Haliclona (Halichoclona) fulva Topsent 1893

Haliclona (Halichoclona) fulva (Topsent, 1893) Figure 2 C, 3 C, 4 C Reniera fulva Topsent, 1893, 39; 1925, 711; Griessinger 1971, 138, 139, Fig. 7, Fig. 8, pl. II, Fig. 3. Haliclona (Halichoclona) fulva Kefalas & Castritsi-Catharios 2007, 1534. Material examined. ESFM –POR / 2014 –003, October 2...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Evcen, Alper, Çinar, Melih Ertan, Zengin, Mustafa, Süer, Serdar, Rüzgar, Melih
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6081972
https://zenodo.org/record/6081972
Description
Summary:Haliclona (Halichoclona) fulva (Topsent, 1893) Figure 2 C, 3 C, 4 C Reniera fulva Topsent, 1893, 39; 1925, 711; Griessinger 1971, 138, 139, Fig. 7, Fig. 8, pl. II, Fig. 3. Haliclona (Halichoclona) fulva Kefalas & Castritsi-Catharios 2007, 1534. Material examined. ESFM –POR / 2014 –003, October 2013, 30 m, on a mussel shell in sandy bottom, 1 specimen Description. The specimen is massive and thickly encrusting. The body has a greenish color in alcohol; fragile and hard (Fig. 2 C). Oscules are few, slightly elevated, circular and small (2–4 mm). Ectosomal and choanosomal skeleton consists of primary multispicular and secondary unispicular tracts (Fig. 3 C). The choanosomal primary columns are covered by large quantities of spongin and thus are very difficult to distinguish. Spicules are include only slender and fusiform oxeas: 180–300 x 5–9 µm (Fig. 4 C). No microscleres. Habitat and distribution. The species was found on a mussel shell in the Black Sea. It was previously reported on hard substrata in shallow water in the east Atlantic Ocean (Topsent 1892 a, De Weerdt 1987) and the western Mediterranean (Topsent 1892 b), Adriatic Sea (Griessinger 1971), Aegean Sea (Kefalas et al. 2003), Alboran Sea (Maldonado 1992) and Levantine Sea (Evcen & Cinar 2012). : Published as part of Evcen, Alper, Çinar, Melih Ertan, Zengin, Mustafa, Süer, Serdar & Rüzgar, Melih, 2016, New records of five sponge species (Porifera) for the Black Sea, pp. 267-275 in Zootaxa 4103 (3) on pages 270-271, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4103.3.5, http://zenodo.org/record/264012 : {"references": ["Topsent, E. (1893) Nouvelle serie de diagnoses d'eponges de Roscoff et de Banyuls. Archives de Zoologie experimentale et generale, Series 3, 1 (Notes et Revue 10), xxxiii - xliii.", "Griessinger, J. M. (1971) Etude des Renierides de Mediterranee (Demosponges Haplosclerides). Bulletin du Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle (Zoologie), 3, 97 - 182.", "Kefalas, E. & Castritsi-Catharios, J. (2007) Taxonomy of some sponges (Porifera: Demospongiae) collected from the Aegean Sea and description of a new species. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 87, 1527 - 1538. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1017 / S 002531540705206 X", "Topsent, E. (1892 a) Contribution a l'etude des Spongiaires de l'Atlantique Nord (Golfe de Gascogne, Terre-Neuve, Acores). Resultats des campagnes scientifiques accomplies par le Prince Albert I, Monaco 2, 1 - 165, pls. I - XI.", "De Weerdt, W. H. (1987) The shallow-water Chalinidae (Haplosclerida, Porifera) of the British Iles. In: Jones, W. C. (Eds.), European Contributions to the taxonomy of sponges. Publication of the Sherkin Island Marine Station, 1, pp. 75 - 109.", "Topsent, E. (1892 b) Diagnoses d'eponges nouvelles de la Mediterranee et plus particulierement de Banyuls. Archives de Zoologie experimentale et generale, Series 2, 10 (Notes et Revue 6), xvii - xxviii + XVII.", "Kefalas, E., Tsirtsis, G. & Castritsi-Catharios, I. (2003) Distribution and ecology of Demospongiae from the circalittoral of the islands of the Aegean Sea (Eastern Mediterranean). Hydrobiologia, 499, 125 - 134. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1023 / A: 1026343113345", "Maldonado, M. (1992) Demosponges of the red coral bottoms from the Alboran Sea. Journal of Natural History, 26, 1131 - 1161. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222939200770661", "Evcen, A. & Cinar, M. E. (2012) Sponge (Porifera) species from the Mediterranean coast of Turkey (Levantine Sea, eastern Mediterranean), with a checklist of sponges from the coasts of Turkey. Turkish Journal of Zoology, 36, 460 - 474."]}