Nomenclatural changes in some sea cucumbers with the erection of a new genus and description of a Thyone? juvenile (? n. sp.) from the Gulf of California (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea: Dendrochirotida)
Author
Thandar, Ahmed S.
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-08-27
5026
4
507
526
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5026.4.3
1175-5326
5300888
A3AA106D-527A-4934-953C-C2EA746659FE
Stolus parafusus
(
Deichmann, 1941
)
n. comb.
Figure 6
Thyone parafusus
Deichmann, 1941: 106–107
, pl. 18, figs. 7–12; Solis-Marin
et al.
2009: 80–81, pl. 15; Jacobson, et al 2015:84.
Diagnosis
(see
Deichmann, 1941
).
Material examined.
USNM
E2221
,
North Pacific Ocean
,
Mexico
, Baja, California, det.
M. Wright
, 1977,
1 spec.
Remarks.
This species was established on the basis of
two specimens
a few cm long, collected from Tenacatita Bay,
Mexico
, at about
45 m
.
The current specimen is elongated, about
155 mm
long, with a bloated middle but attenuated ends. The tentacles are well branched and the calcareous ring incised, with deeply cleft radials. The body wall ossicles (
Figure 6A
), as described by
Deichmann (1941)
and
Jacobson
et al.
(2015)
, comprise tables with a four- holed disc with often a short handle on one side and a spire of moderate height, terminating in a few teeth. Deichmann described the tube feet tables in the
type
as possessing a three-pillared spire, but in the current specimen this is not clearly evident. The introvert possesses numerous tables with a multilocular disc with the spire welldeveloped or reduced. The tentacle deposits comprise numerous rosettes but at the bases adjoining the introvert, there are numerous tables with a reduced disc.
Deichmann (1941)
, however, described the tentacles as being packed with perforated, multilocular plates of different sizes – perhaps referring to the reduced table discs. The delicate rods described by Deichmann to be present in the terminal branches were not detected in the specimen at hand nor by
Jacobson
et al.
(2015)
.
This species comes very close to
Deichmann’s (1930)
T. pseudofusus
originally described from Yucatan, as a tapering form with mouth and anus directed upwards. This is the shape of the current specimen. According to
Deichmann (1930)
,
T. pseudofusus
has tables with a short robust spire with numerous teeth and the tentacles lack the perforated plates present in the tentacles of
T. parafusus
. This is well illustrated by
Jacobson
et al.
(2015)
. The placement of both these species in the genus
Thyone
is doubtful. Hence, due to the often presence of heavily knobbed table discs and handles or half-rings to most of the body wall tables (
Figure 6A
), both these species are here transferred to
Stolus
.
S. parafusus
n. comb.
strongly resembles
S. crassus
Liao & Pawson, 2001
, from
China
, not only in body wall ossicles but also in the presence of tables in the introvert and rosettes in the tentacles. Hence, there is little justification in retaining these species in
Thyone
as none corresponds with the characters of the
type
species (
T. fusus
) of this genus.