Unusual morphotypes of the giant barrel sponge off the coast of barbados

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Abstract

Giant barrel sponges (GBSs) belong to a cryptic species complex (Xestospongia spp.) and are found on tropical reefs worldwide. Over their range, including most of the Caribbean, GBSs have a cylindrical shape, with variation in height, diameter and surface complexity. However, off the southwest coast of Barbados, GBSs mostly exhibit a clam shape or a tub shape, interspersed with a few that have the normal barrel morphotype, suggesting that this variation is not due to environmental factors. Haplotype identification (mtDNA-COI) of six clam and six normal sponges indicated no clear genetic differentiation based on morphotype; hence, this morphological variation remains unexplained.

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Pawlik, J. R., Manker, D. C., Evans, J. S., Erwin, P. M., & López-Legentil, S. (2021). Unusual morphotypes of the giant barrel sponge off the coast of barbados. Diversity, 13(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/d13120663

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