Amphilectus fucorum

Amphilectus cf. fucorum (Esper, 1794) Fig. 5 For synonymy, see Van Soest & Hajdu 2002b: 657. Material examined ZMA Por. 06775, Mauritania, off Banc d’Arguin, depth 100 m, bottom muddy sand, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest & J.J. Vermeulen, Mauritania II Exped. Stat. 072/14, 20.0°N 17.3°W, 2.4 m Agass...

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Main Authors: Van Soest, Rob W. M., Beglinger, Elly J., de Voogd, Nicole J.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3858676
https://zenodo.org/record/3858676
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3858676
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Porifera
Demospongiae
Poecilosclerida
Esperiopsidae
Amphilectus
Amphilectus fucorum
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Porifera
Demospongiae
Poecilosclerida
Esperiopsidae
Amphilectus
Amphilectus fucorum
Van Soest, Rob W. M.
Beglinger, Elly J.
de Voogd, Nicole J.
Amphilectus fucorum
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Porifera
Demospongiae
Poecilosclerida
Esperiopsidae
Amphilectus
Amphilectus fucorum
description Amphilectus cf. fucorum (Esper, 1794) Fig. 5 For synonymy, see Van Soest & Hajdu 2002b: 657. Material examined ZMA Por. 06775, Mauritania, off Banc d’Arguin, depth 100 m, bottom muddy sand, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest & J.J. Vermeulen, Mauritania II Exped. Stat. 072/14, 20.0°N 17.3°W, 2.4 m Agassiz trawl, 13 Jun. 1988. ZMA Por. 06796, Mauritania, off Banc d’Arguin, depth 48-52 m, bottom muddy sand with some calcareous gravel, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest & J.J. Vermeulen, Mauritania II Exped. Stat. 082/19, 19.9833°N 17.5°W, 3.5 m Agassiz trawl, 14 Jun. 1988. ZMA Por. 06843, Mauritania, off Banc d’Arguin, depth 95-100 m, bottom muddy sand with shells, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest & J.J. Vermeulen, Mauritania II Exped. Stat. 130/09, 20.4167°N 17.6667°W, 3.5 m Agassiz trawl, 20 Jun. 1988. Description The material consists of several fragments of encrusting to irregularly ramose sponges (Fig. 5A). Consistency, soft irregular surface, colour brownish alive and beige to whitish in alcohol. Size of individual fragments 2-3 cm. SKELETON. Irregularly plumoreticulate (Fig. 5B), with loosely defined spicule bundles connected by individual spicules, general aspect rather confused. Spicules barely protruding beyond the surface. Chelae clustered and singly occurring throughout the interior. SPICULES. Styles, palmate isochelae. STYLES. (Fig. 5C, C 1) Straight or slightly curved, relatively short and robust, 198- 237.6- 276 x 9- 11.4 - 14 µm. PALMATE ISOCHELAE. (Fig. 5D) Of ‘normal’ shape, but like in A. utriculus sp. nov., the shaft is slightly incurved. 19- 23.6 - 27 µm. Distribution and ecology Mauritania, off Banc d’Arguin (Fig. 1, loc. 2), on muddy bottom below 50 m. Elsewhere, if identification is correct, along most of the coasts of Europe, including the Western Mediterranean. This is the southernmost record of the species if Southern Ocean records (see below) are considered not conspecific. Remarks By assigning these specimens to A. fucorum , the range of this species, which was already huge, is further extended along the East Atlantic coasts. The species is common and distinctly orange-coloured in shallow water habitats of the British Isles and the W coast of France, but according to Van Soest et al. (2000) deep-water specimens may loose their colour, and such specimens may be found down to 100 m. Skeleton and spicule characteristics of the present material fall within the recorded variation, although usually styles elsewhere are thinner than those of the Mauritanian specimens. Genetic comparisons may show diversity over the range of this species and such studies are needed to decide the specific identity of the Mauritanian populations. From the other Amphilectus species from the area described above, A. cf. fucorum differs in habit and chelae ( A. utriculus sp. nov. has chelae twice the size, A. strepsichelifer sp. nov. has chelae with a twisted shaft). Amphilectus informis (Stephens, 1915) from the Atlantic coast of South Africa appears to be similar based on published data. According to the original description its chelae have an incurved shaft but apparently the frontal alae of the chelae are characteristic showing a ‘tubercle in front view’. However, the illustration of this feature is indistinct. Samaai & Gibbons (2005) described the species also, but their illustrations do not clarify these alleged differences. Burton (1932, 1940) recorded A. fucorum from Tristan da Cunha, the Falkland Islands, South Georgia, and off the coast of Argentina. Thiele (1905) recorded it from Chile. Goodwin et al. (2011) described two new Amphilectus species from the Falkland Islands, which appear to cover the Burton and Thiele records. Bergquist & Fromont (1988) recorded the European species Esperiopsis normani (Bowerbank, 1866) and Esperiopsis edwardii (Bowerbank, 1866) from New Zealand waters, but both are now considered junior synonyms of Amphilectus fucorum . This is not to say that A. fucorum occurs in New Zealand, but merely that these records should be compared critically. : Published as part of Van Soest, Rob W. M., Beglinger, Elly J. & de Voogd, Nicole J., 2012, Sponges of the family Esperiopsidae (Demospongiae, Poecilosclerida) from Northwest Africa, with the descriptions of four new species, pp. 1-21 in European Journal of Taxonomy 18 on pages 9-11, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2012.18, http://zenodo.org/record/3857876 : {"references": ["Van Soest R. W. M. & Hajdu E. 2002 b. Family Esperiopsidae Hentschel, 1923. In: Hooper J. N. A. & Van Soest R. W. M. (eds) Systema Porifera. A guide to the classification of sponges: 656 - 664 .. Kluwer Academic / Plenum Publishers, New York.", "Van Soest R. W. M., Picton B. E. & Morrow C. 2000. Sponges of the North East Atlantic. In: World Biodiversity Database CD-ROM Series, Windows / Mac version 1.0. ETI Bioinformatics, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam.", "Samaai T. & Gibbons M. 2005. Demospongiae taxonomy and biodiversity of the Benguela region on the west coast of South Africa. African Natural History 1: 1 - 96.", "Burton M. 1932. Sponges. Discovery Reports 6: 237 - 392, pls. 48 - 57.", "Burton M. 1940. Las Esponjas marinas del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales. (Parte 1). Anales del Museo argentino de ciencias naturales ' Bernardino Rivadavia' 40 (6): 95 - 121, pls. I-VIII.", "Thiele J. 1905. Die Kiesel- und Hornschwamme der Sammlung Plate. Fauna Chiliensis III. Zoologische Jahrbucher Supplement 6: 407 - 496.", "Goodwin C., Jones J., Neely K. & Brickle P. 2011. Sponge biodiversity of the Jason Islands and Stanley, Falkland Islands with descriptions of twelve new species. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 91 (2): 275 - 301. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1017 / S 0025315410001542", "Bergquist P. R. & Fromont P. J. 1988. The Marine Fauna of New Zealand: Porifera, Demospongiae. Part. 4: Poecilosclerida. New Zealand Oceanographic Institute Memoir 96, New Zealand oceanographic institute, Wellington."]}
format Text
author Van Soest, Rob W. M.
Beglinger, Elly J.
de Voogd, Nicole J.
author_facet Van Soest, Rob W. M.
Beglinger, Elly J.
de Voogd, Nicole J.
author_sort Van Soest, Rob W. M.
title Amphilectus fucorum
title_short Amphilectus fucorum
title_full Amphilectus fucorum
title_fullStr Amphilectus fucorum
title_full_unstemmed Amphilectus fucorum
title_sort amphilectus fucorum
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2012
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3858676
https://zenodo.org/record/3858676
long_lat ENVELOPE(140.900,140.900,-66.735,-66.735)
ENVELOPE(166.733,166.733,-72.550,-72.550)
ENVELOPE(-81.566,-81.566,50.550,50.550)
ENVELOPE(-62.833,-62.833,-65.100,-65.100)
geographic Southern Ocean
New Zealand
Argentino
Argentina
Tristan
Burton
Morrow
Goodwin
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
New Zealand
Argentino
Argentina
Tristan
Burton
Morrow
Goodwin
genre North East Atlantic
Southern Ocean
genre_facet North East Atlantic
Southern Ocean
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3858676 2023-05-15T17:38:55+02:00 Amphilectus fucorum Van Soest, Rob W. M. Beglinger, Elly J. de Voogd, Nicole J. 2012 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3858676 https://zenodo.org/record/3858676 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/3857876 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFA7D03C182E227FFFD0B406FFCB5144 http://zoobank.org/27F70F53-68F3-42AB-8893-347F796796EC https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2012.18 http://zenodo.org/record/3857876 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFA7D03C182E227FFFD0B406FFCB5144 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3857886 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3857878 http://zoobank.org/27F70F53-68F3-42AB-8893-347F796796EC https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3858675 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Porifera Demospongiae Poecilosclerida Esperiopsidae Amphilectus Amphilectus fucorum Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2012 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3858676 https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2012.18 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3857886 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3857878 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3858675 2022-02-08T13:25:49Z Amphilectus cf. fucorum (Esper, 1794) Fig. 5 For synonymy, see Van Soest & Hajdu 2002b: 657. Material examined ZMA Por. 06775, Mauritania, off Banc d’Arguin, depth 100 m, bottom muddy sand, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest & J.J. Vermeulen, Mauritania II Exped. Stat. 072/14, 20.0°N 17.3°W, 2.4 m Agassiz trawl, 13 Jun. 1988. ZMA Por. 06796, Mauritania, off Banc d’Arguin, depth 48-52 m, bottom muddy sand with some calcareous gravel, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest & J.J. Vermeulen, Mauritania II Exped. Stat. 082/19, 19.9833°N 17.5°W, 3.5 m Agassiz trawl, 14 Jun. 1988. ZMA Por. 06843, Mauritania, off Banc d’Arguin, depth 95-100 m, bottom muddy sand with shells, coll. R.W.M. Van Soest & J.J. Vermeulen, Mauritania II Exped. Stat. 130/09, 20.4167°N 17.6667°W, 3.5 m Agassiz trawl, 20 Jun. 1988. Description The material consists of several fragments of encrusting to irregularly ramose sponges (Fig. 5A). Consistency, soft irregular surface, colour brownish alive and beige to whitish in alcohol. Size of individual fragments 2-3 cm. SKELETON. Irregularly plumoreticulate (Fig. 5B), with loosely defined spicule bundles connected by individual spicules, general aspect rather confused. Spicules barely protruding beyond the surface. Chelae clustered and singly occurring throughout the interior. SPICULES. Styles, palmate isochelae. STYLES. (Fig. 5C, C 1) Straight or slightly curved, relatively short and robust, 198- 237.6- 276 x 9- 11.4 - 14 µm. PALMATE ISOCHELAE. (Fig. 5D) Of ‘normal’ shape, but like in A. utriculus sp. nov., the shaft is slightly incurved. 19- 23.6 - 27 µm. Distribution and ecology Mauritania, off Banc d’Arguin (Fig. 1, loc. 2), on muddy bottom below 50 m. Elsewhere, if identification is correct, along most of the coasts of Europe, including the Western Mediterranean. This is the southernmost record of the species if Southern Ocean records (see below) are considered not conspecific. Remarks By assigning these specimens to A. fucorum , the range of this species, which was already huge, is further extended along the East Atlantic coasts. The species is common and distinctly orange-coloured in shallow water habitats of the British Isles and the W coast of France, but according to Van Soest et al. (2000) deep-water specimens may loose their colour, and such specimens may be found down to 100 m. Skeleton and spicule characteristics of the present material fall within the recorded variation, although usually styles elsewhere are thinner than those of the Mauritanian specimens. Genetic comparisons may show diversity over the range of this species and such studies are needed to decide the specific identity of the Mauritanian populations. From the other Amphilectus species from the area described above, A. cf. fucorum differs in habit and chelae ( A. utriculus sp. nov. has chelae twice the size, A. strepsichelifer sp. nov. has chelae with a twisted shaft). Amphilectus informis (Stephens, 1915) from the Atlantic coast of South Africa appears to be similar based on published data. According to the original description its chelae have an incurved shaft but apparently the frontal alae of the chelae are characteristic showing a ‘tubercle in front view’. However, the illustration of this feature is indistinct. Samaai & Gibbons (2005) described the species also, but their illustrations do not clarify these alleged differences. Burton (1932, 1940) recorded A. fucorum from Tristan da Cunha, the Falkland Islands, South Georgia, and off the coast of Argentina. Thiele (1905) recorded it from Chile. Goodwin et al. (2011) described two new Amphilectus species from the Falkland Islands, which appear to cover the Burton and Thiele records. Bergquist & Fromont (1988) recorded the European species Esperiopsis normani (Bowerbank, 1866) and Esperiopsis edwardii (Bowerbank, 1866) from New Zealand waters, but both are now considered junior synonyms of Amphilectus fucorum . This is not to say that A. fucorum occurs in New Zealand, but merely that these records should be compared critically. : Published as part of Van Soest, Rob W. M., Beglinger, Elly J. & de Voogd, Nicole J., 2012, Sponges of the family Esperiopsidae (Demospongiae, Poecilosclerida) from Northwest Africa, with the descriptions of four new species, pp. 1-21 in European Journal of Taxonomy 18 on pages 9-11, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2012.18, http://zenodo.org/record/3857876 : {"references": ["Van Soest R. W. M. & Hajdu E. 2002 b. Family Esperiopsidae Hentschel, 1923. In: Hooper J. N. A. & Van Soest R. W. M. (eds) Systema Porifera. A guide to the classification of sponges: 656 - 664 .. Kluwer Academic / Plenum Publishers, New York.", "Van Soest R. W. M., Picton B. E. & Morrow C. 2000. Sponges of the North East Atlantic. In: World Biodiversity Database CD-ROM Series, Windows / Mac version 1.0. ETI Bioinformatics, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam.", "Samaai T. & Gibbons M. 2005. Demospongiae taxonomy and biodiversity of the Benguela region on the west coast of South Africa. African Natural History 1: 1 - 96.", "Burton M. 1932. Sponges. Discovery Reports 6: 237 - 392, pls. 48 - 57.", "Burton M. 1940. Las Esponjas marinas del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales. (Parte 1). Anales del Museo argentino de ciencias naturales ' Bernardino Rivadavia' 40 (6): 95 - 121, pls. I-VIII.", "Thiele J. 1905. Die Kiesel- und Hornschwamme der Sammlung Plate. Fauna Chiliensis III. Zoologische Jahrbucher Supplement 6: 407 - 496.", "Goodwin C., Jones J., Neely K. & Brickle P. 2011. Sponge biodiversity of the Jason Islands and Stanley, Falkland Islands with descriptions of twelve new species. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 91 (2): 275 - 301. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1017 / S 0025315410001542", "Bergquist P. R. & Fromont P. J. 1988. The Marine Fauna of New Zealand: Porifera, Demospongiae. Part. 4: Poecilosclerida. New Zealand Oceanographic Institute Memoir 96, New Zealand oceanographic institute, Wellington."]} Text North East Atlantic Southern Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Southern Ocean New Zealand Argentino Argentina Tristan ENVELOPE(140.900,140.900,-66.735,-66.735) Burton ENVELOPE(166.733,166.733,-72.550,-72.550) Morrow ENVELOPE(-81.566,-81.566,50.550,50.550) Goodwin ENVELOPE(-62.833,-62.833,-65.100,-65.100)