Found in Singapore: A new species of sponge
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Shobana Kesava, Straits Times 9 Aug 08;
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What looked like a bean sprout in the sea here has been identified as a new species of sponge found nowhere else.
The sponge, named Tethycometes radicosa (which translates to sea comet with roots), is only the seventh sponge species described from Singapore.
It
was dredged up from the sea bed about 10m from the shores of the
Singapore Strait by researchers from the Tropical Marine Science
Institute.
Mr Lim Swee Cheng, 31, Singapore's only sponge expert, identified the new sponge.
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The last time a sponge was described from Singapore was more than 100 years ago, in 1884.
The new species is a unique, atypical sponge the size and shape of a bean sprout.
And just like the bean sprout, the delicate sponge stands erect with its 'roots' in sandy mud on the floor of the sea.
This
is quite unlike typical sponges, which tend to be larger, with a wide
range of growth forms either attached to rocks and dead corals, or
buried in soft mud or sand.
The new species is also unique in
having a partially detached sheath surrounding the stalk, something
which has yet to be seen in other sponges.
Tethycometes radicosa is the first among similar species reported from shallow, coastal waters.
Others are known only from deeper waters elsewhere in the world. |
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