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
Aplidium sacciferum
n. sp.
(
Figs 11
; 113C)
Aplidium altarium
–
Kott 1992a: 519
part, fig. 62, pl. 10c-d.
TYPE
MATERIAL
. —
Palau
.
Babeldaob, SE
Airai
, Ngerdwais,
7°20.82’N
,
134°34.35’E
,
5 m
,
9.IV.1997
(
MNHN
A1
APL
.B 402).
ETYMOLOGY. — From the Latin
saccus
: bag.
DESCRIPTION
The colonies are made of several joined cushions of
3 cm
in maximum diameter and
1 cm
in thickness. The colour is dark purple (Fig. 113C) but the pigment is localised in the tunic only, while the zooids are colourless. The cloacal channels converge at one or two common cloacal apertures in each colony. The systems are clearly apparent because each oral aperture is circled by a dark purple ring. The tunic is very soft, translucent, without sand, and contains long filiform pigment cells. The oral siphon has six pointed lobes. The long and undivided cloacal languet is inserted close to the cloacal aperture (
Fig. 11A
). The cloacal aperture is of variable diameter due to a strong sphincter.
The oral tentacles are very numerous. The branchial sac is wide with nine rows of 22 stigmata on each side. The stigmata are interrupted on the dorsal line, and the rapheal languets are slightly displaced to the left side.
The stomach is shorter dorsally than ventrally: its wall is marked with numerous narrow longitudinal folds (
Fig. 11A
). There is an annular post-stomach. The post-abdomen is short, with an anterior ovary and a cluster of testis follicles (
Fig. 11A
).
Two or
three larvae
are incubated in a brood pouch appended to the cloacal cavity (
Fig. 11A
). The larvae are large,
1 mm
for the trunk. They have three adhesive papillae with narrow stalks, and a line of pedunculate ampullae on each side (
Fig. 11B
). A branchial sac is already developed with four rows of numerous stigmata. On each side there are two pigment flecks, one at the base of the tail and one along the ventral side.
REMARKS
These characters correspond well to the description given by
Kott (1992a)
, for specimens having such a brood pouch, but we have not observed a bilabiate cloacal aperture in the zooids.
This species is not
Aplidium altarium
,
whose
type
has been examined. In Sluiter’s species the larva has only four pairs of ampullae between the adhesive papillae (
Fig. 1C
) and the incubation takes place inside the cloacal cavity. This same situation corresponds to what Millar described in 1956 for
A. altarium
for
Mozambique
specimens. The species described by
Kott (1966)
under the name
A. altarium
has numerous ampullae between the larval adhesive papillae, but the incubation is not in an appended brood pouch; this probably corresponds to a part of the description of
A. altarium
by
Kott (1992a)
.
The description of
A. altarium
given by
Michaelsen (1919a)
for specimens from
Zanzibar
does not mention the larvae, so its status cannot be assessed.
The distribution of
Aplidium sacciferum
n. sp.
is probably wide in the western Pacific Ocean, as it is now recorded from
Palau
and
Australia
.
Aplidium solidum
(
Herdman, 1891
)
(
Figs 12
; 113D)
Psammaplidium solidum
Herdman, 1891: 620
.
Type
locality:
Australia
. Synonymy and distribution: see
Kott 1992a: 586
,
Australia
. — Monniot F. & Monniot C. 1999: 14, fig. 10, pl. 2B,
Tanzania
.
MATERIAL EXAMINED
. —
Papua New Guinea
.
Louisiade Archipelago, Calvados Island Chain, Brooker Channel,
11°03.09’S
,
152°28.62’E
,
7 m
,
1.
VI
.1998
(
MNHN
A1
APL
.B 409). —
Milne Bay Province
, East Cape, Boia Boia Waga Island,
10°12.26’S
,
150°44.75’E
,
16 m
,
27.
V
.1998
(Sample:
CRRF
).
FIG. 12. —
Aplidium solidum
(
Herdman, 1891
)
;
A
, zooid;
B
, abdomen and post-abdomen for another zooid;
C
, larva. Scale bars: A, B, 0.5 mm; C, 0.3 mm.
DESCRIPTION
The colonies are thick crusts totally embedded with sand (Fig. 113D). The common cloacal apertures open atop swellings, and they are widely open in life. The oral openings are irregularly distributed in sinuous double rows or circles. The zooids are colourless in formalin, very small,
3 mm
long for the most relaxed ones, and perpendicular to the colony surface.
Zooids have six short oral lobes. The cloacal aperture is distant from the oral siphon, as a simple hole whose anterior rim carries a short, simple languet. There are 10 to 11 rows of stigmata. The gut loop is straight, with a cylindrical stomach in the middle of the descending limb. There are five stomach folds and no distinct annular post-stomach (
Fig. 12A
).
The post-abdomen is rarely longer than the abdomen in contracted zooids. The ovary lies a little below the gut, followed by rather few testis follicles (
Fig. 12A, B
) either in a line in relaxed zooids or in a cluster after contraction.
The post-abdomen ends in two horns made by the longitudinal muscular bundles (
Fig. 12B
).
The incubation of larvae takes place at the base of the thorax. The very small larvae,
0.3 mm
long, have three well-separated adhesive papillae, and an anterior crescent of spherical vesicles on each side (
Fig. 12C
).
REMARKS
The shape of the colony, the very small size of the zooids, their anatomy, and the structure of the larva are characteristic.
The new collection extends the distribution of the species, which has been recorded from several places in eastern and western Australia and in
Tanzania
.