Cliona vermifera Hancock, 1867
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4370.5.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:88C1C5A7-3C4E-416D-A716-D8B3D62E720D |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6489436 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BC2D87B2-7B7D-E542-5FB5-8563FBD4F882 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Cliona vermifera Hancock, 1867 |
status |
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Cliona vermifera Hancock, 1867
Material examined. CIMAR.CU.06, CIMAR.CU.8(I), CIMAR.CU.09(I), CIMAR.CU.09(IIa) MZUCR.381: Bahía Culebra, 10m, 21.III.2011, coll. and det. Cristian Pacheco Solano . CIMAR. CU.122, CIMAR.CU.123, CIMAR.CU.200, CIMAR.CU.201: Bahía Culebra, 10 m, 28.VI.2011, coll. and det. Cristian Pacheco Solano . MZUCR. 383, MZUCR.384, CIMAR.IC.21.1, CIMAR.IC.34.1: Isla del Caño , 5 m, 12. II.2011, coll. and det. Cristian Pacheco Solano. N /A: Playa el Faro, Los Cóbanos , El Salvador , <3 m, 1-X-2016, coll. Sofía Solorzano, det. José Luis Carballo .
External morphology. Endolithic sponge in alpha morphology. Circular papillae 1 mm in diameter. Live color orange.
Excavation. Erosion multicamerate. Oval or irregular chambers with diameters of 1 to 3 mm, occasionally fused. Erosion scars 35–53 µm in diameter, very smooth, with sharp edges ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 ).
Spicules. Megascleres as tylostyles in two size classes, microscleres helical rods ( Fig. 21 View FIGURE 21 ). Tylostyle dimensions: 100–294 µm (x̅ =195.1, σ=54.8) x 1–12 µm (x̅ =5.3, σ=3.0). Spiraster dimensions: 25–65 µm (x̅ =41.9, σ=9.8) x 1–12 (x̅ =3.9, σ=1.6) µm.
Previous records. Carballo et al. (2008a) and Vega (2012) sampled C. vermifera in the Mexican Pacific. Guzmán (1988) further reported it from Costa Rica. Our account is a new record for El Salvador.
Ecology. It was found in dead coral of genus Pocillopora and Porites , from 5 to 10 m depth. C. vermifera is the most abundant excavating sponge in the ETP and is thus of considerable importance to local bioerosion ( Carballo et al. 2008b; Vega 2012).
Distribution and previous records. The species was described by Hancock (1867) without indication of the type locality. It has since been widely reported, from the Mediterranean Sea ( Volz 1939; Bertolino et al. 2013), Eastern Atlantic Ocean ( Carballo et al. 1994), Caribbean ( Topsent 1889, Hechtel 1965; Rützler 1974; Ward & Risk 1977), Mexican Pacific ( Carter 2009; Carballo et al. 2004, 2008a; Vega 2012), the Western Pacific ( Schönberg 2001), and Indian Ocean ( Topsent 1932). Scott et al. (1988) found this species in Costa Rica, and we did additionally in El Salvador ( Fig. 22 View FIGURE22 ).
Remarks. Due to its characteristic microscleres and its two size classes of tylostyles ( Fig. 21 View FIGURE 21 ), C. vermifera has always been regarded as easy to identify, and it has been reported from warm waters across the whole world (Schönberg et al. 2017). Traditionally, C. vermifera was thought to be cosmopolitan (e.g. Schönberg et al. 2006). However, due to recent discoveries of taxonomically cryptic species within the Clionaida ( Boury-Esnault et al. 1999; Xavier et al. 2010, Paula et al. 2012), such “cosmopolitan” species are now treated with more caution and are increasingly reviewed. A recent publication by León-Pech et al. (2015) showed that dispersal abilities of C. vermifera were limited in the Mexican Pacific, which suggests that this species could also be a species complex. We were unable to resolve this taxonomically and treated C. vermifera as one species.
CIMAR |
Universidad Catolica de Valparaiso, Centro de Investigaciones del Mar |
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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