New and little-known species of Didemnidae (Ascidiacea, Tunicata) from Australia (part 4)
Author
Kott, Patricia
text
Journal of Natural History
2007
2010-07-29
41
17 - 20
1163
1211
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930701359218
journal article
10.1080/00222930701359218
1464-5262
4669578
Leptoclinides placidus
Kott, 2001
(
Figure 6F
)
Leptoclinides placidus
Kott 2001
, p 75
; 2004b, p 2473.
Distribution
Previously recorded (see
Kott 2004b
): central eastern coast (Byron Bay, Solitary I., Hervey Bay). New record:
Queensland
(Noosa Heads, QM G308766).
Description
The colony is robust and sheet-like and looks the same in life as it does in preservative, being white with black spots about
5 mm
apart in the surface test. Spicules are absent from the superficial layer of test and the lower half of the colony, but are present on the base of the colony and they line the common cloacal cavities, which consist of deep primary cavities extending into posterior abdominal cavities. The spicules are stellate, to
0.08 mm
diameter, and have 9–13 sturdy conical rays with pointed or chisel-shaped tips.
Remarks
The colony, with its three-dimensional common cloacal cavity and spotted appearance, resembles the South Australian
L. maculatus
Kott, 2001
(see
Kott 2004b
). However, the spicules of the latter species have fewer rays. The colony also resembles that of
L. constellatus
Kott,
2001
in the distribution and size of its spicules although
L. constellatus
has fewer rays.
Leptoclinides tuberculatus
Kott, 2004a
has similar spicules but they have fewer rays and colonies lack the superficial bladder cell layer. The tropical
Leptoclinides erinaceus
Kott, 2001
and
L. caυernosus
Kott, 2001
both have spicules of similar form but they are significantly larger and the colonies are different from the present species. The present specimen conforms to descriptions of those previously assigned to this species except for the presence of black spots in the test, although
Kott (2001)
did report the presence of black pigment. Also, although a maximum number of 11 spicule rays in optical transverse section were reported previously for this species, some with 13 rays have been detected in the newly reported specimen.
The present species has been recorded only from the central eastern coast of
Australia
.