Cyamon pedroalcoladoi, Ozga & Menegola, 2023

Ozga, Aline Vasum & Menegola, Carla, 2023, Hidden treasures of Camamu Bay, Bahia, Brazil: New records and two new species of Raspailiidae (Porifera, Demospongiae), Zootaxa 5375 (4), pp. 515-532 : 521-524

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5375.4.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:361B8D47-4AE1-4983-B197-C604769CDFB6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10248497

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8D3BBA43-0C0C-F14B-FF12-76A1A05432A4

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cyamon pedroalcoladoi
status

sp. nov.

Cyamon pedroalcoladoi View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figs. 3 View FIGURE 3 and 4 View FIGURE 4 , Table 2 View TABLE 2 )

Material examined. Holotype. MZUSP 478 (Schizoholotypes MUCIN 0149). Brazil. Bahia State, Maraú, Camamu Bay , Coroa das Ilhas, 13°57’33”S 38°59’51”W, 23.x.2012, 2–3 m, Coll. C. Menegola, Det. A. Ozga & C. Menegola. GoogleMaps

Diagnosis. Sponge with has five kinds of styles, two kinds of strongyles with regular rays and arranged spines, and two kinds of polyactines with irregular rays, completely smooth, with mucronate tips.

Description. Massive, irregular sponge with dimensions (19 x 12 mm (length x width)). Conulose surface, conules with spicule projections of long styles, visible to the naked eye. The spaces between the conules form sinuous grooves with oscules of approximately 0.22 mm to 1.85 mm are evenly distributed on the sponge surface. Pores not visible. Firm, compressible and elastic. Orange color in situ ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ). Upon preservation, turns dark brown externally, beige internally ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ).

Skeleton. Ectosome measures about 10 µm, of columnar structures comprising long and short plumose styles tufts, and strongyles that protrude from the surface. Polyactines I and II are also present. Choanosome is composed of plumose multispicular columnar bundles emerging from a basal grouping of polyactines I and II. Columns are echinated by short and long styles and strongyles perpendicular to the surface and wrapped in spongin fibers. Exhalant channels are surrounded by dense patches of polyactines and short styles ( Fig. 3C–D View FIGURE 3 ).

Spicules. Two kinds of strongyles, five kinds of styles and two kinds of polyactines ( Fig. 4A–P View FIGURE 4 ; Table 2 View TABLE 2 ).

Strongyles I ( Fig. 4A and B View FIGURE 4 )—Long, thin and straight. Delicate spicules that break easily: 1175–1860–2325/ 10–15.2–22.5 µm. Strongyles II ( Fig. 4C View FIGURE 4 )—Short and thick with rounded ends: 250–390.3–510/ 12.5–17.9–25 µm. Styles I ( Fig. 4D View FIGURE 4 )—Long and thin with pointed hastate apical ends. The spicule looks like subtylostyles: 1775–2161.7–2500/ 7.5–14.3–20 µm. Styles II ( Fig. 4E View FIGURE 4 )—Long, thin and with pointed hastate apical ends. Some spicules have a discrete tyle: 875–1158.3–1525/ 2.5–6.4–12.5 µm. Styles III ( Fig. 4F View FIGURE 4 )—Short and thick, straight or curved, rounded tips with pointed acerate apical ends: 300–465–600/ 10–17–25 µm. Styles IV ( Fig. 4G View FIGURE 4 )—Short and thin, straight or slightly curved, with round, blunt, mucronate apices: 250–335–500/ 5–6.4–10 µm. Styles V ( Fig. 4H View FIGURE 4 )—Short, thin and sinuous, with pointed conical apical end: 220–385.7–520/ 2.5–4.5–7.5 µm. Polyactines I ( Fig. 4I–N View FIGURE 4 )—Three to five cladi of regular length, with pointed or blunt, spined tips. Growing (young) spicules are smooth. The spines may be straight or facing the center of the spicule. Basal cladi with pointed ends (42.5–58.9–80/ 5–9.5–15 µm) and lateral cladi with rounded ends (42.5–56.1–70/ 7.5–8.9–12.5 µm). Polyactines II ( Fig. 4O and P View FIGURE 4 )—Four or five-claded with single basal elongate clade all tapering towards the apex. Center with irregularly dispersed rounded projections, which may also be found along the rays. Elongate basal clade (36–51.2–65/ 2–3.7–8 µm) and short lateral cladi (10–22.7–37/ 1–2.4–4 µm).

Ecology and bathymetry. Sandy bottom with biodetritus (shell and carapace fragments and calcareous nodules) at 2–3 m depth.

Distribution. Southwestern Atlantic Ocean, Brazil. Only known from the type locality.

Etymology. The specific epithet is in homage to Dr. Pedro Alcolado ( Cuba), beloved friend and scientific mentor of C. Menegola, who left us prematurely in 2017 and whose dynamism and passion for sponges and coral reefs are reflected in his vast, more than four decades, contributions to coral and sponge taxonomy, ecology and biology, with hundreds of publications and mentoring dozens of graduate students.

Remarks. Cyamon pedroalcoladoi sp. nov. is closely related to C. agnani ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 ; Table 2 View TABLE 2 ) described for northeastern Brazil and reported from the Caribbean ( Colombia) by Van Soest et al. (2012). The new species differs from C. agnani by having two kinds of strongyles, and two additional kinds of styles. The details of megascleres here highlighted have not been documented in the general literature and in the review of Cyamon by Van Soest et al. (2012). Cyamon pedroalcoladoi sp. nov. possesses style V sinuous, not observed in C. agnani from Brazil.

Regarding C. agnani, Van Soest et al. (2012) pointed out the notable variation between the holotype described by Boury-Esnault (1973) for Brazil (Espirito Santo state), deposited at the Natural History Museum in Paris, and the specimen from Colombia (Santa Marta region), deposited at the Amsterdam Zoological Museum, which had a young and smooth form of polyactines (also found in Cyamon pedroalcoladoi sp. nov. and named here as polyactines II. In relation to the other Cyamon species from the Atlantic ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 ; Table 2 View TABLE 2 ), C. arguinense has, in addition to the styles, a subtylostyles type, absent in the new species, and its polyactines has tapered tips in all cladi, while polyactine I of Cyamon pedroalcoladoi sp. nov. has a tapered clade and others that are rounded. While C. amphipolyactinum has an amphipolyactine kind that is absent in Cyamon pedroalcoladoi sp. nov. but which has two kinds of usual shape of polyactines (cladi diverging from a single central point). The new species differs from all other species in the genus by having strongyles and two additional kinds of styles. The strongyles I are long and thin, leaving the spicule delicate and easy to break during dissociation and slide preparation. To measure 30 complete spicules of strongyles I, it is necessary to prepare a larger number of slides.

The description of Cyamon pedroalcoladoi sp. nov. increases to four the number of known species of the genus in the Atlantic Ocean, of which two are known from shallow waters off Brazil. This first record of C. agnani in Bahia expands the geographic and depth limits for this species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Porifera

Class

Demospongiae

Order

Axinellida

Family

Raspailiidae

SubFamily

Cyamoninae

Genus

Cyamon

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