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
Polysyncraton polysystema
sp. nov.
Polysyncraton pavimentum
:
Kott 2002a
, p 32
.
Not
Monniot 1993
, p 9
.
Distribution
Previously
recorded (see
Kott 2002a
):
Northern Territory
(
Darwin Harbour
). Type locality:
Northern Territory
(
Darwin Harbour
,
Plater Rock
,
8–10 m
, coll.
K. Gowlett Holmes
,
21 November 1999
,
holotype
NTM
E170
). The previously recorded specimen is from the type locality
.
Remarks
Although their colonies are similar and their spicules are the same size,
P. pavimentum
:
Kott, 2002a
and
P. pavimentum
Monniot, 1993
from Chesterfield Reef and
New Caledonia
appear not to be conspecific. The nominal species has 13–15 pointed rays in optical
Figure 5. (A–C)
Polysyncraton papyrus
(SAM E3253): (A) colony; (B) thorax; (C) gut loop. (D–F)
Polysyncraton pedunculatum
(SAM E3272): (D) colony (E) thorax, (F) abdomen. Scale bars: 1.0 mm (A);
0.1 mm
(B, C, E, F); 1.0 cm (D).
transverse section, while those of the new species have only 9–11 conical, pointed or truncated rays in optical transverse section.
Polysyncraton lithostrotum
:
Monniot, 1993
and
P. pavimentum
Monniot, 1993
, both from Chesterfield Reef and
New Caledonia
, have similar stellate spicules with 13–15 pointed rays in optical transverse section and some globular spicules, six coils of the vas deferens, a small retractor muscle, similar larvae with the larval trunk
0.7–0.8 mm
long, and a circle of 24 larval epidermal ampullae. However,
Kott (2001)
was wrong in thinking them synonymous, for, despite their very similar appearance, the maximum diameter of spicules of
P. lithostrotum
:
Monniot, 1993
is only
0.04 mm
—half the size of the largest spicules in
P. pavimentum
Monniot, 1993
. Further, the
New Zealand
species,
P. lithostrotum
(Brewin, 1956)
is distinguished from the tropical
P. lithostrotum
:
Monniot 1993
by its larger spicules with rounded rays. It is probable that
P. lithostrotum
:
Monniot 1993
is another undescribed species in this related group, with a maximum spicule diameter of
0.04 mm
and pointed spicule rays—different from the large spicules with rounded rays of the
New Zealand
species.
It appears that the scale line of
0.1 mm
applied to the larvae of
P. lithostrotum
:
Monniot, 1993
is incorrect, the larval trunk being reported as
0.8 mm
long but measuring
1.6 mm
(
Monniot 1993
,
Figure 1F
).