The holothurian subgenus Mertensiothuria (Aspidochirotida: Holothuriidae) revisited
Author
Yves
text
Journal of Natural History
2003
37
2487
2519
journal article
1464-5262
Holothuria (Mertensiothuria) papillifera
Heding
inMortensen, 1938
(figures 7A–M, 8A–J, 12H–K)
Holothuria papillifera
Heding
in
Mortensen, 1938: 55, pl. XI, figures 1–3.
Holothuria (Mertensiothuria) papillifera
: Rowe, 1969: 149
; Clark and Rowe, 1971: 176; Price, 1982: 11 Samyn
et al
., 2001: 104, 107.
Original name.
Holothuria papillifera
Heding
in
Mortensen, 1938.
Name-bearing type.
Syntype
series ZM Karaf no. 85,
25.10.1937
;
lectotype
by present designation, ZM Karaf no. 85/1 (largest specimen of the type series),
paralectotypes
ZM Karaf no. 85/2,3.
Type
locality.
Egypt
(Ghardaqa)
.
Current status.
Holothuria (Mertensiothuria) papillifera
Heding
in
Mortensen, 1938.
Material examined.
ZM
lectotype
and
two paralectotypes
.
Description.
Medium size to large specimens (
lectotype
225×
20–30 mm
;
paralectotypes
165×
30–50 mm
and 160×
20–30 mm
); body club-shaped, narrow anteriorly, much larger posteriorly. Colour of living specimen uniform greyish brown. Colour in alcohol brown dorsally (figure 12H), beige to light brown ventrally (figure 12K). Mouth ventral, anus terminal. Twenty short, yellowish tentacles surrounded by a circle of papillae. Dorsally, numerous, large conical papillae without alignment (figure 12J). Ventrally, tube feet densely crowded in the ambulacral as well as in the interambulacral areas (figure 12J).
Calcareous ring (figure 7A) typical of the subgenus
Mertensiothuria
; two long Polian vesicles (one-sixth of body length) and two very short (±2% of body length), contorted stone canals (figure 7B); tentacle ampullae very short (2–2.5% body length). Cuvierian tubules numerous, whitish, very thin.
Ossicles
: in the body wall tables and buttons. Dorsally, tables few with disc
45–75
m
m across, round to quadrangular (figure 7C), perforated by four central and 9–10 peripheral holes; four pillars united by one cross-beam and ending in a small crown of spines; table height ±
50
m
m. Buttons regular with three to five pairs of holes (three pairs being the most frequent),
55–85
m
m long (figure 7D); a few irregular buttons (figure 7E). In the ventral body wall same types of ossicle, tables (figure 7F) being more numerous and buttons (figure 7G) smaller than dorsally. At the base of the dorsal papillae same ossicles as in the dorsal body wall. At the top of the papillae, tables (figure 7H), buttons (figure 7J) generally with three pairs of holes and rods,
200–230
m
m long, with lateral processes (figure 7K). In the dorsal papillae of the
paralectotype
,
165 mm
long, the buttons have generally four to five pairs of holes and lateral processes of the rods are perforated (figure 7L). In the tube feet buttons (figure 7M), irregular perforated plates (figure 8A), large, regular perforated plates, from 70×
85
m
m to 95×
120
m
m (figure 8B), and small tables (figure 8C),
50–55
m
m across. In the paralectoptype
165 mm
long, ossicles of the tube feet somewhat larger, especially the regular and irregular perforated plates (figure 8D and E, respectively). In the tentacles rods, spiny at the extremities (figure 8F, G),
30–500
m
m long. The smallest rods,
30–45
m
m long, C- or S-shape (figure 8H). In the longitudinal muscles numerous regular to irregular C-shape and O-ring ossicles (figure 8J),
10–65
m
m long.
F. 7.
Holothuria (Mertensiothuria) papillifera
Heding
in
Mortensen, 1938. (A) Calcareous ring (r, radial plate; ir, interradial plate) (L=225 mm); (B) stone canal (L=225 mm); (C) tables of dorsal body wall (L=225 mm); (D) regular buttons of dorsal body wall (L=225 mm); (E) irregular buttons of dorsal body wall (L=225 mm); (F) tables of ventral body wall (L=225 mm); (G) buttons of ventral body wall (L=225 mm); (H) tables of top of dorsal papillae (L=225 mm); (J) buttons of top of dorsal papillae (L= 225 mm); (K) rods of top of dorsal papillae (L=225 mm); (L) rods of top of dorsal papillae (L=165 mm); (M) buttons of tube feet (L=225 mm). Scale bars: (A, B) 5 mm; (C–J, M) 50
m
m; (K, L) 100
m
m.
F. 8.
Holothuria (Mertensiothuria) papillifera
Heding
in
Mortensen, 1938. (A) Irregular perforated plates of ventral tube feet (L=225 mm); (B) regular perforated plates of ventral tube feet (L=225 mm); (C) tables of ventral tube feet (L=225 mm); (D) regular perforated plate of ventral tube feet (L=165 mm); (E) irregular perforated plates of ventral tube feet (L=165 mm); (F–H) rods of tentacles (L=225 mm); (J) ossicles of longitudinal muscles (L=225 mm). Scale bars: (F) 200
m
m; (A–E, G–J) 50
m
m.
Diagnosis.
Present note.
Ecology.
Unknown.
Geographical distribution.
Up to now only recorded from the
Red Sea
(Ghardaqa, Abu Sadaf and Abu Fanadir).
Proposed status.
Holothuria (Mertensiothuria) papillifera
Heding
in
Mortensen, 1938.
Comments.
The original description of
H. (M.) papillifera
given by Heding (
in
Mortensen, 1938) in a footnote (without any illustration) is very succinct. Since the type series is available in the collection of the ZM, we take the opportunity to describe and illustrate the species, and to designate a
lectotype
and
paralectotypes
.
Heding (
in
Mortensen, 1938) suggested that
H. (M.) papillifera
is very close to
H. (M.) leucospilota
. Rowe (1969) suggested it is possibly conspecific with
H. (M.) leucospilota
. Examination of the
type
series confirms that both species are close to each other. Moreover, presence or absence of Cuvierian tubules is no longer a distinctive character (Heding
in
Mortensen, 1938) since both species possess them. The main characters separating
H. (M.) papillifera
from
H. (M.) leucospilota
are the greyish brown colour of the body wall, the long, soft dorsal papillae, the tables with a smooth disc margin, a very narrow crown of spines at the top of the tables, the rods of the dorsal papillae with lateral perforated processes and the presence of ossicles in the tentacles.