The Echinoderm Fauna of the Azores (NE Atlantic Ocean)
Author
Madeira, Patrícia
Author
Kroh, Andreas
Author
Cordeiro, Ricardo
Author
De, António M.
Author
Martins, Frias
Author
Ávila, Sérgio P.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-07-19
4639
1
1
231
journal article
26164
10.11646/zootaxa.4639.1
812e0570-38c6-4f6e-840c-7d52d87a8c12
1175-5326
PMC6910866
31712455
3342161
B1690E30-EC81-46D3-881D-97648DDC7745
Holothuria
(
Vaneyothuria
)
lentiginosa lentiginosa
Marenzeller, 1892
(
Fig. 37
)
Reports for the
Azores
:
Holothuria lentiginosa
$
Marenzeller, 1892: 66
,
1893: 6–7
, pl. 1, fig. 1, pl. 2, fig. 1;
Deichmann 1954: 391
;
Cherbonnier 1958:
371,
1965: 13–14
;
Rowe 1969: 151
, 152;
Pereira 1997: 333
;
Pérez-Ruzafa
et al
. 1999: 56–57
, fig. 1C;
García-Diez
et al
.
2005: 51;
Holothuria lentiginosa lentiginosa
Marenzeller—Miller & Pawson 1979: 914
–915, figs. 4C–D.
Type
locality:
between Faial and Pico islands,
Azores
(
38°31’19”N
,
28°34’31”W
).
See:
Marenzeller (1893)
;
Tommasi & de Oliveira (1976: 81–84
, fig. 6);
Miller & Pawson (1979)
;
Thandar & Mjobo (2014: 246–247
, fig. 3).
Occurrence:
Northeast Atlantic, from
Morocco
to
Angola
waters (
Hérouard 1929
,
Cherbonnier 1965
), including the archipelagos of the Azores (
Marenzeller 1892
), Canaries (
Rowe 1969
),?
Cape Verde
(
Pérez-Ruzafa
et al
. 1999
) and?Gorringe seamount; reported elsewhere in the Alboran Sea (Mediterranean Sea;
Borrero-Pérez
et al
. 2010
); the subspecies
H
.
lentiginosa enodis
Miller & Pawson, 1979
was reported from the Gulf of
Mexico
and Caribbean in the West Atlantic and to?
Cape Verde
archipelago (
Pérez-Ruzafa
et al
. 1999
) in the East Atlantic; the subspecies
H
.
lentiginosa brasiliensis
Tommasi & de Oliveira, 1976
is reportedly restricted to the waters between S„o Paulo and
Rio de Janeiro
, in
Brazil
.
Depth:
(?12)100–275 (?316) m (
Cherbonnier 1965
,
Pérez-Ruzafa
et al
. 1999
, herein), though the tropical subspecies
H
.
lentiginosa enodis
was reported from depths as shallow as
8 m
(
Pérez-Ruzafa
et al
. 1999
) and as deep as
450 m
(
Miller & Pawson 1979
); AZO: (?130)208–275(?316) m.
Habitat:
sand, coralligenous, detritic to rock (Ruzafa
et al
. 1992b).
Larval stage:
probably planktotrophic (inferred from the genus, see
McEdward & Miner 2001
).
Material examined:
DBUA-ECH
388 (off
Praia
da Amora, Ponta Garça,
SMG
,
AZO
,
37°42’30”N
,
25°20’49”W
,
2009.09.
24
, 208 m; 1 spm, TL =
125 mm
);
DBUA-ECH
389 (off
Praia
da Amora, Ponta Garça,
SMG
,
AZO
,
37°42’30”N
,
25°20’49”W
,
2009.09.
24
, 208 m; 3 spm, TL =
120–150 mm
);
DBUA-ECH
391(off
Praia
da Amora, Ponta Garça,
SMG
,
AZO
,
37°42’31”N
,
25°20’14”W
,
2011.07.
15
, 275 m; 1 spm, TL =
140 mm
).
Description:
body almost cylindrical, flattened ventrally. Body wall soft and relatively thick. Mouth subventral with 20 peltate tentacles (cauliflower-like); anal opening dorsal. On each side of the body one dorsal and one lateral longitudinal row of seven to ten well-developed large conical papillae. Lateral papillae slightly larger than the dorsal papillae. Ventral surface with numerous tube feet in three longitudinal rows, the central one divided at the mid-line. Table discs not smooth (with small external projections); table with tetrabasal spires of moderate width and height, crowned by numerous teeth. Buttons smooth, frequently contorted and with obliterated or incomplete perforations; buttons frequently with small knobs. Colour: lateral surface of the body cream white with numerous small dark brown spots (tube feet); towards the dorsal mid-line dorsal surface becomes gradually light brown (DBUA 388) or brown (DBUA 391); brown somewhat irregular and inconspicuous spots at the base of the dorsal papillae (with cream coloured tips); lateral papillae cream coloured as the body; ventrally, outer longitudinal row white with dark brown spots around the tube feet, inner row light brown with dark brown spots also around the tube feet; tentacles cream coloured.
Remarks:
Marenzeller (1892
,
1893
) described a new species of sea cucumbers based on a partially damaged and eviscerated animal (
160 mm
TL) taken in Azorean waters, between Pico and Faial islands, at about
130 m
deep (
Hirondelle
, sta 226). However, the accompanying echinoderms found in the same dredge indicate that the station’s depth likely was much shallower than the reported
130 m
(see remarks under
Pawsonia saxicola
and
Thyone inermis
). Regardless,
H
.
lentiginosa
was not seen in the
Azores
for more than 100 years. The
Third International Workshop of Malacology and Marine Biology
offered a rare opportunity to survey the least known waters of the archipelago, by dredging depths between the maximum scuba diving (=
30–60 m
) and the typical depths explored by the oceanographic cruises (Ξ
150–250 m
). Two of the least known littoral holothurians were captured:
H. lentiginosa
and
Parastichopus regalis
(
Cuvier, 1817
)
(see remarks under this species) from depths between 208 and
275 m
.
FIGURE 37.
Holothuria
(
Vaneyothuria
)
lentiginosa lentiginosa
Marenzeller, 1892
(DBUA-ECH 388: A–E). Dorsal view (A, C); ventral view (B, D); specimen, when alive (C, D); ossicles (E); holothurians most likely belonging to
H
. lentiginosa
in situ
in Azores (EMEPC–LUSO, 37°43'15"N, 25°48'24"W, 2009.10.08, 316 m: F) and Gorringe Bank (EMEPC–LUSO, 36°42'46"N, 11°10'02"W, 2009.09.13, 145 m: G).
The new material agrees in most aspects with the original description and illustrations by
Marenzeller (1892
,
1893
), except for the presence of a double row of well-developed dark brown dorsal papillae in our individuals. However, the poor preservation of the
type
specimen could account for this small difference. In the examined material both colour and size of the dorsal papillae became quite imperceptible (retracted) during preservation (96% ethanol) (
Figs. 37A, B
). Furthermore,
Miller & Pawson (1979)
commented that colour could be lost in preserved specimens. No greenish-yellow hue was observed in the lateral surface of the specimens, a feature observed by
Cherbonnier (1958)
in animals from
Sierra Leone
. Nevertheless, the dorsal dark spots presented by material from the Azores (
Figs. 37C, D
) were rather small and inconspicuous when compared with the figures presented by
Miller & Pawson (1979)
for
H
.
lentiginosa enodis
. The Azorean animals also presented a well-developed dorsolateral longitudinal row of papillae (though becoming greatly retracted during preservation), which is apparently absent in the Caribbean subspecies. This species can be easily distinguished from other sea-cucumbers belonging to this genus recorded in the archipelago by its colour pattern. For example,
H
.
sanctori
can present (
Fig. 36D
) the same colour range as this species but arranged in a quite different pattern,
i
.
e
. dark brown with yellowish rings in opposition to cream with small dark brown spots, respectively.
In the West Atlantic
H
.
lentiginosa
was divided in two subspecies:
H
.
lentiginosa brasiliensis
described by
Tommasi & de Oliveira (1976)
from south Brazilian waters and
H
.
lentiginosa enodis
described by
Miller & Pawson (1979)
to the Caribbean waters. The Brazilian subspecies was described based on colour differences, as the animals presented a darker colour with large dark dorsal blotches. The ossicles in the Brazilian subspecies agreed with Marenzeller’s original description. On the other hand, the Caribbean
variety was
raised fundamentally on ossicle morphology differences, as
Miller & Pawson (1979)
considered colour differences or papillae distribution as minor variations. Surprisingly,
Pérez-Ruzafa
et al
. (1999)
recorded both
H
.
lentiginosa lentiginosa
and
H
.
lentiginosa enodis
from
Cape Verde
shallow waters (
12–22 m
and
8–20 m
depth, respectively) without offering any description of the examined material. The new material from the Azores (
type
area) herein examined reinforces
Miller & Pawson (1979)
’s opinion that colour variation should not be used as a diagnostic character as it is subject to local variation and may not survive the preservation process. Thus, the status of the
H
.
lentiginosa
subspecies should be re-addressed, comparing material throughout its geographical distribution on both sides of the Atlantic. Additionally, in 2009 during the expedition by EMEPC, ROV
Luso
captured footage portraying two holothurians likely to belong to this species, one south of S„o Miguel Island in the Azores (L09D20R,
37°43'15"N
.
25°48'24W
",
316 m
; see
Fig. 37F
) and another in Gorringe Seabank (sta L09D09L1,
36°42'46"N
,
11°10'2.30"W
,
145 m
; see
Fig. 37G
).