New and little-known species of Didemnidae (Ascidiacea, Tunicata) from Australia (Part 3)
Author
Kott, Patricia
text
Journal of Natural History
2005
2005-06-30
39
26
2409
2479
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930500087077
journal article
10.1080/00222930500087077
1464-5262
5215680
Didemnum astrum
Kott, 2001
(
Figure 15D
)
Didemnum astrum
Kott 2001
, p 151
.
Distribution
Previously recorded (see
Kott 2001
):
Western Australia
(
Cape Preston
);
Queensland
(
S. Great Barrier Reef
); Indian Ocean (
Cocos Keeling
). New record:
Western Australia
(near
Green I.
off
Grey
,
WAM 601.89
)
.
Description
The newly recorded colony is a thin irregular encrusting sheet. The under surface is hard, spicule-filled with some fine, sharply defined parallel ridges crossing it. Spicules are crowded throughout the remainder of the colony, including the smooth upper surface where they obscure the branchial apertures. Spicules mostly are stellate, to
0.06 mm
diameter, with 13–15 short crowded rays in optical transverse section, although some have shorter, round-tipped rays and are almost globular. Sometimes the branchial siphon is about half the length of the remainder of the small thoraces in the newly recorded colony, which appear to be juveniles. Only six stigmata per side reducing to four in the posterior row were detected in the newly recorded colony, although
Kott (2001)
recorded eight in the anterior rows of the small zooids she examined. The abdomina are mature, each with a well-developed, undivided testis surrounded by 10 coils of the vas deferens.
Remarks
The hard, ridged, basal test of this species occurs also in
Leptoclinides durus
Kott, 2001
and
Polysyncraton millepore
Vasseur, 1969
(see above),
L. uniorbis
F. and C.
Monniot, 1996
from
Micronesia
, and
Didemnum parancium
Kott, 2001
from Townsville. The present species is distinguished from these and others by its spicules and the large number of vas deferens coils, both of which are clearly recognizable in all the specimens so far examined. There are 12 separate records of this species from the Capricorn Group at the southern end of the Great Barrier Reef. Since it is recorded also from NW
Australia
and the Indian Ocean it can be expected to occur in coral reef locations in the Indian and western Pacific Oceans.