Intro 
Species 
Specimens 
Distribution 
Checklist 
Sources 
Log in 

Porifera source details

Hestetun, J.T.; Rapp, H.T.; Pomponi, S. (2019). Deep-Sea Carnivorous Sponges From the Mariana Islands. Frontiers in Marine Science. 6: 371.
354427
10.3389/fmars.2019.00371 [view]
Hestetun, J.T.; Rapp, H.T.; Pomponi, S.
2019
Deep-Sea Carnivorous Sponges From the Mariana Islands
Frontiers in Marine Science
6: 371
Publication
Available for editors  PDF available [request]
Carnivorous sponges belonging to family Cladorhizidae (Porifera, Demospongiae, Poecilosclerida) are unique within phylum Porifera due to their ability to capture and envelop small prey. While other sponges use an aquiferous system to filter water, the aquiferous system of the cladorhizids is partially reduced or completely absent. Carnivorous sponges can be found worldwide at all depths, but are more common in the deep sea, where oligotrophic conditions containing less suspended particles may favor a carnivorous feeding strategy. Here, we provide formal descriptions of eight cladorhizid sponge species from 1229 to 5813 m depth collected as part of the NOAA 2016 Deepwater Exploration of the Marianas with the NOAA ship Okeanos Explorer (EX1605) during the investigation of the bathyal and abyssal seafloor off the Northern Mariana Islands and Guam: the harp sponge Chondrocladia (Symmetrocladia) lyra, Chondrocladia (Chondrocladia) coronata sp. nov., Lycopodina subtile sp. nov., Abyssocladia fryerae sp. nov., Abyssocladia kellyae sp. nov., Abyssocladia marianensis sp. nov., Abyssocladia stegosaurensis sp. nov., and Abyssocladia villosa sp. nov. We also provide a phylogenetic analysis showing the systematic position of the described species. Our results show that the deep-sea seafloor off the Mariana Islands contains a diverse and previously virtually unknown cladorhizid fauna. The examined species display similarities with species from other parts of the Pacific, and add considerably to the available information for the genus Abyssocladia. The high number of new species is consistent with other recent publications from the Pacific and Indian Ocean, and shows that despite recent sampling efforts, the cladorhizid fauna of these areas remains very poorly investigated. Additional sampling effort will in all probability yield both additional species and a better understanding of the biogeographical distribution of already known cladorhizids.
Pacific Ocean
Systematics, Taxonomy
RIS (EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)
BibTex (BibDesk, LaTeX)
Date
action
by
2019-08-09 08:41:01Z
created

Holotype USNM 1424095, geounit Mariana Islands, identified as Chondrocladia (Chondrocladia) coronata Hestetun, Rapp & Pomponi, 2019
Holotype USNM 1424162, geounit Mariana Islands, identified as Abyssocladia villosa Hestetun, Rapp & Pomponi, 2019
Holotype USNM 1424164, geounit Mariana Islands, identified as Abyssocladia stegosaurensis Hestetun, Rapp & Pomponi, 2019
Holotype USNM 1424167, geounit Mariana Islands, identified as Lycopodina subtilis Hestetun, Rapp & Pomponi, 2019
Holotype USNM 1424180, geounit Mariana Islands, identified as Abyssocladia kellyae Hestetun, Rapp & Pomponi, 2019
Holotype USNM 1424186, geounit Mariana Islands, identified as Abyssocladia fryerae Hestetun, Rapp & Pomponi, 2019
Holotype USNM 1424192, geounit Mariana Islands, identified as Abyssocladia marianensis Hestetun, Rapp & Pomponi, 2019


Website and databases developed and hosted by VLIZ · Page generated 2024-04-16 · contact: Nicole de Voogd