4.5 Article

Molecular and morphological assessment of tropical sponges in the subfamily Phyllospongiinae, with the descriptions of two new species

Journal

ZOOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
Volume 193, Issue 1, Pages 319-355

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa133

Keywords

18S; 28S; Dictyoceratida; Indo-Pacific; ITS2; Keratosa; morphology; Porifera; sponge; taxonomy

Categories

Funding

  1. WA Museum's grant from the Gorgon Project's Barrow Island Net Conservation Benefits Fund

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This study utilizes a multigene approach to assess the systematics of common phyllospongiinids in tropical Australia and the Red Sea, revealing taxonomic inconsistencies and describing two new species. The study provides a reliable framework for accurately identifying these sponges and their phylogenetic relationships, which is essential for assessing the impacts of climate change and anthropogenic stressors.
Sponges in the subfamily Phyllospongiinae are important components of coral reefs. However, significant taxonomic inconsistencies exist in this group due to the lack of useful morphological characters for species delineation. This study assesses the systematics of some common phyllospongiinids in the genera Carteriospongia, Phyllospongia and Strepsichordaia from tropical Australia and the Red Sea, by using a multigene approach that utilizes the Internal Transcribed Spacer 2, the complete ribosomal 18S rRNA and three 28s rRNA gene regions (D1-D2, D3-D5 and D6-D8), which produced a phylogenetic framework in which complementary morphological taxonomic assessments were performed. Type specimens were included, where available, and six species clades were recovered, including the well-established Phyllospongia papyracea and Strepsichordaia lendenfeldi. Carteriospongia foliascens, the type species for the genus Carteriospongia, is transferred to the genus Phyllospongia, resulting in Carteriospongia becoming a synonym of Phyllospongia. Consequently, Carteriospongia flabellifera is removed from Carteriospongia and is reinstated to its original designation of Polyfibrospongia flabellifera. Two new species, Phyllospongia bergquistae sp. nov. and Polyfibrospongia kulit sp. nov., are described. With phyllospongiinid sponges increasingly used as models for assessing the effects of climate change and anthropogenic stressors, this study provides a reliable systematics framework for the accurate identification of common phyllospongiinids across the Indo-Pacific.

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