The Psolidae of New Zealand and some additions to the Macquarie Ridge fauna (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea: Psolidae)
Author
Davey, Nicola
National Institute of Water and Atmosphere Research Ltd (NIWA), PO Box 893, Nelson 7040, New Zealand (niki. davey @ niwa. co. nz)
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2013
2013-12-18
70
51
67
journal article
1447-2554
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:131EFBFB-3A77-4C35-9FC0-4451DDAC4A0A
Psolidium ramum
sp. nov.
http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:A9BB906B-094B-
4F5E-83C5-5FFD1C68CC9B
Table 1
,
Figures 2
,
6A–B
,
11A–H
.
Material examined.
Holotype
.
New Zealand
,
North Island
west coast canyons: NIWA 73660 (1)
Stn
TAN1105/88,
36.18°S
173.68°E
,
188– 210 m
,
01/04/2011
.
Description.
Psolidium
species
up to
16 mm
long,
8 mm
wide,
2 mm
high. Profile low, body form oval. Oral cone slightly higher than anal cone; no distinct oral or anal valves or plates, approximately 230 µm wide, macroscopically smooth, microscopically glassy and beady texture, lacking significant bumps or pillars. Body wall dorsal and lateral scales macroscopically evident and continuous over body wall, up to
2.3 mm
at widest point. Tube feet numerous, up to 10 per scale, evident throughout dorsal and lateral scales. Tentacles 10; 8 + 2 (ventral smaller). Sole largely destroyed, with peripheral single row of larger tube feet and smaller outer non-continuous ring of tube feet; midventral row of tube feet present, only
2 feet
found as a result of a damaged sole.
Dorsal and lateral ossicles include large multilayered thick scales with small perforations and conspicuous round tube feet holes up to 60 µm in diameter; numerous tube feet support plates up to 85µm wide; rare single-layered plates with 4–9 perforations up to 70 µm wide; broken thorn (branching rod) ossicles present.
Ventral ossicles knobbed perforated plates up to 100 µm wide with blunt marginal projections, predominantly 4 projections, sometimes more projections peripherally, and thick elongate plates up to 160 µm long, without knobs, with small perforations; small crosses up to 60 µm wide; thorn ossicles present, mainly broken, largest 135 µm.
Colour. Preserved: white, with dorsal and lateral scales, grey centrally.
Distribution.
New Zealand
, North Island west coast,
188–
210 m
.
Etymology.
The Latin word
‘
ramum’ = branching, in reference to the branch-like thorn ossicles in the dorsal and ventral body wall of this species.
Remarks.
This description is based on
one specimen
, of which the ventral sole was partially destroyed. The distinctive thorn ossicles, while rare, were present in both the dorsal and ventral body wall and have not been reported for any other
New Zealand
Psolidium
species.
In
Psolidium ramum
sp. nov.
the ventral ossicles have predominantly 4 perforations; in
P. marriotti
sp. nov.
they are numerous.
P. aequm
sp. nov.
has larger perforations, thicker ossicles and many more angular knobs on ossicle margins. The thickened elongated plates are unique to
P. ramum
sp. nov.
The northwest Australian species
P. parmatus
(
Sluiter, 1901
)
and
P. nigrescens
Clark, 1938
also contain thorn ossicles similar to those of
P. ramum
sp. nov.
, but
P. parmatus
has bulbous pillars on the dorsal and lateral scales, and
P. nigrescens
is black, and has cups and crosses ventrally.
Further specimens would contribute to this description. The structure and distribution of ventral tube feet are difficult to determine, and there was little material available for ossicle extraction and SEM study. The tentacle ossicles could not be described due to the damaged state of the specimen, and these will need to be examined in the future.