–52–63 (n=11) |
UFPEPOR 1853 | Paraíba, NE Brazil | Reddish brown | 202–221–245/7– 12–15 | 155–190–228/1– 3–5 | – |
UFPEPOR 1854 | Paraíba, NE Brazil | Reddish brown | 172–217– 248/10–13–16 | 152–182–198/1– 3–5 | – |
UFPEPOR 1855 | Paraíba, NE Brazil | Reddish brown | 200–212–240/6– 12–15 | 150–185–213/1– 3–5 | – |
UFPEPOR 1458 | Pernambuco, NE Brazil | Dark green | 207–225– 243/12–14–15 | 130–163–245/1– 2–4 | – |
UFPEPOR 1472 | Pernambuco, NE Brazil | Dark green | 212–228–240/7– 13–15 | 137–172–193/1– 2–4 | 48 (n = 1) |
YPM IZ 8960 | Pernambuco, NE Brazil | – | 247–262– 281/12–17–22 | 134–184–213/2– 3–6 | 46–61–77 (n=12) |
MNRJ 17400 | Ceará, NE Brazil | – | 189–218– 242/10–11–15 | 130–167–201/1– 2–2 | 34–44–60 (n=18) |
MNRJ 17741 | Ceará, NE Brazil | Dark green | 213–234– 261/10–12–15 | 122–165–199/1– 1–3 | – |
MNRJ 17766 | Ceará, NE Brazil | Brown | 203–234– 266/10–13–15 | 148–186–218/1– 2–3 | – |
MNRJ 17777 | Ceará, NE Brazil | Brown | 203–219– 237/10–11–15 | 119–161–208/1– 2–3 | – |
MNRJ 17782 | Ceará, NE Brazil | Dark green | 189–221– 242/10–10–15 | 124–170–205/1– 2–4 | – |
MNRJ 17783 | Ceará, NE Brazil | Reddish brown | 174–214– 232/10–10–15 | 111–177–209/1– 2–3 | – |
MNRJ 17832 | Ceará, NE Brazil | Dark green | 203–223– 237/10–10–15 | 140–177–210/1– 2–4 | 27–36–42 (n=7) |
MNRJ 17840 | Ceará, NE Brazil | Dark green | 203–227– 252/10–12–15 | 123–171–215/1– 2–3 | 28–35–45 (n=7) |
MNRJ 17866 | Ceará, NE Brazil | Brown | 213–232– 266/10–12–15 | 137–180–211/1– 2–3 | 21–33–41 (n=30) |
MNRJ 17887 | Ceará, NE Brazil | Dark green | 160–211– 257/10–11–15 | 132–165–206/1– 2–4 | – |
MNRJ 18033 | Rio Grande do Norte, NE Brazil | Dark green | 194–217– 252/10–10–15 | 130–170–212/1– 2–3 | 26–35–42 (n=30) |
MNRJ 18690 | Abrolhos Bank, Bahia, NE Brazil | Dark green, almost black | 203–222– 242/10–10–15 | 141–178–211/1– 2–3 | – |
MNRJ 4713 | Alagoas, NE Brazil | Dark green, almost black | 189–220– 257/10–16–19 | 131–169–201/1– 2–3 | 29–59–70 (n=11) |
MNRJ 17035 | Alagoas, NE Brazil | Dark green | 218–235– 257/10–16–19 | 125–175–206/1– 3–5 | – |
MNRJ 9405 | Panama | Black | 237–254– 273/11–16–23 | 190–212–233/1– 3–8 | 50–59–70 (n=9) |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Genus |
Neopetrosia carbonaria (Lamarck, 1814)
Sandes, Joana, Rocha, Lívia, Pinheiro, Ulisses & Santos, George Garcia 2023 |
Neopetrosia carbonaria
Perez, T. & Diaz, M. C. & Ruiz, C. & Condor-Lujan, B. & Klautau, M. & Hajdu, E. & Lobo-Hajdu, G. & Zea, S. & Pomponi, S. A. & Thacker, R. W. & Carteron, S. & Tollu, G. & Pouget-Cuvelier, A. & Thelamon, P. & Marechal, J. P. & Thomas, O. P. & Ereskovsky, A. E. & Vacelet, J. & Boury-Esnault, N. 2017: 10 |
Xestospogia carbonaria
Diaz, M. C. 2005: 470 |
Lehnert, H. & Van Soest, R. W. M. 1998: 93 |
Adocia carbonaria
Hechtel, G. J. 1976: 252 |
Hechtel, G. J. 1969: 9 |
Hechtel, G. J. 1965: 26 |
Pellina carbonaria
Zea, S. 1987: 125 |
Pulitzer-Finali, G. 1986: 159 |
Van Soest, R. W. M. 1980: 83 |
De Laubenfels, M. W. 1936: 69 |
Pachychalina carbonaria
Arndt 1927: 153 |