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
Ecteinascidia diaphanis
Sluiter, 1885
(
Figure 12
B)
Ecteinascidia diaphanis
Sluiter, 1885
: 168
pl. 1fig.2, pl.2 figs 7–10;
Kott: 1985
: 90
fig. 35;
Monniot F. & Monniot C.: 1996
: 227
fig.43;
Kott: 2003
:1635
fig. 5AB and synonymy.
?
Ecteinascidia ndouae
Monniot C. 1991
: 505
fig.6.
FIGURE 12.
A,
Ecteinascidia bandaensis
. B,
Ecteinascidia diaphanis
.
Material.
Indonesia
.
West
Papua
, Gam Island, southeast side, Blue Water mangrove channel,
00°29.164’S
–
130°39.865’E
,
0.5m
,
07/XII/2007
, coll. L.J. Bell and LE. Martin, BMC 0 0 1 (
MNHN
P2 ECT 108).
The transparent zooids
15mm
tall are densely packed on mangrove roots (
Fig. 12
B). The body is colourless except a pale pink tinge of the siphons. Transverse muscles extend over 2/3 of the body wall on each side. They are the only muscles in addition to the siphonal sphincters. The dorsal lamina in a plain membrane carries a languet at its margin at the level of each transverse vessel. Eighteen to twenty longitudinal vessels, almost all entire, lie above 20 rows of stigmata. The stomach has 3 oblique folds. The sperm duct ends in a papilla below the anus at the level of the 6th stigmata row.
Kott (2003)
estimates that
E. ndouae
is a synonym. This species is smaller, more pigmented, with fewer stigmatal rows but nevertheless mature with incubated larvae. Both species are very similar (
Monniot C. 1991
). The material is not abundant enough to validate.