Some ascidians from Indonesian marine lakes (Raja Ampat Islands, West Papua)
Author
Monniot, Françoise
text
Zootaxa
2009
2106
13
40
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.274849
eecca8e3-6355-42e3-be72-51494ecadcb8
1175-5326
274849
Pyura elongata
Tokioka, 1952
Figures 18A
,
19
)
Pyura
elongata
Tokioka, 1952:136
; Millar,
|
1975:311; |
Kott |
& |
Goodbody, |
1982:539; |
Kott, |
1985: 299; |
Sanamyan |
K.E. |
& |
Sanamyan N.P., 1999: 1860. |
=
Pyura scortea
: Monniot C. 2002: 102.
|
Material.
Indonesia
.
West
Papua
, Danau A Gam marine lake,
00°26.970’S
–
130°29.149’E
,
0.5m
,
02/XII/ 2007
,coll. L.J. Bell and L.E. Martin,
DAG
0 94 (
MNHN
S2 PYU 430).
Description.
The largest specimen is
7cm
large, the other
4.5cm
in width. The siphonal lining is bright red, the tunic is brown-red covered with epibionts except the siphons (
Fig. 18A
). The tunic is thick but not hard. The body wall is colourless except the siphons which are red. The muscles (
Fig. 19
B) are strong, in bundles in the main part of the body but in dense thin parallel fibres on the ventral side (
Fig. 19
B). The 6 folds are high (
Fig. 19
A) with up to 22 vessels, widely separated anteriorly. The gut forms a single loop (
Fig. 19
B) with a narrow stomach partially covered with several hepatic diverticula. The gonads are straight, of the pyurid shape (
Fig. 19
B), with lobes slightly attached to the body wall. There are no endocarps. A large cloacal velum is curved at its anterior margin.
FIGURE 18.
A,
Pyura elongata
. B,
Pyura vittata
.
FIGURE 19
.
Pyura elongata
: A, right part of the branchial sac; B, body opened along the ventral line; C, spinules of the siphonal lining, scale bar = 10µm; D, spinules covering the external tunic surface of the body, scale bar = 100µm.
All characters correspond well with previous descriptions, including the shape of the spinules in lamellas (
Fig. 19
C) lining the internal side of the siphons. The entire external surface of the tunic appears velvety due to a dense cover of thin stick-like spinules, as seen in electron microscopy (
Fig. 19
D). Spinules commonly extend on the body surface of many pyurid species but their density is exceptional here. They were probably not seen before as they cannot be seen with naked eye on this large size species.
Pyura elongata
is widely distributed in the indo-pacific.
Pyura scortea
Kott, 1985
is considered here as a junior synonym.