A new IndoWest Pacific species of Actinopyga (Holothuroidea: Aspidochirotida: Holothuriidae)
Author
Samyn, Yves
Author
Vandenspiegel, Didier
Author
Massin, Claude
text
Zootaxa
2006
1138
53
68
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.172021
411cd3ec-9962-486e-aa43-1151a03d95cc
11755326
172021
Actinopyga caerulea
sp. nov.
(
Figures 1
A–J, 2A–E, 3A–E, 4A–G, 5; plate 1A–C)
Actinopyga crassa
;
Cherbonnier & Féral 1984
: 664
, fig. 3 A–K;
Féral & Cherbonnier 1986
: 70
–71;
Erhardt & Moosleitner 1995
: 1153
(non
A. crassa
Panning, 1944
)
Actinopyga
(?)
bannwarthi
;
Erhardt & Baensch 1998
: 1076
(non
A. bannwarthi
Panning 1944
)
Namebearing
types
Holotype
,
RMCA
1803
;
Paratype
1
,
CNDRS
2004.09;
Paratype
2,
RBINS
IG 30376;
Paratype
3,
MNHN
EcHo 8081;
Paratype
4
,
NHM 2005.2405
.
Material examined
Union des
Comores
(Grande
Comore
, Ikoni),
22.XI.
2003
, 37 m depth, coll. Y. Samyn & D. VandenSpiegel,
RMCA
1803
(
holotype
); Union des
Comores
(Grande
Comore
, H.L.M Langouste),
11.X.
2004
, 28 m depth, coll. Y. Samyn, D. VandenSpiegel & C. Massin,
CNDRS
2004.09 (
paratype
1); Union des
Comores
(Grande
Comore
, Itsandra),
20.XI.
2003
, 23 m depth, coll. Y. Samyn & D. VandenSpiegel,
RBINS
IG 30376 (
paratype
2); Union des
Comores
(Grande
Comore
, Aérodrome),
16.V.
2005
, 26 m depth, coll. Y. Samyn & D. VandenSpiegel,
NMHN
EcHo 8081 (
paratype
3); Union des
Comores
(Grande
Comore
, Itsandra),
16.V.
2005
, 21 m depth, coll. Yves Samyn & D. VandenSpiegel, NHM 2005.2405 (
paratype
4);
Papua New Guinea
(Madang Province, Madang’s Reef, Wongat Island),
05.X.
1996
, 25 m depth, coll. C. Massin,
RBINS
, IG 28 455/22.
Type
locality
Union des
Comores
, Grande
Comore
, Ikoni.
Type
material (2
syntypes
) of
Actinopyga serratidens
var.
bannwarthi
Panning, 1944
:
ZMH
E5902 (Zoologishes Institut und Zoologisches Museum der Universität Hamburg);
Egypt
(Suez), 1913, depth unknown, coll. Dr E. Bannwarth.
Non
type
material (
1 specimen
) of
A. mauritiana
(
Quoy & Gaimard, 1833
)
(misidentified as
A. bannwarthi
Panning, 1944
by
Cherbonnier (1988))
:
Madagascar
(
Nosy
Be, Andilana),
20.VIII.1959
, coll. G. Cherbonnier, EcHh 5082 (Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris,
France
).
FIGURE 1
.
Actinopyga caerulea
sp. nov.
(Papua New Guinea). A, Calcareous ring,: r = radial piece, ir = interradial piece. B, Rods from base of tentacles. C, D Rods from tip of tentacle. E, Rosettes from ventral body wall. F, Rosettes from dorsal body wall. G, Elongated rodlike rosettes from dorsal body wall. H, Rosettes from tip of dorsal papillae. J, Rods from base of dorsal papillae.
FIGURE 2.
Actinopyga caerulea
sp. nov.
(Papua New Guinea) A, Rods from ventral tube feet. B, Rods from longitudinal muscle. C, Rods from cloacal retractor muscles. D, Rods from cloacal wall. E, Rods from gonad.
Non
type
material (
2 specimens
) of
A. crassa
Panning, 1944
:
Seychelles
(
Mahé
),
07.IX.1969
, coll. Mission zoologique
MRACULB
,
RMCA
1186.
Description
Very large species; living specimens up to
400 mm
long and
140 mm
wide midbody; preserved specimens from
225 to 280 mm
long and from
85 to 110 mm
wide midbody. Body loafshaped with slight ventral flattening (more or less cylindrical with some distal tapering). Colour in life bluish with patches of white devoid of tube feet at anterior and posterior ends and, discontinuously, along sides (Plate 1). Colour in
type
material in alcohol largely preserved, but faded to dull brown in specimen from
Papua New Guinea
. White patches remain clearly visible on all specimens. Body wall smooth, up to
14 mm
thick. Mouth ventral, surrounded by 15–18 large, peltate, uniformly bluishgrey tentacles, in turn surrounded by a stout collar of bluish papillae, fused at their base. Anus terminal, guarded by five prominent, calcareous, teeth, each bearing numerous tubercles. Ventral tube feet stout, distributed unevenly,
albeit
somewhat concentrated in ambulacral areas. Dorsal “papillae” large, conical at base, near cylindrical at top; bluish at base, slightly lighter at top; scattered over ambulacral and interambulacral areas, though absent in white zones. Cuvierian organ absent. Single, clubshaped Polian vesicle, about one seventh of length of preserved animals. Stone canal and associated madreporite not observed in all the specimens studied. Gonad observed only in the specimen from
Papua New Guinea
. Calcareous ring huge, radial pieces about twice as large as interradial pieces (
Figure 1
A). Details of surface of calcareous ring obscured by thick layer of tissue.
Ossicles
: Tentacles with rods only; base of tentacles with few, straight to slightly curved, smooth rods,
50–90 m
long (
Figure 1
B); tip of tentacles with similar but larger rods, up to
500 m
long (
Figure 1
C, D), occasionally distally branching (
Figures 1
C, 3A). Ventral body wall with rosettes of various forms, some elongated with endings swollen, others wider and more spiny,
15–65 m
long (
Figures 1
E, 3B). Dorsal body wall with small rosettes that have their endings swollen,
20–60 m
long (
Figures 1
F, 3C) and elongated rodlike spiny rosettes, 255–
100 m
long (
Figures 1
G, 3D). The proportion of rosettes with swollen endings versus spiny rodlike rosettes as well as the size of the rosettes are highly variable within a single specimen, depending on site of bivium sampled. The same phenomenon occurs in specimens coming from different geographic localities:
holotype
from
Comoros
Islands with more spiny ossicles in dorsal body wall than the specimen from
Papua New Guinea
. Base of dorsal papillae with rosettes and rodlike rosettes,
25–65 m
long, as well as dichotomously branched spiny rods,
100–160 m
long (
Figures 1
J, 3E). Tip of dorsal papillae with spiny rods of various form; from simple to complex branching,
50–200 m
long (
Figures 1
H, 4A). Ventral tube feet with smooth rods,
25–40 m
long, spiny rods,
40–150 m
long, and stout spiny rods,
100–140 m
long, with perforated extremities (
Figures 2
A, 4B); terminal disc, up to
1,000 m
across, composed of several pieces; centrally several perforated plates with large holes (
Figure 4
C) surrounded by 10–12 perforated plates with smallest holes at periphery (
Figure 4
D). Cloaca with spiky rods, similar in shape as those from dorsal papillae,
50–100 m
long (
Figures 2
D, 4E). Longitudinal and cloacal retractor muscles with simple, smooth, occasionally branched rods,
35–55 m
long (
Figures 2
B, C, 4F, G). Gonad with spiny, branched rods,
160–250 m
long (
Figure 2
E).
Etymology
The name
caerulea,
Latin
, refers to the unique blue colour of the species.
Ecology
This species is characteristic of somewhat deeper tropical waters; it has been observed from
12 to
45 m
. The species is predominantly a detritus/deposit feeder on coral patches on the outer slope of coral reefs; it forages actively during the day.
FIGURE 3.
Actinopyga caerulea
sp. nov.
(Comoros, holotype) A, Rods from tentacle. B, Rosettes from ventral body wall. C, Rosettes from dorsal body wall. D, Spiny, rodlike rosettes from dorsal body wall. E, Rosettes from base of dorsal papillae.
FIGURE 4.
Actinopyga caerulea
sp. nov.
(Comoros, holotype) A, Rods from tip of dorsal papillae. B, Rods from ventral tube feet. C, Central plate from fragmented terminal disc. D,
In toto
view of fragmented terminal disc. E, Spiny rods from cloacal wall. F, Rods from cloacal retractor muscle. G, Rods from longitudinal muscle. Scale A& F = 50 m; Scale B,E,G = 10 m; Scale C = 100 m; Scale D = 200 m.
PLATE 1.
Actinopyga caerulea
sp. nov.
as photographed
in situ
in
Comoros
(A), Sulawesi (B), Bali (C) and
Papua
New
Guinee
(D). (Picture A by D. VandenSpiegel; B by D. Lane; C by R. Myers and D by P. Colins).
Geographic distribution
Tropical IndoPacific; confirmed sightings have been made in
Thailand
(see
Erhardt & Moosleitner 1995
, as
A. crassa
), the
Philippines
(see
Erhardt & Baensch 1998
, as
A.
(?)
bannwarthi
),
Indonesia
[Bali (Myers pers. comm.) and Sulawesi (Lane pers. comm.)],
Papua New Guinea
[Kavieng (Colin pers. comm), Hansa Bay (Colin pers. comm.) and Madang (present paper)],
New Caledonia
(see
Féral & Cherbonnier 1986
, as
A. crassa
) and the Archipelago of the
Comoros
(
type
locality).
Figure 5
shows the known distribution of this species, including locations requiring confirmation of identification.
Discussion
Actinopyga caerulea
sp.nov
belongs to what
Panning (1944)
has termed the ‘
echinites
group. It shares with
A. bannwarthi
the presence of spiny rosettes (cf.
Panning 1944
, Fig. 22, p. 54). However, rosettes from
A. bannwarthi
are less spiny and have many more lateral extensions than those from
A. caerulea
.
Another striking difference between the two species lies in the colouration: the two
syntypes
of
A. bannwarthi
are uniform dark chocolate brown dorsally (
Figure 6
A) and light brown to yellow ventrally (
Figure 6
B), with no white patches devoid of tube feet on the lateral and dorsal surfaces of the body. The two species differ also in terms of distribution:
A. caerulea
has not yet been found in the Red Sea, whereas
A. bannwarthi
seems restricted to it.
Sloan
et al.
(1979
, as
A.
sp. cf.
A. bannwarthi
),
Cherbonnier (1988)
and Rowe & Gates’ (1995) records of
A. bannwarthi
need verification. Certainly one of the
Malagasy
specimens identified by
Cherbonnier (1988)
is
A. mauritiana
and not
A. bannwarthi
.
FIGURE 5.
Actinopyga caerulea
sp. nov.
Known geographic distribution with uncertain records flagged with a question mark.
FIGURE 6.
One of the two syntypes of
A. bannwarthi
Panning, 1944
as deposited in the ZMH (ZMH E. 5902) (A) dorsal view, (B) ventral view.
With comparative voucher material now at hand, we conclude that we are not dealing with
Actinopyga crassa
(see
Erhardt & Moosleitner 1995
). The latter species differs markedly from
A. caerulea
in the presence of stout, slightly curved rods in the ventral body wall and in the presence of elongated narrow rodlike rosettes with lateral extensions in the dorsal body wall (cf.
Panning 1944
, fig 19, p. 51).
The more recently described
A. flammea
also appears to belong to Panning’s (1944) ‘
echinites
group’, an observation we share with
Cherbonnier (1979)
. Nevertheless,
A. caerulea
can again be easily distinguished from
A. flammea
, in life, because
A. caerulea
has a conspicuous bluish and white colouration, and
A. flammea
has a uniformly brick red body wall and prominent, greyish, tubercular “papillae”. Further,
A. caerulea
differs markedly from
A. flammea
in not having closed rosettes in the ventral body wall (see
Cherbonnier 1979
, fig. 2F,G, p. 5).
Our observation of a compound endplate in the ventral tube feet is not new. This character has already been noted for several species in
Actinopyga
,
Bohadschia
,
Pearsonothuria graeffei
(
Semper, 1868
)
, as well as in certain
Stichopodidae
(
Massin 1996
;
1999
; unpublished data) and
Synallactidae
, notably species of
Synallactes
Ludwig, 1894
(
Massin, 1992
)
. More detailed systematic study of such “fragmentation” in all the genera of
Aspidochirotida
will help to determine whether this phenomenon is due to common descent or not. For now, we can note that an endplate of a large diameter (
500 m
across) does not
ipso facto
imply that the endplate will be compound. Indeed, some aspidochirotid species have a simple, single endplate of over
500 m
across, while others possess a compound endplate that is
350 m
across.