Corvospongilla siamensis Manconi & Ruengsawang

Ruengsawang, Nisit, Hanjavanit, Narumon Sangpradub Chutima & Manconi, Renata, 2012, Biodiversity assessment of the Lower Mekong Basin: A new species of Corvospongilla (Porifera: Spongillina: Spongillidae) from Thailand, Zootaxa 3320, pp. 47-55 : 49-50

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.281178

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6174646

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/57393413-FFE9-FFB2-75E0-FD4FE064716C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Corvospongilla siamensis Manconi & Ruengsawang
status

 

Corvospongilla siamensis Manconi & Ruengsawang nov. sp.

Figures 1–4 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4

Material. Holotype MSNG 56533, Ban Huai Sai (16˚46ˏ20.40˝N, 102˚42ˏ48.22˝E) type locality, Pong River, Lower Mekong Basin, Thailand, leg. Nisit Ruengsawang, 12.II.2008. Paratype MSNG 56533a, Ban Huai Sai, leg. Nisit Ruengsawang, 12.II.2008.

Comparative materials. Corvospongilla burmanica , BMNH 82.3.22.1–3, box 6, dry, type, DTRG FW420 schizotype, Burma; C. burmanica (?), BMNH 86.10.29.1, DTRG FW 636, River Kuano, India; C. caunteri , BMNH 14.11.24.27 ex-ZEV 4776/7, paratype, DTRG FW637, schizotype, Lucknow, India; C. lapidosa , BMNH 0 8.2.11.1, paratype, DTRG FW638, schizotype, River Godavery Nasik, India; Corvospongilla loricata , ZMB 2093 SE325-SE37–41, type, fragment DTRG FW511 locality unknown, Africa; C. mesopotamica MSNG 51766, holotypes, DTRG FW574, schizotype, River Diyala, Iraq; C. thysi , MRAC 1311, type, DTRG FW472, schizotype, Lake Barombi-ma-Mbu, Cameroun, W-Africa; C. ultima , BMNH 14.11.24.29 ex-ZEV 4906/7, DTRG FW639, fragment, India; C. ultima var. spinosa , BMNH 14.11.24.30 ex-ZEV 5106/7, DTRG FW640, Satara District, India; C. volkmeri , BMNH 89.9.25.10, schizoparatype, ex-MCN 86, DTRG FW642, Lagoa Redonda, Sousa, Paraíba State, Brazil; C. zambesiana , BMNH 1906.2.28.2, 13 IIIC, DTRG FW623 R. Zambezi, SE-Africa.

Description. Holotype massive 14 x 11 cm in diameter, 0.5–5 cm in height with lobes up to 3–4 cm in height ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A). Growth form from thin crusts to massive in flourishing specimens with body size dimensions up to 16 cm in diameter. Colour light brown, greenish to emerald green in vivo in the same specimen, light brown to brown in ethanol. Consistency rigid, hard with increasing hardness from surface to the basal portion, fragile in vivo, due to the low amount of spongin in the skeleton. Basal spongin plate notably developed, with sessile gemmules. Surface notably irregular and hispid, conulose, with conules supported by short ascending pauci- to multi-spicular tracts. Conules 1–2.5 mm in height, 1–1.5 mm apart. Oscules chimney-shaped (0.2–0.5 cm in diameter) apical and usually single at the tips of lobes ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 B). Ectosomal skeleton with no special architecture (triangular to polygonal paucispicular meshes) except for ascending pauci- to multi-spicular tracts supporting conules ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 A). Choanosomal skeleton as an alveolar (isotropic) network of megascleres with paucispicular (up to 6 spicules) polygonal meshes (89–213 µm in diameter), and ascending pauci- to multi-spicular tracts supporting conules ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 B). Megascleres strongyles (126–245 x 13–26 µm) frequently with slightly inflated tips, extremely abundant with scattered small tubercles (granules) except for tips or with shaft entirely covered of tubercles up to the tips ( Figs 2 View FIGURE 2 C, 3C, D). Less frequent acanthostrongyles with few spines scattered up to the tips, among the small tubercles. Density of tubercles and spines notably variable. Rare smooth strongyles also present. Strongyles sometime xshaped or with tips slightly inflated or rarely with swellings along the shaft as malformations. Rare stout, smooth oxeas (160–171 x 9–14 µm, n = 4) with tips abruptly pointed also present ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 C). Microscleres micropseudobirotules quite abundant, scattered in the choanosomal skeleton, typical of the genus, with smooth, variably bent shaft (19–51 x 2–2.5 µm) bearing distal smooth pseudorotules (9–19 µm in diameter) with variably long, bent hooks (4–6) ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 E). Gemmules exclusively sessile, not abundant at the sponge basal portion, strictly adhering to the basal spongin plate singly or in small groups (2–5) sharing gemmular cages with fused walls ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A). Gemmular cage hemispherical (865–1160 µm in diameter) with thick wall (107–113 µm in thickness) of extremely scanty compact spongin in small laminae joining abundant strongyles arranged in a notably dense mosaic-like multilayer. Strongyles of the cage belong to different categories, from stout, large, granulate (tubercled) strongyles (107–190 x 15–27 µm, n = 25) very similar to skeletal megascleres, to bent and tubercled strongyles (27–49 x 7–14 µm, n = 15), to bent acanthostrongyles (29–49 x 6–9 µm, n = 5) up to boomerang-shaped, or ring-like (17 µm in diameter, n = 2) and flat button-like (16–27 µm in diameter, n = 4), armed by acute spines sometimes grouped ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 B). Gemmular theca enveloped by the cage but not joined to it (cage and theca are easily detachable from each other), subspherical (589 x 650 µm in diameter) to suboval (424 x 814 µm in diameter) ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 C, D) of almost compact spongin with sublayers (up to 5) supported by small gemmuloscleres tangentially embedded ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 E, G, H). Pneumatic layer absent; only rare, small areas of spongin chambers are present, scattered within the sublayers of laminar spongin. Foramen single, apical or lateral with a short simple collar surrounded by slightly chambered spongin ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 F). Gemmuloscleres short acanthostrongyles (32– 50 x 7–14 µm, n = 25) from straight to boomerang-shaped, ring-shaped to flat (button-like) with ornamentations ranging from tubercles scattered along the shaft to large acute spines mostly at the tips ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 F); also smooth spherules rarely present. Brooded larvae present. Larval acanthoxeas (128–139 x 5 µm, n = 3) fusiform, slender, straight, with scattered small, acute spines more dense towards the tips.

Etymology. The specific epithet is derived from the ancient name of Thailand, formerly known as Siam.

Geographic distribution. Known until now exclusively from the type locality ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ).

Habitat. Sponges in dense populations along the river bank at 0.5–2.0 m of depth in quite transparent waters, generally in shaded areas. Associated organisms: diatoms, insects, molluscs, bryozoans.

MSNG

Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Genova 'Giacomo Doria'

ZMB

Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (Zoological Collections)

MRAC

Musée Royal de l’Afrique Centrale

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