Ascidiacea (Tunicata) from deep waters of the continental shelf of Western Australia
Author
Kott, Patricia
text
Journal of Natural History
2008
2008-04-30
42
15 - 16
1103
1217
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930801935958
journal article
10.1080/00222930801935958
1464-5262
5219188
Synoicum vesica
sp. nov.
(
Figures 7B, C
)
Distribution
Type locality:
Western Australia
CSIRO
SS10
/
05 (
Pt. Hillier
,
Stn
57,
117.1970E
35.3735S
,
195–196 m
,
27 November 2005
,
holotype
WAM
Z27524
,
QM
G328100
)
.
This species is one of three
Synoicum
spp.
taken at this location, the others being
S. chrysanthemum
and
S. implicatum
sp. nov.
Description
The
holotype
colony is a rounded globe about
6 cm
in diameter, narrowing to the base by which it is fixed to the substrate. A network of red veins is along each side of circular common cloacal canals, where the zooids open to the surface through the thin surface layer of crowded sand. Internally sand is sparse and the firm gelatinous test is translucent, containing only a scattering of spherical red cells and the long, well-spaced zooids that project into the base of the colony. Common cloacal apertures were not detected.
Zooids are long and narrow. Both apertures have a relatively short muscular siphon. The rim of the branchial aperture has six shallow lobes and the anterior rim of the atrial aperture is produced forwards into a short rounded lip. The branchial sac has up to 20 rows of stigmata with 12 rather short and rounded stigmata in each half row. The length of the stigmata gradually decreases toward the dorsal and ventral midlines. The abdomen is short, although the oesophagus is long. The smooth-walled stomach tapers toward its pyloric end where it merges into the duodenum. The posterior stomach is oval as is the mid-intestine which opens into the rectum in the pole of the gut loop.
Gonads consisting of the longitudinal cluster of male follicles and connected by vasa efferentia are grouped around a single-egg ovary in the middle of a very long posterior abdomen. The long posterior abdomina of most of the zooids are filled with vegetative cells and it is probable that this colony is in a vegetative phase, as evidenced by the small stigmata and the small abdomen and simple gut loop.
Remarks
The tropical
Synoicum durum
Kott, 1992a
and
S. suarenum
Kott, 1992a
from eastern
Australia
have simple atrial apertures like the present species. The former species also has a sandy external layer of sand like the present species. The latter has a similar long posterior abdomina with a cluster of gonads halfway down but it lacks an external layer of crowded sand. Further, both these species have zooids arranged in circles around central common cloacal apertures rather than lining each side of the common cloacal canals forming a network as in the present species.
Synoicum intercedens
(
Sluiter, 1909
)
also has a short atrial siphon and a rounded anterior lip on the anterior rim of the opening, but its almost spherical stomach has pouches in its wall unlike the small smooth pear-shaped stomach of the present species.