Costasiella Coronata, New Species, And A Revised Diagnosis For The Family Costasiellidae (Mollusca: Opisthobranchia: Sacoglossa)
Author
Swennen, C.
text
Raffles Bulletin of Zoology
2007
2007-08-31
55
2
355
362
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.4509064
2345-7600
4509064
Costasiella coronata
,
new species
(
Figs. 1
,
2
)
Material examined.
–
Bang Tawa, in the mangrove forest (
6°51'N
101°09'E
), some specimens and egg-strings,
10 Jul.2000
. Same site, some tens of individuals with a length up to
7 mm
, also egg-strings found,
Oct.2000
. Same site, some tens of individuals with a length of
4-10.5 mm
, also egg-strings found,
13 Oct.2003
.
Tak
Bay, on intertidal mud bordering a small fringe of mangroves (
6°16'N
102°03'E
),
2 specimens
with a length of
4-5 mm
,
23 Apr.2005
.
Both
locations are in southern
Thailand
along the
Gulf
of
Thailand
, and all specimens were on, or in, patches of the alga
Vaucheria
sp
.
Fig. 1.
Costasiella coronata
,
new species
:
A
, outline of a submerged live specimen;
B
, outline of a live specimen on mud during low tide;
C
, different shapes of the anterior part of a live specimen;
D
, outline of a cross section through the cardiac area of a relaxed specimen;
E
, ventral view of a relaxed specimen showing organs shining through;
F
, branch of the digestive gland in ceras;
G
, outline of cross section of a preserved ceras;
H
, branches of the albumen gland in a series of cerata of different sizes; upper row dorsal sides, lower row ventral sides;
I
, dorsal view of the anterior body of a preserved specimen; the renal shield and cerata are removed; former position of renal shield is indicated by slashes;
J
, the genital apertures at the right anterior side of a preserved specimen with removed renal shield;
K
, ventral view of anterior area showing the mouth in a preserved specimen. Legend:
ag
– albumen gland;
ap
– anus papilla;
bl
– black line;
ce
– ceras;
dg
– digestive gland;
dr
– dorsal rim;
fo
– follicles of ovotestis;
lc
– lost cerata;
ma
– male aperture;
mo
– mouth;
oa
– oviducal aperture;
pc
– pericardium;
rh
– rhinophore;
rp
– renal pore;
rs
– renal shield;
st
- stomach;
va
– vaginal aperture.
Fig. 2.
Costasiella coronata
,
new species
:
A
, eyes;
B
, radular tooth and connection;
C
, pharynx in lateral view;
D
, digestive system from mouth to stomach in lateral view; ring of main ganglia around anterior part of oesophagus is removed.
E
, branches of the digestive gland in the body of a preserved specimen; dorsal skin and branches of the albumen gland are removed;
F
, hermaphrodite follicles and ductules from a preserved specimen;
G
, branches of the albumen gland in the body of a preserved specimen; dorsal skin removed; the heart and some organs of the genital complex block the view in the outlined area;
H
, penis;
I
, egg-strings;
J
, arrangement of eggs in an egg-string;
K
, diagram of the genital complex. Legend:
ad
– albumen duct;
ag
– albumen gland;
am
– ampulla;
an
– anus;
bc
– bursa copulatrix;
bw
– body wall;
cc
– central canal;
dg
– digestive gland;
ey
– eyes;
gr
– genital receptacle;
hd
– hermaphrodite duct;
in
– intestine;
ma
– male aperture;
mu
– mucus gland (large oviduct);
oa
– oviducal aperture;
oe
– oesophagus;
og
– oral gland;
op
– oesophageal pouch;
ov
– oviduct;
ph
– pharynx;
pr
– prostate;
sg
– salivary gland;
st
– stomach;
va
– vaginal aperture;
vd
– vas deferens.
The description is based on
11 specimens
collected in
Oct.2003
, of which five were dissected and six selected as types. The
holotype
and three
paratypes
are deposited in the Zoological Reference Collection (
ZRC
) of the Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research, National University of
Singapore
, and three
paratypes
in the Zoological Museum, University of Amsterdam (
ZMA
).
External morphology.
– Black eyes close together between rhinophores (
Fig. 1 A, C
). Renal shield large, fixed on dorsal side of small pericardium, covering dorsum from just posterior of eyes to two-third of body length; wide, free rim can be held upwards and pleated (
Fig. 1 A
). Rim usually covers basal parts of bordering cerata and often nearly their whole length (
Fig. 1 B
). Transparent renal shield contains irregular central channel with side-branches bordered by dispersed dark dots. Rhinophores smooth, wide, somewhat flattened at base, but rounded distally and tapering into blunt tips. Shape of head varies according to degree of straightening (
Fig. 1 C
); frontal part usually kept bilobed. Lateral areas of back wider than body by thick rims (
Fig. 1 D, E
). Each rim filled with maze of branches of albumen and digestive glands. Cerata in a row of up to 22 on dorsal side of each rim, starting shortly behind rhinophores; not covering central part of dorsum and posterior end of foot; strongly flattened, wide, and smooth (
Fig. 1 F, G
); flat sides concave-convex in preserved specimens (
Fig. 1 G
). Each ceras containing wide branch with side branches of digestive gland (
Fig. 1 F
) and in reproductive slugs also branches of albumen gland being most dense on dorsal side of ceras (
Fig. 1 H
).
Foot somewhat wider than dorsum in live specimens, but the opposite is true after preservation. Anterior border of foot with blunt extensions; posterior tip pointed (
Fig. 1 A, E
). Foot length 4-6 times width in actively crawling specimens (N = 11). Sole anteriorly with shallow central longitudinal groove continuing posteriorly as unpigmented line. Anus on small papilla anterior right of pericardium covered by renal shield (
Fig. 1 I
). Renal pore just left of anus papilla. Male aperture below right rhinophore, vaginal aperture just posterior of male aperture and oviductal aperture slightly posterior to and below vaginal aperture (
Fig. 1 J
).
Live colouration.
– Colour of body and cerata is mainly determined by colour of digestive gland: bright green in well-fed individuals, and pale yellowish brown when not fed recently. Skin largely transparent with scattered iridescent blue-green dots, white or yellowish glandular dots, and angular reddish-brown dots, latter especially on renal shield. These colours only visible under specific light conditions. Moreover, fine grey-purple pigment on lateral and dorsal sides, anterior foot border, and in two longitudinal bands on sole of foot. White lines on posterior sides of rhinophores and thin dark pigment on lateral sides. Appearance of lines and areas with grey-purple pigment on head largely depends on degree of expansion of head (
Fig. 1 C, I
). A small black line present on both sides of mouth (
Fig. 1 K
). No pigment around genital orifices and eyes. In preserved specimens content of digestive gland brownish and purple areas in epidermis grey.
Internal characteristics.
– Diameter of eyeball
125–145 µm
(N = 4, length of live specimen
6–8 mm
). Eyeballs touching (
Fig. 2 A
). Clusters of oral glands besides anterior part of pharynx (
Fig. 2 D
). Pharynx nearly spherical, diameter
400– 520 µm
(N = 5) with prominent ascus, strong ascus muscle, and well developed dorsal septate muscle. Wide, internal, longitudinal band of dark pigment borders pharyngeal space (
Fig. 2 C, D
). Radular teeth blade-shaped, smooth and narrow, with slightly curved sharp tips (
Fig. 2 B
). Length of leading tooth in large specimens
85–100 µm
(N = 5). In ascending row 5-8 teeth, in descending row and ascus 18–27 progressively smaller teeth (N = 5). Teeth, including 3 preradular teeth, remain fixed on radular ribbon that curls in a spiral in ascus. Length of base of first preradular tooth about
4 µm
, second about
8 µm
, third with minuscule blade
15 µm
in total. On both sides of short oesophagus, salivary duct between pharynx and salivary gland below prominent oesophageal pouch on dorsal side of oesophagus just anterior of stomach (
Fig. 2 D
). Oesophagus and pouch dark pigmented; salivary glands and ducts pale. Stomach dark, ventral in body. From right dorsal side of stomach, pale coloured intestine ascends to anal papilla (
Fig. 2 D
). A branch of the digestive gland starts in both posterior corners of stomach. Both immediately split into a branch that goes slanting upwards and a branch that directly goes in posterior direction and then upwards (N = 5). Both branches knotty, repeatedly branching in respectively anterior and posterior dorsal parts of body. First branch reaches to just posterior of eyes, second up into tail far posterior of origins of posterior cerata (
Fig. 2 E
). Only some branches of digestive gland in dorsum connected with a ceras.
Extensive network of albumen gland tubules ramifying in dorsal side of body close to branches of digestive gland including in cerata (
Figs. 1 H
,
2 G
). Tubules white and relatively thick in egg laying specimens, thin and pale in non-reproductive individuals, uniting into single albumen duct. Hermaphroditic follicles dense (
Fig. 2 F
), small (diameter single follicles
50-150 µm
, length of compound follicles
200-300 µm
), and numerous (>500), on ventral side of body cavity from near frontal border of foot to below division between anterior and posterior networks of digestive gland. Follicles yellow, connected by ductules that unite into short hermaphrodite duct. Organs of genital complex (
Fig. 2 K
) packed together in anterior right half of body cavity. Hermaphrodite duct widens into strongly coiled ampulla leaving it at anterior end and splitting into vas deferens and small oviduct. Vas deferens receives prostate duct coming from about 30 fusiform prostate glands in anterior part of body below spherical genital receptacle, then running anteriorly over female system to long, narrow, unarmed penis (
Fig. 2 H
). Male system uncoloured, but prostate glands white. Vaginal duct widens into bursa copulatrix going to posterior end of solid, ovoid central canal. Small oviduct receives albumen duct and enters central canal together with vaginal duct. Oviduct leaves central canal in anterior end and continues as large oviduct via wide and voluminous mucous gland occupying most of ventral right of anterior body cavity. Genital receptacle spherical, pale, situated dorsally slightly right of oesophageal pouch and left of loop of bursa copulatrix (vaginal duct). Genital receptacle connected to left side of central canal by narrow tube.
Habitat and behaviour.
– Specimens of
Costasiella coronata
were found on, and shallowly buried into, soft muddy sediment in and around tufts of
Vaucheria
sp. in open spaces within or bordering mangrove forests high in the intertidal zone. The slugs lived amphibiously. When the
Vaucheria
patches had emerged during low tide, more and more slugs crawled over the algae for feeding. The contracted rhinophores were firmly kept against the back and the cerata were held largely under the renal shield that seemed to increase in thickness and relative size (
Fig. 1 B
). The epidermis looked dirty by mud suggesting that the ciliary actions were reduced or had ceased completely. The number of visible slugs declined again by hiding in mud when the tide was out for some time. In captivity it could be seen that they fed by sucking the siphonal cells of
Vaucheria
sp. both when submerged and when emerged. In
October 2000
the temperature of the water was 35°C and the salinity 29‰, but salinity fluctuates strongly over the season in the coastal zone (
Swennen et al., 2001
).
The slugs were difficult to keep alive in captivity for more than a few weeks. The main problem was maintaining the algae in a condition such that they could be consumed by the slugs; replacing the algae every few days was necessary. A good growth of the
Vaucheria
sp. did occur when keeping them with substrate either permanently emerged in a damp atmosphere, or submerged with some aeration, but in both cases the slugs either hardly fed or did not feed at all.
Copulation was not observed in individuals out of the water. When two submerged slugs met for mating, they erected their rhinophores and repeatedly touched each other with the swollen anterior parts of the head for about 15 seconds. Then they aligned their bodies in opposite directions with the heads just side by side for penal insertion. The duration of the copulation could not be timed precisely, but the intimate contact lasted 15 to 30 s. When mating ended the bodies shook as if the penis had to be redrawn with force out of the partner. The eggs were in colourless, transparent, gelatinous strings of a length of
9–15 mm
and a width of up to
1.7 mm
(
Fig. 2 I
). The strings contained 2000–4000 eggs in a spiral chain (
Fig. 2 J
). The capsules of fresh eggs were touching each other in the spiral, but not those in neighbouring curves. Fresh, still uncleaved ova yellowish; developing embryos were pale. The egg capsules measured 108.2 ±
3.6 µm
by 90.2 ±
6 µm
(N = 36), diameters of uncleaved ova 61.1 ±
1.7 µm
(N = 22). In captivity, the egg masses were deposited both by submerged and emerged individuals on the mud or on
Vaucheria
sp. The eggs developed to free-swimming veliger larvae within four days (temperature 28–35°C).
Etymology.
–
The specific name refers to the striking character that the dorsal side is crowned by the renal shield.