New Glass Sponges (Porifera : Hexactinellida) from Deep Waters of the Central Aleutian Islands, Alaska

New Glass Sponges (Porifera : Hexactinellida) from Deep Waters of the Central Aleutian Islands, Alaska
Author: Henry Michael Reiswig
Publisher:
Total Pages: 64
Release: 2013
Genre: Hexactinellida
ISBN: 9781775571292

Hexactinellida from deep-water communities of the central Aleutian Islands, Alaska, are described. They were mostly collected by the remotely operated vehicle 'Jason II' from 494-2311 m depths during a 2004 RV 'Roger Revelle' expedition, but one shallow-water species collected with a shrimp trawl from 155 m in the same area is included. The excellent condition of the ROV-collected specimens enabled valuable redescription of some species previously known only from badly damaged specimens. New taxa include one new genus and eight new species in five families. Farreidae consist of two new species, Farrea aleutiana and F. aspondyla. Euretidae consists of only Pinulasma fistulosum n. gen., n. sp. Tretodictyidae include only Tretodictyum amchitkensis n. sp. Euplectellidae consists of only the widespread species Regadrella okinoseana Ijima, reported here over 3,700 km from its closest previously known occurrence. The most diverse family, Rossellidae, consists of Aulosaccus ijimai (Schulze), Aulosaccus schulzei Ijima, Bathydorus sp. (young stage not determinable to species), Caulophacus (Caulophacus) adakensis n. sp., Acanthascus koltuni n. sp., Staurocalyptus psilosus n. sp., Staurocalyptus tylotus n. sp. and Rhabdocalyptus mirabilis Schulze. We present argument for reinstatement of the abolished rossellid subfamily Acanthascinae and return of the subgenera Staurocalyptus Ijima and Rhabdocalyptus Schulze to their previous generic status. These fauna provides important complexity to the hard substrate communities that likely serve as nursery areas for the young stages of commercially important fish and crab species, refuge from predation for both young and adult stages, and also as a focal source of prey for juvenile and adult stages of those same species.

A Guide to the Deep-water Sponges of the Aleutian Island Archipelago

A Guide to the Deep-water Sponges of the Aleutian Island Archipelago
Author: Robert P. Stone
Publisher:
Total Pages: 206
Release: 2011
Genre: Sponges
ISBN:

Furthermore, sponges are extremely fragile and easily damaged by contact with fishing gear. High rates of fishery bycatch clearly indicate a strong interaction between existing fisheries and sponge habitat. Bycatch in fisheries and fisheries-independent surveys can be a major source of information on the location of the sponge fauna, but current monitoring programs are greatly hampered by the inability of deck personnel to identify bycatch. This guide contains detailed pecies descriptions for 112 sponges collected in Alaska, principally in the central Aleutian Islands. It addresses bycatch identification challenges by providing fisheries observers and scientists with the information necessary to adequately identify sponge fauna.Using that identification data, areas of high abundance can be mapped and the locations of indicator species of vulnerable marine ecosystems can be determined.

An Annotated Checklist of the Marine Macroinvertebrates of Alaska

An Annotated Checklist of the Marine Macroinvertebrates of Alaska
Author: David Thomas Drumm
Publisher:
Total Pages: 308
Release: 2016
Genre: Marine animals
ISBN:

A current and comprehensive species list of marine invertebrates of Alaska is essential for effective management of living marine resources, sustainable fisheries, conservation of vulnerable ecosystems, and advancement of our knowledge of biodiversity and ecosystem function. Furthermore, the most current checklist available to resource managers and scientists is quite dated and limited in that it only includes the marine invertebrates of the southern coast of Alaska to California. Since that checklist was published, many new species have been described, many range extensions have been discovered, and considerable changes in higher-level systematics have been made. The checklist that we have compiled lists 3708 species and presents for each species the currently accepted scientific name and its significant synonyms, common names, type localities, geographic and depth distributions, a general statement of abundance in Alaska when known (e.g., rare, uncommon, common, abundant), and general remarks. It includes species recorded in the marine waters of Alaska from the intertidal zone, continental shelf, and upper continental slope to abyssal depths, from the Beaufort Sea at the Arctic border with Yukon, Canada; the eastern Chukchi Sea, the eastern Bering Sea, the Aleutian Islands to the western border with Russia; and the Gulf of Alaska to Dixon Entrance at the southern border with British Columbia. Sound and reliable taxonomic identifications are necessary to monitor and predict changes in the distribution and abundance of marine species. The current status and future direction of the study of Alaskan marine invertebrate biodiversity are briefly discussed.

A Guide to the Deep-water Sponges of the Aleutian Island Archipelago

A Guide to the Deep-water Sponges of the Aleutian Island Archipelago
Author: Robert P.. Stone
Publisher:
Total Pages: 187
Release: 2011
Genre: Sponges
ISBN:

"The first dedicated collections of deep-water (>80 m) sponges from the central Aleutian Islands revealed a rich fauna including 28 novel species and geographical range extensions for 53 others. Based on these collections and the published literature, we now confirm the presence of 125 species (or subspecies) of deep-water sponges in the Aleutian Islands. Clearly the deep-water sponge fauna of the Aleutian Islands is extraordinarily rich and largely understudied. Submersible observations revealed that sponges, rather than deep-water corals, are the dominant feature shaping benthic habitats in the region and hat they provide important refuge habitat for many species of fish and invertebrates including juvenile rockfish (Sebastes spp.) and king crabs (Lithodes sp). Examination of video footage collected along 127 km of the seafloor further indicate that there are likely hundreds of species still uncollected from the region, and many unknown to science. Furthermore, sponges are extremely fragile and easily damaged by contact with fishing gear. High rates of fishery bycatch clearly indicate a strong interaction between existing fisheries and sponge habitat. Bycatch in fisheries and fisheries-independent surveys can be a major source of information on the location of the sponge fauna, but current monitoring programs are greatly hampered by the inability of deck personnel to identify bycatch. This guide contains detailed species descriptions for 112 sponges collected in Alaska, principally in the central Aleutian Islands. It addresses bycatch identification challenges by providing fisheries observers and scientists with the information necessary to adequately identify sponge fauna.Using that identification data, areas of high abundance can be mapped and the locations of indicator species of vulnerable marine ecosystems can be determined. The guide is also designed for use by scientists making observations of the fauna in situ with submersibles, including remotely operated vehicles and autonomous underwater vehicles"--Abstract.

The Boundary Reefs

The Boundary Reefs
Author: Robert P. Stone
Publisher:
Total Pages: 31
Release: 2014
Genre: Hexactinellida
ISBN:

Hexactinellid sponge reefs have been discovered in shallow-water areas in Portland Canal on the international boundary between Southeast Alaska and British Columbia. The reefs were first observed on multibeam imagery data collected in 2008 and were examined in detail with a survey undertaken with a remotely operated vehicle in April 2010. The Boundary Reefs consist of three distinct reef areas at depths between 53 and 107 m. Framework constructing, dictyonine sponges (Aphrocallistes vastus, Heterochone calyx, and Farrea occa) form bioherms up to 200 m in diameter and 21 m in height on glacial sediments, and extensive beds on moraines and glacial promontories. Variations in the morphology and structure of some of the Portland Canal reefs are attributed to variations in sedimentation compared to other shelf and fjord reef sites in British Columbia. Development of extensive oxide crusts, pervasive colonization by zooanthid corals on reef surfaces, and the largely skeletal nature of the reefs suggest very low sedimentation rates as a result of low overall riverine inflow to the surface waters of the fjord and possibly reduced glacial meltwater input in recent years. A second complex of small reefs was discovered near Benjamin Island north of Juneau, Alaska. These reefs are the northernmost documented in the world and are very shallow, occurring at depths between 22 and 56 m. The two newly discovered reef sites are separated by almost 500 km indicating that the Inside Passage of Southeast Alaska may harbour additional undiscovered sponge reefs.

The Marine Fauna of New Zealand

The Marine Fauna of New Zealand
Author: Henry M. Reiswig
Publisher:
Total Pages: 174
Release: 2018
Genre: Science
ISBN:

"Glass sponges in the Family Euplectellidae (basket glass sponges) found in the New Zealand Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) are reviewed and revised by studying existing and new collections within the NIWA Invertebrate Collection (NIC), Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa (NMNZ) and specimens from the NORFANZ mid-Tasman Sea survey, housed at the Queensland Museum in Brisbane. Studying these collections has yielded well over 250 catalogued specimens, some of which are from the Australian EEZ and International waters"--Page 9.

The Marine Fauna of New Zealand

The Marine Fauna of New Zealand
Author: Henry M. Reiswig
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2018
Genre: Euplectellidae
ISBN:

"Glass sponges in the Family Euplectellidae (basket glass sponges) found in the New Zealand Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) are reviewed and revised by studying existing and new collections within the NIWA Invertebrate Collection (NIC), Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa (NMNZ) and specimens from the NORFANZ mid-Tasman Sea survey, housed at the Queensland Museum in Brisbane. Studying these collections has yielded well over 250 catalogued specimens, some of which are from the Australian EEZ and International waters"--Page 9.