Taxonomy and distribution of irregular echinoids (Echinoidea: Irregularia) from Sri Lanka
Author
Arachchige, Gayashan M.
Author
Jayakody, Sevvandi
Author
Mooi, Rich
Author
Kroh, Andreas
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-01-03
4541
1
1
100
journal article
27715
10.11646/zootaxa.4541.1.1
9c3fecf1-4e11-4c79-a908-e0a5abbaf3ca
1175-5326
2617460
B11E734C-218B-418C-84E6-719AB3C58AFF
Nacospatangus altus
(A. Agassiz, 1864)
Figures 74–75
1864
Maretia alta
A. Agassiz
: p. 360.
1951
Pseudomaretia alta
(A. Agassiz)
.—Mortensen: p. 58–62; pl. 3: figs. 12–14, 16–20; pl. 46: figs. 1–6, 8–11, 13, 19, 20.
Material studied.
Five denuded specimens: WUSL/EI/82, EI/83, EI/116, and EI/117, from Kamburugamuwa, and WUSL/EI/115, from Mount Lavinia,
Sri Lanka
.
Description.
Shape and size
—Test thin and fragile; medium-sized,
32.7–46.95 mm
TL; width 73–80% TL, greatest width about halfway along length; outline of anterior end gently curved with very inconspicuous anterior notch; TH 42–45% TL, highest point along posterior interambulacrum 5 which forms a sharp keel; posterior end obliquely truncated in lateral view; oral side flat but sternum rises into a conspicuous keel at its posterior end; ambitus sharply curved from aboral to oral surface.
Apical system
—Ethmolytic, with three gonopores (no gonopore in genital plate 2); posterior pore pair larger than anterior gonopore; madreporite not conspicuously extending beyond posterior oculars; situated anterior of centre, c. 33% TL (SD=1, N=6) from anterior margin.
Ambulacra
—Ambulacrum III narrow, very slightly sunken; paired petals with unequal poriferous zones, nearly closed, pores in single pore pair equal in size, slightly pointed at inner ends, pore series converging distally; adapical pore pairs rudimentary in both anterior and posterior paired petals; poriferous zones of anterior paired petals highly unequal, in anterior paired petal, posterior poriferous zone (petal IIa, IVb) usually 7–9 pore pairs longer than anterior poriferous zone (petal IIb, IVa); in posterior paired petals (petals I, V), length difference not as pronounced and posterior poriferous zones (petal Ia, Vb) usually a single pore pair shorter than anterior ones (petal Ib, Va) (however, largest examined specimen [WUSL/EI/82] shows equal pore pair numbers in both anterior and posterior poriferous zones); length of rudimentary area of anterior poriferous zones (petal IIb, IVa) greater than posterior poriferous zones (petal IIa, IVb) of anterior paired petal, c. 17% and 3% TL respectively; length of rudimentary area of anterior (Ib, Va) and posterior poriferous zones (petal Ia, Vb) of posterior paired petal nearly equal, c. 8% TL respectively.
FIGURE 74.
Nacospatangus altus
: A, aboral view (WUSL/EI/83); B, oral view (WUSL/EI/83); C, left side (WUSL/EI/82), D, right side (WUSL/EI/82), lateral views; E, anterior (WUSL/EI/83); F, posterior (WUSL/EI/83); G, sternal view (WUSL/EI/83).
FIGURE 75.
Distribution map of
Nacospatangus altus
recorded in this study.
Tuberculation
—Aboral interambulacra uniformly and densely covered by small secondary tubercles, except for a few enlarged primary tubercles in interambulacra 1, 2, 3, and 4; aboral interambulacrum 5 without enlarged primary tubercles; in aboral interambulacra 2 and 3, many enlarged primary tubercles present along adjoining anterior ambulacrum; these tubercles without sunken areoles; two series (or exceptionally three) of enlarged tubercles along interambulacra 1 and 4 on each side starting anteriorly from very close to posterior poriferous zones of anterior paired petals, first series consists of 3–4 and rarely 5 enlarged primary tubercles just aboral to ambitus (
Fig. 74C, D
); second series 1–2 tubercles just above first series; rarely third series with a single enlarged primary tubercle; these tubercles non-crenulate with deeply sunken areoles; oral interambulacra with non-crenulate primary tubercles, mamelon of tubercles eccentric; these primary tubercles smaller than tubercles on aboral interambulacra 1 and 4, and larger than tubercles on aboral interambulacra 2 and 3; tubercles on adoral interambulacrum 5 smaller than other tubercles on oral interambulacra; larger tubercles present along adjoining ambulacra.
Plastron
—Narrow, width c. 16% TL (SD=0.43, N=6); sternal plates tuberculate except for small part along anterior end; sternal plates forming conspicuous median keel towards posterior end; labrum arrow, slightly elevated at peristome with narrow posterior prolongation.
Fasciole
—Subanal fasciole well-developed, heart-shaped, adoral end pointed, adapical fasciole following lower edge of periproctal cavity; height of subanal fasciole approximately 21% TL (SD=1.1, N=6) and width approximately 28% TL (SD=0.7, N=6); usually encloses three pore pairs on each side, exceptionally, four pore pairs in each side of largest specimens examined (WUSL/EI/82); no anal branches.
Peristome
—D-shaped; oblique; moderately large, length 9–12% TL, width 15–17% TL; 24–25% TL from anterior margin.
Periproct
—Large, length 12–19% TL, width 14–19% TL; fully visible in oral view..
Geographic range.
Indo-West Pacific, from Islands of West Indian Ocean (
Clark 1925a
),
Mauritius
(
De Loriol 1883
),
Sri Lanka
(
Clark 1915
), Bay of Bengal (
Koehler 1914
), East Indies (de
Meijere 1904
) to
Philippine Islands
(
Mortensen 1948e
;
Mortensen 1951
) and
China
& South
Japan
(
Agassiz 1872
).
Bathymetric range.
1.5–204 m
(
Mortensen 1951
).
Observed occurrence in
Sri Lanka
.
Specimens were collected from sand patches between patch reefs on the western and southern coasts of Sri Lanka, at a depth of
20–30 m
(
Fig. 75
).
Remarks.
The number of the distal pore pairs in the anterior series of the anterior paired petals is variable. Out of six specimens, only one (WUSL/EI/127, 38.0 mm TL) has 5 distal pore pairs, while four specimens have 8 distal pore pairs and the largest examined specimen has 9.
Mortensen (1951: 59)
observed 5–6 distal pore pairs in the anterior series of the anterior petals in his specimens, even though he had examined specimens up to a size of
54 mm
. Likewise, number of enlarge primary tubercles is variable: some of the examined materials (WUSL/EI/116,
34.2 mm
TL; WUSL/EI/83,
37.3 mm
TL; WUSL/EI/127,
37.95 mm
TL) and (WUSL/EI/82,
46.95 mm
TL) have seven and eight large tubercles in interambulacrum 4 respectively. This differs from
Mortensen’s (1951)
observations. These features suggest intraspecific variation and can thus only be used in conjunction with the additional characters listed above.