Ascidians from the tropical western Pacific
Author
Monniot, Françoise
Author
Monniot, Claude
UPESA 8044, Laboratoire de Biologie des Invertébrés marins et Malacologie, Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, 55 rue Buffon, F- 75005 Paris (France) monniot @ mnhn. fr.
monniot@mnhn.fr
text
Zoosystema
2001
23
2
201
383
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5391440
1638-9387
5391440
Microcosmus bitunicatus
n. sp.
(
Figs 108C
;
130D
)
?
Microcosmus manaarensis
Herdman, 1906: 311
. — Monniot F. & Monniot C. 1996: 265, fig. 59,
Philippines
.
TYPE
MATERIAL
. —
Philippines
.
Cebu
Straits, Cabilao Island,
9°53.39’N
,
123°45.45’E
,
10 m
,
15.IV.1997
(
MNHN
S2
MIC
157).
ETYMOLOGY. — From the Latin
tunicatus
: dressed in a tunic.
DESCRIPTION
A second specimen has been collected of
Microcosmus
having two encased tunics, one inside the other. This peculiar structure of the tunic previously seemed a possible artefact, but the collection of another specimen gives this structure a unique significance.
The new specimen (
Fig. 130D
) is larger, being
10 cm
long instead of
5 cm
. It was attached in a rocky hollow by a ball of extremely hard compact, tunic. The remainder of the body has developed above the substrate and has a regular shape.
All characters described by Monniot F. & Monniot C. (1996) are confirmed, particularly the independence of the apertures of the external tunic and the siphons of the encased tunic. The spinules (
Fig. 108C
) covering the external and internal sides of the encased tunic grow from the deepest part of the reflex tunic. As the animal increases in size, the spinules move towards the external rim of the siphon. In some cases they can invade all the body, and this is so for the present specimen.
The absence of spinules on the openings of the external tunic implies that the dissociation between the encased and external tunics occurred at an early stage of the growth of this specimen.
REMARKS
It was with doubt that the first specimen was identified as
M. manaarensis
. We supposed it to be an ecological form from rocky bottoms of a species normally living on gravel. The internal morphology, the number of branchial folds, and the shape and disposition of the gut and gonads are very similar. On sedimentary bottoms
M. manaarensis
has a tunic in two parts: one internal which is normal and one external made by a network of ramified hairs agglomerating the sediment. The two tunics are linked by rhizoids. Several
Stolidobranchia
show a similarly double tunic structure (
Pyura tunica
Kott, 1969
;
S. rhizoides
Diehl, 1969
; etc.). But
M. bitunicatus
n. sp.
does not follows this pattern. The external tunic, with its openings corresponding to the siphons, is not in continuity – at least in large specimens – with the functional siphons of the animal. The growth of the two tunics seems to occur independently.
Microcosmus helleri
Herdman, 1882
possesses a sedimentary form with a thin tunic encrusted with sand, and another form with a thick, clean hard tunic living on rocks, and intermediate forms exist. This is not the case between the typical
M. manaarensis
and
M. bitunicatus
.