Two new subfamilies, three new species and a new subspecies of dendrochirotid sea cucumbers (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea)
Author
Thandar, Ahmed S.
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-12-20
4365
4
410
420
journal article
31123
10.11646/zootaxa.4365.4.2
d834dbd0-6d0a-44b6-a642-ac416eb9a9a6
1175-5326
1119197
27B93F6C-55F8-40BB-A854-EB916E339D04
Thyonina rasidae
n.sp.
Figure 3
Diagnosis.
A strongly U-shaped species, up to
50 mm
in length along ventral surface; mouth surrounded by fringe of papillae. Colour off white in alcohol. Tentacles 10, ventral two reduced, others of unequal length. Tube feet short, scattered. Anal teeth absent, anal papillae present. Calcareous ring complex, radial and interradial plates short, faintly fused and weakly subdivided into few pieces of calcite; posterior processes of radial plates long, about thrice the length of ring, conspicuously subdivided. Polian vesicles four, one long, others diminutive; stone canal short, madreporite spherical. Body wall ossicles as smooth curved rods, 20–47 µm long, with dichotomously branched and/or perforated ends. Tube feet with similar rods, end-plates reduced. Introvert with closed mulberrylike rosettes. Tentacles with mulberry-like bodies and rods, of which some rosette-like.
Etymology.
This species is named after my dear wife Rasida for her patience and tolerance in allowing me to continue with my passion long after retirement.
Holotype
.
NHMUK
1883.4.19.7,
Kurrachee
(colonial spelling of
Karachi
), ex
Karachi Museum
,
Pakistan
.
Paratypes
.
NHMUK
1883.4.19.8-9. Same data as the
holotype
,
2 specimens
.
Description.
All three specimens U-shaped, mouth and anus terminal, level of mouth higher than that of anus, anal end attenuated. Length
28–51 mm
, mid-body width
5–10 mm
. Skin thin, colour off white in alcohol.
Holotype
Length
51 mm
(
Figure 3A
). Tentacles 10, white, bushy, in 8 + 2 arrangement, ventral two reduced, others of unequal length, longer ones occurring dorsally, decreasing in size ventrally. Tube feet short, well developed, scattered, longer and more numerous in ventral ambulacra, decreasing in size dorsally, suckers conspicuous. Mouth circular, surrounded by a fringe of papillae. Anal teeth absent but anal papillae present in pairs in the five radii surrounding anus.
Calcareous ring complex (
Figure 3G
), radial and interradial plates short, faintly fused, plates weakly subdivided but subdivisions not obvious. Radial plates anteriorly bifid, but bifurcations not conspicuous; some radial plates somewhat incised posteriorly; posterior processes of radial plates arise at posterior border of the interradial plates; posterior processes long, about thrice the size of the ring itself, all conspicuously subdivided. Polian vesicles four, of variable length, longest one straight, tubular,
10 mm
in length, remaining three diminutive, dorsal in position, apparently arising at the same point as the stone canal. Stone canal short, thin, straight, embedded in dorsal mesentery; madreporite spherical. Longitudinal muscles unpaired; retractors arise from longitudinal muscles at about mid-body, dorsal ones more anteriorly.
Body wall ossicles comprise smooth, curved rods (
Figure 3C
) of two
types
: delicate ones 20–47 µm long (mean 36 µm) with dichotomously branched and/or perforated ends; stouter rods with corrugated surface and also with perforated and/or branched ends, both
types
somewhat corroded, hence corrugation of the larger rods perhaps a result of corrosion. Anal region supported by fragmented, perforated plates on way to corrosion (
Figure 3B
). Other perforated plates in body wall are perhaps remains of tube feet end-plates but without any regular arrangement of holes. Tube feet supported by similar rods and reduced end-plates (
Figure 3D
), also without regular arrangement of holes and showing signs of corrosion. Introvert supported by closed, mulberry-like rosettes, 12–22 µm (mean 16 µm) and branched rods (
Figure 3F
) and tentacles by rods with few “branches”, thus appearing as open rosettes, as well as closed mulberry like rosettes, 11–29 µm (mean 17 µm) (
Figure 3E
).
FIGURE 3.
Thyonina rasidae
n. sp.
A. Specimen entire (holotype,NHMUK 1883.4.19.7); B. Anal body wall plates; C. Body wall ossicles; D. Tube feet end-plate; E. Rods and rosettes from tentacles; F. Rods and rosettes from introvert; G. Part of calcareous ring (dorsal). (B–F drawn to same scale).
Distribution.
Known only from Karachi,
Pakistan
(Arabian Sea).
Remarks.
Thyonina articulata
from
South
Africa
was the only species in this genus, hence the genus was long thought to be monotypic and endemic to
South
Africa
. The presence now of a similar but not identical form from Karachi,
Pakistan
(
T. rasidae
n. sp.
), and another form (
T. bijui
n. sp.
) with similar ossicles from
Kerala
,
India
, also in the Arabian Sea, described above, confirms that the genus is not monotypic after all. The
Pakistan
species differs from the
South
African
T. articulata
not only in the form of the body and the size and form of the body wall rods, but also in the tentacle and introvert deposits and tube feet end-plates. The tentacle deposits in the
South
African species comprise plates only, compared to rods and rosettes in the
Pakistan
and
Kerala
forms. The end-plates of the
South
African form and
T. bijui
are very characteristic with minute medial holes surrounded by a ring of larger holes outside these. However, these deposits in
T. rasidae
, although somewhat corroded show no signs of clearly differentiated holes with regular arrangement. The calcareous ring is also quite different with the new species not showing as much fragmentation of plates as the
type
species and
T. bijui
, and the processes are much longer.