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 pacificus
n. sp.
(
Figs 108D
;
109
)
TYPE
MATERIAL
. —
Papua New Guinea
.
Milne Bay Province
, Samarai Island,
10°36.98’S
,
150°39.77’E
,
27 m
,
10.
VI
.1998
(
MNHN
S2
MIC
159).
ETYMOLOGY. — Named after the Pacific Ocean.
OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED. —
Philippines
.
Musorstom 3,
11°37’N
,
121°43’E
,
120-122 m
,
5.VI.1985
(MNHN S2 MIC 160).
DESCRIPTION
Both specimens were collected on a sandy bottom. They are very similar,
3 cm
in length, covered with coarse sand and broken shells. The siphons are well apart. The body wall is thin and pale in formalin except for the red extremity of the siphons. Internally the siphons are long and narrow. The internal spinules are arranged in chevrons and their section is angular (
Fig. 108D
). The musculature forms a network of crossed and regularly spaced bundles issuing from both siphons.
The tentacles are inserted at the base of a high velum. There are 12 large, bushy tentacles in two orders of size with three orders of branchings (
Fig. 109D
); smaller ones are irregularly intercalated. The prepharyngeal band is very close to the branchial tissue. It is deeply indented dorsally. The dorsal tubercle is protruding; its opening is horse-shoe shaped, anteriorly opened with horns inwardly rolled (
Fig. 109D
). The neural ganglion is particularly long (
Fig. 109D
).
The dorsal lamina is a high blade of equal height along its whole length.
The branchial sac counts seven folds on each side. The formula on the right side is:
R.E.?
10
2
15
2
17
1
19
1
19
1
19
1
17
2 D.L.
The folds are high, overlapping each other. There are five to six stigmata per mesh between the folds and three to four on the folds. At the top of the folds one or two stigmata are curved. There are parastigmatic vessels.
The gut makes a very long and curved loop with both limbs very close together (
Fig. 109A, C
). The stomach is only slightly enlarged. It is covered by a massive hepatic gland constituted of lamellae. Many filiform papillae arise from the hepatic lobes (
Fig. 109C
).
The rectum is cylindrical, its posterior part attached to the oesophagus. The anus is wide open with two lobes. There is one gonad on each side, protruding well above the body wall (
Fig. 109
A-C). The left gonad lies in the secondary loop of the gut but does not overlap the rectum (
Fig. 109C
). The general outline of the gonads is oval. The male lobules surround the sinuous ovaries and penetrate them in furrows (
Fig. 109E
) The gonoducts are joined, opening at the same level.
The endocarps are irregular in size, and lobulated. They lie inside the gut loop, on both sides of the body wall ventrally, and above the gonads (
Fig. 109C
).
There is a large cloacal velum with an irregular ring of filiform papillae at its base.
FIG. 109. —
Microcosmus pacificus
n. sp.
;
A
,
B
, left and right sides of the body;
C
, body ventrally opened;
D
, dorsal tubercle;
E
, gonad. Scale bars: A, B, 1 cm; C, 5 mm; D, E, 2 mm.
REMARKS
By its sediment-covered tunic, the length of its well-separated siphons, its branchial sac, and its long narrow gut loop, this species resembles
Microcosmus madagascariensis
Michaelsen, 1918
from
Madagascar
. But the latter has the left gonad overlapping the gut loop. As well, the endocarps are differently distributed in these two species.
FIG. 110. —
Microcosmus vesiculosus
n. sp.
;
A
,
B
, left and right sides of the body;
C
, body ventrally opened. Scale bars: 1 cm.
Microcosmus agglutinans
Hartmeyer, 1919
from
western Australia
is also closely allied. It differs in having its the siphons close together, and it has a more accentuated secondary loop of the gut with the anus level with the top of the primary gut loop. It has no oral velum.
Hartmeyer & Michaelsen (1928)
synonymised
M. madagascariensis
and
M. agglutinans
, an opinion that
Kott (1985)
supported, but we believe that these are different species. Kott’s description corresponds better to
M. agglutinans
. Moreover the description given by
Vasseur (1969)
for
M. madagascariensis
collected in
Madagascar
corresponds well to the description of Michaelsen’s
type
from the same locality. The geographic distance separating them – one in
Madagascar
, the other in western Australia – is an additional argument for separating the two species.