Myxilla incrustans

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Myxilla incrustans
Myxilla incrustans.jpg
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Porifera
Class: Demospongiae
Order: Poecilosclerida
Family: Myxillidae
Genus: Myxilla
Species:
M. incrustans
Binomial name
Myxilla incrustans
(Johnston, 1842) [1]
Synonyms [2]
List
  • Amphilectus incrustans(Johnston, 1842)
  • Dendoryx incrustans(Johnston, 1842)
  • Halichondria bateiBowerbank, 1866
  • Halichondria candidaBowerbank, 1866
  • Halichondria incrustansJohnston, 1842
  • Halichondria irregularisBowerbank, 1866
  • Halichondria robertsoniBowerbank, 1882
  • Halichondria saburrataJohnston, 1842
  • Hastatus robertsoni(Bowerbank, 1882)
  • Isodictya rugosaBowerbank, 1874
  • Isodictya tumulosaBowerbank, 1874
  • Myxilla gigasMerejkowsky, 1879

Myxilla incrustans is a species of demosponge. It is an encrusting species and is usually yellow.

Contents

Description

M. incrustans is an encrusting sponge occurring in patches up to 20 cm (8 in) across and 5 cm (2 in) high. It is usually some shade of yellow but can range through orange, pink and white. It has a bubbly-looking appearance with internal channels visible through the surface and large, raised oscules. The consistency is fairly soft and elastic but the surface feels crisp because of the vertical spicule bundles supporting it. The skeleton is built out of tornotes, megascleres with spear-shaped ends with tiny spines on them. The microscleres are a mixture of curved, shovel-like chelae and C-shaped sigmas. Several other similar sponges grow in the same habitats and microscopic examination is necessary to identify the species. [3]

Distribution

M. incrustans was described from specimens collected in the Firth of Forth, Scotland, North Sea. It is reported from the Arctic, round Bear Island and the Faroe Islands, on the coasts of Norway and south along the Atlantic coast to the Mediterranean Sea. In these areas, it is usually found between low-water mark and a depth of 400 metres (1,300 ft) on vertical rocks and sites with clean water exposed to strong tidal flows. [3] It also occurs in the north Pacific Ocean from Japan to California, where it is often found growing on the shells of scallops in the genus Chlamys . [4] [5] [6] It is unclear whether the free living Atlantic sponges and the Mutualistic pacific sponges are the same species.

Biology

M. incrustans is viviparous and in the months of August and September, developing embryos are sometimes found inside the tissues. These are spherical and measure about 0.5 mm (0.020 in) across before becoming detached. [3] Initiation of the sexual processes involved in reproduction depends on the water temperature. The male tissue releases sperm into the water column. These may get sucked into another sponge, and then fertilisation takes place. About 7% to 12% of the maternal tissue of the sponge is used up in the reproductive process, and there is some localized destruction of the tissue. [7]

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<i>Agelas clathrodes</i> Species of sponge

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<i>Chlamys varia</i> Species of mollusc

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<i>Chlamys hastata</i> Species of bivalve

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Orange wall sponge</span> Species of sponge

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<i>Spongia officinalis</i> Species of sponge

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<i>Amphimedon compressa</i> Species of sponge

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<i>Callyspongia aculeata</i> Species of sponge

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<i>Crassadoma</i> Genus of bivalves

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<i>Alcyonium coralloides</i> Species of coral

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Mycale adhaerens, the purple scallop sponge, is a species of marine demosponge in the family Mycalidae. Mycale is a large genus and this species is placed in the subgenus Aegogropila making its full name, Mycale (Aegogropila) adhaerens. It grows symbiotically on the valves of scallop shells and is native to the west coast of North America.

<i>Oscarella lobularis</i> Species of sponge

Oscarella lobularis is a species of sponge in the order Homosclerophorida. It is native to the northeastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea, where it forms encrusting colonies on rocks and other hard surfaces.

Biemna variantia is a species of sponge in the family Biemnidae. It is native to the northwestern Atlantic Ocean, the northeastern Atlantic Ocean, the North Sea and the Mediterranean Sea. This species was first described in 1858 by the British naturalist James Scott Bowerbank, who gave it the name Halichondria variantia. It was later moved to the genus Biemna and is the type species of the genus. The type locality is Tenby, Wales.

<i>Aplysina aerophoba</i> Species of sponge

Aplysina aerophoba is a species of sponge in the family Aplysinidae. It is a yellow, tube-forming or encrusting sponge and is native to the eastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea; the type locality is the Adriatic Sea.

Halisarca caerulea is a species of sponge in the family Halisarcidae. It is native to the Caribbean Sea and was first described in 1987 by the French marine biologists Jean Vacelet and Claude Donadey.

Polymastia penicillus is a species of sponge belonging to the family Polymastiidae. It is found in shallow water in the northeastern and the northwestern Atlantic Ocean, growing on rocks in areas of high sedimentation.

References

  1. Johnston, G. (1842). A History of British Sponges and Lithophytes. (W.H. Lizars: Edinburgh). i-xii, 1-264, pls I-XXV., page(s): 122-124
  2. World Register of Marine Species
  3. 1 2 3 Marine Species Identification Portal
  4. Rosario Beach Marine Laboratory
  5. Heather M. Farren & Deborah A. Donovan (2007). "Effects of sponge and barnacle encrustation on survival of the scallop Chlamys hastata" (PDF). Hydrobiologia . 592 (1): 225–234. CiteSeerX   10.1.1.508.9090 . doi:10.1007/s10750-007-0743-1.
  6. On On Lee; Stanley C. K. Lau; Mandy M. Y. Tsoi; Xiancui Li; Ioulia Plakhotnikova; Sergey Dobretsov; Madeline C. S. Wu; Po-Keung Wong; Pei-Yuan Qian (2006). "Gillisia myxillae sp. nov., a novel member of the family Flavobacteriaceae, isolated from the marine sponge Myxilla incrustans" (PDF). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology . 56 (Pt 8): 1795–1799. doi: 10.1099/ijs.0.64345-0 . PMID   16902010.
  7. A. V. Ereskovsky (2000). "Reproduction cycles and strategies of the cold-water sponges Halisarca dujardini (Demospongiae, Halisarcida), Myxilla incrustans and Iophon piceus (Demospongiae, Poecilosclerida) from the White Sea". The Biological Bulletin . 198 (1): 77–87. doi:10.2307/1542805. JSTOR   1542805. PMID   10707815.