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Family TETHYIDAE Gray, 1867


Compiler and date details

2010 - John N.A. Hooper, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Felix Wiedenmayer (1994), Naturhistorisches Museum Basel, Basel, Switzerland; updated by John N.A. Hooper (1999)

Diagnosis

Body shape typically globose (spherical, hemispherical, ovoid), but also sometimes irregularly massive, lobate or encrusting. Sometimes with a basal stalk. The surface is verrucose with tubercles, typically hispid and frequently flattened. Oscules rarely visible, generally apical, and the pores are in grooves between tubercles. A cortex may be well-developed and sharply distinct from the choanosome, but sometimes poorly developed or indistinct (pseudocortex). The skeleton structure is constructed by stylote (or modified stylote) megascleres, usually in radiate tracts (but in some genera in parallel tracts running from the substrate to the tubercles). The main bundles may branch and sometimes are loose in confused tracts, or crossed by thinner transverse bundles. Interstitial megascleres may also be scattered between the tracts. Spicules generally include stylote megascleres and two types of asters: megasters and micrasters. Stylote megascleres are frequently strongyloxeas (fusiform styles), but may be also styles, subtylostyles, tylostyles or anisostrongyles. In one case (Oxytethya) the megascleres are oxeas. Megasters are spherasters, oxyspherasters and oxyasters. Micrasters are euasters of the tylaster, strongylaster and oxyaster type. Exceptionally one category of aster (megasters or micrasters) may be lacking, a presumed secondary loss. Other spicules occasionally found are polyrhabds, microstrongyles, exotyles and spheres. Reproduction may be oviparous with a parenchymella larvae, or asexual by external (and sometimes internal) buds.

 

ID Keys

KEY TO GENERA
(1) Without basal stalk (or with stalk not exceeding half of the body diameter) ----------------------------------------- 2
With basal stalk longer than half of the body diameter ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 8

(2) With a well developed and distinct cortex, body spherical or subspherical ------------------------------------------- 3
With a little developed or indistinct cortex, irregularly massive or encrusting body ------------------------------------- 4

(3) Megasters spherasters or oxyspherasters, rather homogenous in size not exceeding 180um in diameter ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Tethya
Megasters oxyasters, very heterogeneous in size even exceeding 180um in diameter ----------------- Tethyastra
Without megasters, megascleres oxeas ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Oxytethya

(4) Megascleres styles, subtylostyles or strongyles ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 5
Megascleres tylostyles ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Tethytimea

(5) Megascleres in radiate tracts proximally crossed by thinner megascleres -------------------------- Nucleotethya
Megascleres in radiate ascending tracts, branching and anastomosing --------------------------------------------------- 6
Megascleres in parallel ascending tracts --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7

(6) Megasters anthasters --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Anthotethya
Megasters spherasters or oxyspherasters --------------------------------------------------------------------- Tectitethya
Without megasters, megasclere tracts partially loosened or confused ------------------------------------- Laxotethya

(7) With megasclere tracts arising from a central sediment core, proximally crossed by thinner megascleres, with
a winding cylindrical body ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Columnitis
With megasclere tracts arising from a sediment basis, discoid body --------------------------------------- Xenospongia
With giant megasters, thick encrusting or massive body ------------------------------------------------------ Stellitethya

(8) With stalk about the same length of body diameter --------------------------------------------------- Burtonitethya
With stalk about two to four times the body diameter ------------------------------------------------------- Halicometes
With stalk about eight times the body diameter ------------------------------------------------------------ Tethycometes

 

General References

Baer, L. 1906. Silicispongien von Sansibar, Kapstadt und Papeete. Archiv für Naturgeschichte 72: 1-32 pls 1-5

Bergquist, P.R. 1978. Sponges. London : Hutchinson 268 pp. 12 pls 81 figs 15 tables.

Bergquist, P.R., Cambie, R.C. & Kernan, M.R. 1991. Aaptamine, a taxonomic marker for sponges of the order Hadromerida. Biochemical Systematics and Ecology 19: 289-290

Bergquist, P.R. & Kelly-Borges, M. 1991. An evaluation of the genus Tethya (Porifera: Demospongiae: Hadromerida) with descriptions of new species from the southwest Pacific. The Beagle, Records of the Museums and Art Galleries of the Northern Territory 8(1): 37-72

Boury-Esnault, N. 1987. The Polymastia species (Demosponges, Hadromerida) of the Atlantic area. pp. 29-66 in Vacelet, J. & Boury-Esnault, N. (eds). Taxonomy of Porifera NATO ASI Series. Berlin : Springer-Verlag Vol. G13.

Brien, P., Lévi, C., Sarà, M., Tuzet, O. & Vacelet, J. 1973. Spongiaires. pp. 1-716 485 figs in Grassé, P.P. (ed.). Traité de Zoologie. Anatomie, Systématique, Biologie. Paris : Masson et Cie Vol. 3(1).

Burton, M. 1924. A revision of the sponge family Donatidae. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 1924: 1033-1045 pl. 1

Gray, J.E. 1872. Notes on the classification of the sponges. Annals and Magazine of Natural History 4 9: 442-461

Hartman, W.D. 1982. Porifera. pp. 640-666 in Parker, S.P. (ed.). Synopsis and Classification of Living Organisms. New York : McGraw-Hill Vol. 1.

Sarà, M. 1987. A study on the genus Tethya (Porifera, Demospongiae) and new perspectives in sponge systematics. pp. 205-255 in Vacelet, J. & Boury-Esnault, N. (eds). Taxonomy of Porifera. NATO ASI Series. Berlin : Springer-Verlag Vol. G13.

Sarà, M. 1990. Australian Tethya (Porifera, Demospongiae) from the Great Barrier Reef with descriptions of two new species. Bollettino di Zoologia. Torino 57: 153-157

Sarà, M. 2002. Family Tethyidae Gray, 1848. pp. 245-267 in Hooper, J.N.A. & van Soest, R.W.M. (eds). Systema Porifera: A guide to the classification of sponges. New York : Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers Vol. 1.

Sarà, M. & Sarà, A. 2004. A revision of Australian and New Zealand Tethya (Porifera: Demospongiae) with a preliminary analysis of species-groupings. Invertebrate Systematics 18: 117-156

Wilson, H.V. 1925. Silicious and horny sponges collected by the U.S. Fisheries steamer Albatross during the Philippine Expedition, 1907–10. In Contributions to the biology of the Philippine Archipelago and adjacent regions. Bulletin of the United States National Museum 100(2/4): i-vii 273-532 pls 37-52

 

History of changes

Note that this list may be incomplete for dates prior to September 2013.
Published As part of group Action Date Action Type Compiler(s)
29-Mar-2018 15-Dec-2011 MOVED
29-Mar-2018 13-Apr-2011 MODIFIED
12-Feb-2010 (import)