Ascidians collected during the Madibenthos expedition in Martinique: 2. Stolidobranchia, Styelidae
Author
Monniot, Françoise
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-04-17
4410
2
291
318
journal article
30246
10.11646/zootaxa.4410.2.3
c099b7cc-9634-4455-b59e-d5a597998ee7
1175-5326
1221580
7A46BD51-20A9-4FDA-81FB-D771BA9011FC
Eusynstyela ordinata
(
Monniot C. 1983
)
Figs 1–2
.
Stations
: AB 62; AB 157; AB 159; AB 169; AB 197; AB 301; AB 400; AD 224; AD 257; AR 100; AR 101; AR 116;
AS
96. (
MNHN
S1 EUS 51).
Described from
Guadeloupe
E. ordinata
is now recorded in
Martinique
. Either isolated or in colonies the zooids are strongly attached on hard substrates as dead corals, shells or other ascidians. They have a deep red tunic and the colour remains but darker in formalin (
Fig 1A
). The zooid shape resembles “fried eggs” as the thick dorsal tunic of the body expands laterally and become a thin sheet spread on the support, colourless and firmly stuck to the irregularities of the substrate and difficult to remove without damage. The siphons are well apart with 6 lobes slightly protruding and luminescent internal pigment. The tunic lining the siphons has a honeycomb structure. The body wall is dorsally opaque, red on the siphons and yellowish or brown elsewhere. On the ventral side the body wall is colourless, transparent and very thin (
Fig. 1B
). No musculature could be seen. The oral tentacles are in two orders of size (
Fig. 2A
). The prepharyngeal space is wide without papillae. The dorsal tubercle opens in a simple hole. The branchial sac has 4 high folds on each side (
Fig. 2C
), the number of longitudinal vessels being variable according to the zooid size and sexual maturity. The gut is located posteriorly in the body and occupies a small part of the atrial cavity (
Fig. 1B
). The stomach is oval with about 10 longitudinal folds and has a round caecum. The intestinal loop is short, closed. Numerous endocarps are distributed on the whole internal layer of the body wall. The gonads are absent in most specimens. When present they form irregular but long lines on each body side at some distance from the endostyle. When immature they protrude at the internal side of the body wall, but when mature the polycarps are each embedded in a closed pouch of the body wall and only the gonoducts open into the atrial cavity. The polycarps are round with 2 testis lobes tightly applied on the small ovary (
Fig. 2B
). There is no thick ventral bundle of the body wall between or along the gonad lines as can be found in the genus
Seriocarpa
.
The specimens collected from
Martinique
have all characters as described and figured for
E. ordinata
by
Monniot C. (1983)
from
Guadeloupe
. This species has not been recorded elsewhere and is certainly endemic in the Caribbean area.
The systematic attribution to the genus
Eusynstyela
instead of
Seriocarpa
(
Diehl 1969
)
was already discussed in
Monniot C. (1983)
(who initially listed it as a subspecies of
Polyandrocarpa
but later (
Monniot C. 1991
) elevated it to genus level). Both
Seriocarpa
and
Eusynstyela
have the same anatomy and only differ by the presence in
Seriocarpa
of a thickening of the tunic in a bulge containing the gonads.
E. ordinata
differs from
E. tincta
to which it is closely allied by the tunic structure and colour and by the gut with an elongated stomach.
E. tincta
may also have the polycarps invaginated into the body wall (Van Name 1945).