scholarly journals Boring sponges, an increasing threat for coral reefs affected by bleaching events

2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 872-886 ◽  
Author(s):  
José L. Carballo ◽  
Eric Bautista ◽  
Héctor Nava ◽  
José A. Cruz-Barraza ◽  
Jesus A. Chávez
Keyword(s):  
2008 ◽  
Vol 356 ◽  
pp. 113-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
JL Carballo ◽  
E Bautista-Guerrero ◽  
GE Leyte-Morales

Author(s):  
Giorgio Bavestrello ◽  
Barbara Calcinai ◽  
Carlo Cerrano ◽  
Michele Sarà

Alectona species which bore into the scleraxis of several colonies of Corallium elatius and the stem of a stylasterid coral, Distichopora sp. have been studied. The genus Alectona consists of rarely collected species. Five species, of the eight known for the genus, are here recorded. Two new species of Alectona sorrentini and A. microspiculata and one uncertain species are described.In recent reefs Cliona species are the predominant boring sponges while Alectona and Thoosa were common in the Eocene/Miocene coral reefs. The deep precious red coral communities of the western Pacific may be interpreted as refuge habitats of these ancient boring sponges.


Author(s):  
Héctor Nava ◽  
Carlos Alberto Emmanuel García-Madrigal ◽  
José Luis Carballo

AbstractBoring sponges are an important component of bioeroder assemblages in tropical coral reefs. They are considered as a potential threat for coral reef health, and the increase of dead corals is expected to promote their abundance. The relationship between the availability of dead coral substrata and the development of boring sponge assemblages was evaluated during El Niño 2015–16 at five reefs from Zihuatanejo, Guerrero, Mexico. Environment and substrate quality were assessed. Overall, environment conditions remained normal in relation to previous studies in the area. Only water temperature showed unusually high records at all sites and coincided with bleaching and mortality of corals, possibly caused by the effects of the El Niño event. Abundance of boring sponges in dead corals and coral rubble was lower than during previous studies. Although sponge abundance was not directly related to cover of both dead corals and coral rubble, cover of dead corals showed a high correlation with the variation in the structure of sponge assemblages across sites.Cliona vermiferadominated sponge assemblages at all sites, and its abundance was high under conditions of high cover of live corals and low cover of bleached corals. Since overall sponge abundance responded in a similar way, these results suggest that boring sponge assemblages dominated byC. vermiferaare enhanced by conditions favourable for corals. Our results imply that El Niño events in the Mexican Pacific are not likely to cause immediate population outbreaks of boring sponges.


Author(s):  
José Antonio Cruz-Barraza ◽  
José Luis Carballo ◽  
Eric Bautista-Guerrero ◽  
Héctor Nava

Three new species of coral reef boring sponges were found in remote coral reefs from Revillagigedo Island, an archipelago that is 386 km from the continent.Cliona medinaesp. nov. is a sponge with orange-yellow papillae characterized by short almost straight spirasters.Cliona tropicalissp. nov., is a yellow papillate sponge with a spicule complement similar to the species included in theCliona viridiscomplex. However, the new species differs from the rest of the species mainly in its external morphology and by differences in the size and shape of spicules.Thoosa purpureasp. nov. is characterized by its purple colour, and the spicular complement formed by tylostyles, two amphiaster categories, bi- tri- and tetra-radiate oxyasters and smooth or microspined centrotylote oxeas. In addition,Cliothosa tylostrongylatasp. nov. is also described from coral reefs from the southern Mexican Pacific Ocean. This is a light red species, with tylostyles and tylostrongyles as megascleres and ramose and nodulose amphiasters as microscleres. The four species were found exclusively excavating skeletons of live or dead corals of the genusPocillopora. This study increases the number of boring sponges known from the Mexican Pacific Ocean to 22 species and it is the first study on marine sponge fauna from the Revillagigedo archipelago.


Author(s):  
Eric Bautista-Guerrero ◽  
José Luis Carballo ◽  
José Antonio Cruz-Barraza ◽  
Héctor H. Nava

Two alpha growth form species of boring sponges, Clionapocillopora sp. nov. and Cliona mucronata are described from coral reefs in the Mexican Pacific Ocean. Clionapocillopora sp. nov. is a light brown sponge containing tylostyles that measure 146×5 μm. Tylostyles are generally curved and have a globular or mucronated head, sometimes placed at some distance from the proximal end. In addition, straight, short and thick tylostrongyles and centrotylote oxea occasionally appear. Cliona mucronata is reported for the first time in the eastern Pacific Ocean. It is a red to red-orange sponge with two types of tylostyles, long and slender tylostyles, and short ensiform tylostyles. Both species have been found exclusively excavating corals of the genus Pocillopora. The boring activity of Clionapocillopora sp. nov. produces a network of galleries with mainly rectangular or polygonal chambers measuring from 0.7 to 2.4 mm in diameter, and C. mucronata produces a network of reticulate galleries with irregularly spherical or ovoid chambers 1.14×0.67 mm in diameter.


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