Two new marine flatworms (Polycladida: Pseudocerotidae) from Andaman & Nicobar Islands, India
Author
Dixit, Sudhanshu
Author
Raghunathan, C.
Author
Chandra, Kailash
text
Zootaxa
2017
4221
1
111
122
journal article
37313
10.5281/zenodo.246774
068d72fc-b3ce-427c-ab64-7f99137be230
1175-5326
246774
BED84566-A416-4DF0-BE4E-A027A7B78D82
Pseudoceros nigropunctatus
sp. nov.
Figures: 5, 6 & 7
Type
material.
Holotype
: One specimen (26×
15 mm
) as serial sections (7 slides), remainder of animal in 70% ethanol. Collected
21.11.2015
, subtidally from
15 m
depth,
Hut Bay
,
Little Andaman
(
10°37.340’N
92°33.419’E
),
Andaman and
Nicobar Islands
,
India
(ZSI/ANRC-14851).
Distribution.
Little Andaman
Island
,
India
. Additional photographic record from
Maldives
(
Newman & Cannon, 2003
&
2005
) and
Kenya
(http://www.nudipixel.net/pictures/flatworms/24/)
Diagnosis.
Background body colour mix of light brown and orange shades, margin cream colour interrupted with light brown. A very thin fluorescent yellow rim outlining the body. Numerous black coloured spots of variable sizes present all over body without reaching the margin. These spots are surrounded by cream colour like the margin giving a halo appearance. Ventral surface light orange in colour.
Etymology.
From the Latin
niger
—black,
punctatus
—spotted; for presence of black spots on the body.
Synonyms.
It is likely that it corresponds to
Pseudoceros
sp. 15
Newman & Cannon (2003, pg. 80)
and
Pseudoceros
sp. 15
Newman and Cannon (2005)
, CD-ROM.
Description.
Live
:
Body large, smooth, light brown to orange dorsally and light orange ventrally. Margin cream interrupted with light brown shades with a thin fluorescent yellow rim without any ruffles. Numerous black coloured equally spaced spots of variable sizes present all over body without touching the margin (
Fig.5.A
). These spots are surrounded by cream colour giving a halo appearance. Pseudotentacles small, formed by simple folds of the anterior margin with same colour pattern as that of margin with tentacular eyes present at the tips. Cerebral eyespots cluster horseshoe shaped with 80–85 eyes (
Fig.5
.D).
FIGURE 5.
A.
Pseudoceros nigropunctatus
sp. nov.
ex situ
; B. Ventral surface details; C. Star shaped female gonopore; D. Dorsal region showing arrangement of eyes. ce: cerebral eyes; fp: female gonopore; mp: male gonopore; p: pharynx; pm: pharyngeal mouth; su: sucker; te: tentacular eyes; vd: vas deferens.
Preserved:
Specimen
26 mm
long and
15 mm
wide at central portion. Yellow marginal rim not visible after fixation, but black spots and a clear cream margin without any interruptions remains easily visible. Body wall thickness 25-35 µm for ventral epidermis while dorsal epidermis was not clearly visible in the sections. The total distance between pharyngeal mouth and sucker is
7.53 mm
.
Male
and female gonopores
1.7 mm
apart (
Fig.5
.B). Pharynx small and ruffled with 7 folds.
Male
pore
2.8 mm
from pharyngeal mouth. Female gonopore star shaped (
Fig.5
.C) with numerous easily visible cement glands. A paired vas deferens running towards male gonopore is recognisable. Sucker 40 µm in length and conspicuous.
Reproductive characters:
Measurements refer to length in a
26 mm
long worm, the
holotype
. Seminal vesicle (
Fig.7
.A) oval (481×516 µm), muscular wall thickness surrounding the lumen variable (48–114 µm), tapering towards the anterior side and slightly downwards at posterior side. Lumen lined by heavily ciliated epithelium with nucleus at periphery. Prostatic vesicle round (327×220 µm), located anterior to seminal vesicle above last fold of pharynx. Lumen not visible instead numerous glandular fibres are visible (
Fig.7
.B).
Male
atrium deep and ciliated, housing a stylet 81 µm long and opening ventrally by a small male gonopore. Some dense cement glands and a highly nucleus populated region is visible but no female gonopore was observed.
FIGURE 6.
A & B. Histological sections of reproductive structures; C. Sucker. ma: male atrium; mp: male gonopore; pp: penis papilla; pv: prostatic vesicle; su: sucker; sv: seminal vesicle; st: stylet.
Taxonomic remarks.
With 87 species (Tyler
et al
.
2006–2015
),
Pseudocero
s is the largest genus in the family
Pseudocerotidae
. Members of this genus can be differentiated at specific level solely on the basis of colours and patterns (
Prudhoe, 1989
;
Newman & Cannon 1994
,
1996
,
1997
,
1998
) because of the similarity in their reproductive structures. This colour based species level identification was further validated by
Litvaitis & Newman (2001)
, supported by a nucleotide sequences based study of
Pseudocerotidae
. The newly described species
Pseudoceros nigropunctatus
sp. nov.
presented here is very distinctive and unmatched in terms of its colour and pattern within this genus, with the exception of
P. nipponicus
Kato, 1944
which also possesses a similar background and black spots on the dorsum but differs from the former in having a russet brown sub-marginal band with a black rim and a light coloured median stripe. However, there are a few more species with spots on their body, namely
P. lindae
Newman & Cannon, 1994
;
P. laingensis
Newman & Cannon, 1998
and
P. scintillatus
Newman & Cannon, 1994
(
Table.2
). Both
P. lindae
and
P. laingensis
are characterised by small spots but the appearance and colour of spots are very different from
P. nigropunctatus
sp. nov.
P. lindae
is characterised by golden yellow spots on the dorsum and elongate spots at the margin while
P. laingensis
is characterised by the presence of smaller purple dots scattered all over the dorsum.
P. scintillatus
is another species with spots but these are very big, clearly outlined and touching the margin.
Newman & Cannon (2003
,
2005
) mentioned this species as rare and undescribed.