Holothuria (Lessonothuria) insignis Ludwig, 1875 (formally resurrected from synonymy of H. pardalis Selenka, 1867) and Holothuria (Lessonothuria) lineata Ludwig, 1875 - new additions to the sea cucumber fauna of Pakistan, with a key to the subgenus Lessonothuria Deichmann (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea)
Author
Ahmed, Quratulan
Author
Thandar, Ahmed S.
Author
Ali, Qadeer Mohammad
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-04-24
4767
2
307
318
journal article
22560
10.11646/zootaxa.4767.2.6
d4d0ec5d-02c3-4fc4-a6e2-4236ed012d3e
1175-5334
3771509
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9D29D0BA-53BB-4445-A477-D273D7A3CC9D
Holothuria (Lessonothuria) insignis
Ludwig, 1875
Figure 2
Holothuria insignis
Ludwig, 1875: 106
, p1.7, fig.28.
Holothuria pardalis
var.
insignis
Sluiter, 1890: 106
.
Halodeima insignis
Heding, 1934: 23
.
Holothuria
(
Lessonothuria
)
insignis
Rowe, 1969: 149
(passim);
Clark and Rowe, 1971: 176
(distrib.), p. 194 (note);
Samyn, 2003: 42
(passim);
Samyn
et al
. 2019
(in remarks and key).
Holothuria (Lessonothuria) pardalis
Rowe & Gates, 1995: 292
(partim);?
Cherbonnier, 1988:117
, fig.47.
?non
Holothuria (Lessonothuria) insignis
Thandar 2007:16
, text fig. 6 (=?
H. lineata
Ludwig, 1875
).
Material examined.
Sunahri Beach,
24º 52’33.49’’ N
,
66º 40’40.20’’ E
,
Holo. 19, rocky shore,
24 November 2014
,
1 spec.
; Buleji,
24º 50’20.41’’ N
,
66º 49’24.15’’ E
,
15 April 2015
,
1 spec.
Habitat.
The specimens were found attached to a rock in the intertidal zone. This species inhabits the lower mid-littoral zone on rock and sand substrate, living under boulders or hides in sand in shallow waters.
Description.
Specimen from Sunahri beach was
80 mm
long whereas the specimen from Buleji measured
60 mm
. Both specimens are cylindrical with the dorso-ventral surfaces well arched. Colouration of live specimens was dark brown dorsally (
Figure 2A
) with the ventral surface light brown to creamy-white with brown blotches (
Figure 2B
).The dorsal body wall is only slightly thick but rough to touch. Podia are scattered over the entire body surface with the dorsal ones tipped light creamy-brown. The mouth is ventral and encircled by 18 tentacles (
Figure 2C
) and the anus terminal, encircled by six papillae. Both the Polian vesicle and stone single are single but the madreporite was not observed. Cuvierian tubules are present.
Body wall ossicles comprise tables (
Figure 2D
) and pseudo-buttons, the latter often slightly knobbed (
Figure 2E
). The tables,
20–86 µm
, have a squarish or rounded disc usually perforated by the four central holes, rarely more and with a very spiny margin. The spire is stunted or drastically reduced, terminating in a few teeth, or absent, then teeth appear to be present on disc only; the spire terminates in usually eight teeth surrounding a central hole. Dorsally and ventrally the pseudo-buttons, 20–
13 µm
, are both regular (complete) and irregular (incomplete) with the latter predominating. The ventral podia are supported by elongated rods,
88–274 µm
, perforated with 1–2 holes at each end (
Figure 2H
). The end plates of the ventral podia,
34–110 µm
, are surrounded by elongated plates with undulating margin and paired series of large holes (
Figure 2F
); the dorsal podia have similar but slightly shorter rods (2I),
38–234 µm
. The tentacle rods,
30–52 µm
, may be branched at one end and perforated at the other (2G).
Remarks.
Holothuria (Lessonothuria) insignis
Ludwig, 1875
was not reported from the
Pakistan
coast before and hence it is new to the fauna of
Pakistan
. The specimens are similar to those described by
Ludwig (1875)
from Bowen (
Australia
),
Lampert (1896)
from East Africa, and recently by
Samyn
et al
. (2006)
from the
Comores
, and
Afkhami
et al.
(2015)
from the Persian Gulf (
Hormuz Island
). Their specimen size-range varied from
20–80 mm
with the dorsal life colouration described as darkish grey or brown, striped brown, and ventral life colouration whitish.
Clark and Rowe (1971)
recorded this species from the Red Sea, Eastern Africa and
Madagascar
, Bay of Bengal, East Indies, north
Australia
,
Philippines
,
China
, south
Japan
and south Pacific Is.
Heding (1934)
reported on some holothuroids from
Hong Kong
which included
H. insignis
which he was convinced differs significantly from
H. pardalis
.
Ducarme (2016)
reported
H. insignis
among 14 species of sea cucumbers encountered during the survey of nearby atolls in the
Maldives
.
Although
Clark & Rowe (1971)
included both
H. pardalis
and
H. insignis
, in their note on p. 194, question the validity of the latter but because of
Heding’s (1934)
viewpoint, retained it as a valid species. Later, however, Rowe (in
Rowe & Gates 1995
) accepted
H. insignis
in the synonymy of
H. pardalis
,
after examining some type material and numerous specimens from various museums and localities. A study of the ossicles of a
syntype
(ZMH E2573) by AST, received from Dr Samyn, revealed that the table discs of
H. insignis
usually have four central holes, hardly any marginal holes, a remarkably reduced or absent spire and with most of the buttons (ca. 60%) incomplete, or often developed with a single series of three holes on one side, not showing any sign of reduction, or are sometimes reduced to C-shaped rods, but rarely twisted. Complete buttons have three pairs of slit-like holes and rarely small terminal holes and are deeply constricted in the middle. The rods of the papillae are expanded at ends which may bear perforations or the rods are just thick, curved structures without perforations or spines. Rods of the ventral podia are straight or slightly curved, sometimes spinose, with 3–7 holes at each end. Plates associated with end plates of the ventral podia appear rounded or slightly elongated with undulating, sometimes spinose margin, with large paired series of holes unlike the plates found in
H. lineata
, which have a convincingly spinose or serrated margin. Hence, we opine that there is enough morphological evidence to resurrect
H. insignis
from the synonymy of
H. pardalis
. This evidence is here summarized in
Table 2
, which compares both species. The ossicles of
H. pardalis
are illustrated in
Figure 3
for the purpose of comparison. The fact that some specimens of
H. insignis
do show some plates associated with the end plate with also serrated margins as in
H. lineata
, these may be a result of hybridization, as both species are sympatric over a wide range wherever they occur, or some other factors. In this light
Thandar’s (2007)
H. insignis
, which was later transferred to
H. lineat
a, needs re-examination on the bases of new materials and the characters here recorded, taking into account the re-description of the
syntype
of
H. lineat
a by Samyn
et al
. (2019), as it might represent a true
H. insignis
.