Additions to the aspidochirotid, molpadid and apodid holothuroids (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea) from the east coast of southern Africa, with descriptions of new species
Author
THANDAR, AHMED S.
text
Zootaxa
2007
2007-03-01
1414
1
1
62
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1414.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.1414.1.1
11755334
5077005
DC93A9BC-D24E-44AD-99AF-79CACCCFB984
Holothuria (Lessonothuria) insignis
Ludwig, 1875
Figure 6
Holothuria insignis
Ludwig, 1875:106
, p1.7, fig.28.
Holothuria pardalis
var.
insignis
Sluiter, 1890:106
.
Holothuria pardalis
H.L.
Clark, 1923:423
(non
H. pardalis
Selenka, 1867
).
Holothuria
(
Lessonothuria
)
insignis
Rowe, 1969:149
(passim);
Clark and Rowe, 1971:176
(distrib), 194 (note); Samyn, 2003:42 (passim).
Holothuria (Lessonothuria) pardalis
Rowe & Gates, 1995:292
(partim);?
Cherbonnier, 1988:117
, fig.47;?
Massin 1996a:19
, figs. 12 & 13 (non
H. pardalis
Selenka, 1867
).
Type
Probably lost.
Syntypes
in
ZMH
, E.2573.
Type
locality
Bowen
,
Queensland
.
Previous southern African record
KZN
or
Mozambique
(as
H. pardalis
by H.L.
Clark 1923
).
Material examined
UW
Ecological Survey
,
Inhaca Island
,
Mozambique
(no further data),
1 spec.
;
SAM-A27926
,
KZN
,
Park Rynie, K.S
.
Ganga
,
9 iii 1981
, rock pool, under stone,
1 spec.
;
SAM-A27927
,
Isipingo Beach
,
vii 1982
,
K.S. Ganga
,
1 spec.
(juvenile)
;
SAM-A27928
,
Vetch’s Pier
, J.
Maxwell
,
9 iv 1982
, 2–
3 m
, under stone,
1 spec.
;
SAM-A27929
,
27 iv
1982
, 6 m,
4 spec.
(including
1 juvenile
)
.
Description
Largest specimen
92 mm
. Colour in life mottled grey, dorsally with paired series of dark blotches. Cuvierian tubules present. Table discs (
Figure 6A, B
) with up to 10 marginal holes. Pseudobuttons (
Figure 6C
)) rarely faintly knobbed. Dorsal podia with elongate rods, perforated at ends (
Figure 6F
); ventral podia with shorter rods (
Figure 6E
) and characteristic elongated plates with jagged margins (
Figure 6D
). Table disc diameter
33–93 µm
; spire height
25–58 µm
; pseudobuttons
30–115 µm
. Tentacles with slender rods perforated and/or branched at ends.
Local distribution
KZN
,
South Africa
and
Mozambique
.
General distribution
Throughout the
Indo-West Pacific region
but frequently confused with
H. (L.) pardalis
.
Not
known from
Hawaii
.
Habitat
In sand, under rock or between sandstone slabs.
Remarks
H. pardalis
of H.L.
Clark (1923)
from either
Mozambique
or KZN proved, on re-examination, to be referable to
H. (L.) insignis
and so is also the
H. pardalis
described by
Thandar (1971)
from Isipingo Beach (KZN). Although the form of the body and the life colouration of the latter specimen (now in MNHNP) and the more recent material from KZN are identical, in the former there is a clear distinction between papillae and tubefeet. Both forms lack special anal papillae but the anus of the original Isipingo specimen is bordered by naked skin. Since all specimens are sympatric with an identical complement of spicules, the differences are individual or ecological variations. A point of some interest is that the original Isipingo specimen came from between sandstone slabs containing little sand while the others were collected beneath stones, more or less embedded in sand. This might speak in favour of ecological variations. In its spicules, especially the jaggededged plates from the tubefeet, and the absence of special anal papillae, this species is distinct from
H. (L.) pardalis
as maintained by
Heding (1934)
and supported by Rowe (in
Clark and Rowe,1971
). However, Rowe (in
Rowe & Gates 1995
) now considers both to be conspecific, a view held by several workers and detailed by Samyn (2003:42), hence the detailed synonymy. Not withstanding this, I have no difficulty in separating both forms (see remarks under
H. (L.) pardalis
below).