New dendrochirotid sea cucumbers from northern Australia (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea: Dendrochirotida)
Author
P. Mark O’Loughlin
Author
Melanie Mackenzie
Author
Didier Vandenspiegel
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2014
2014-12-31
72
5
23
journal article
29824
10.5281/zenodo.1298027
b234abf6-4127-4bbe-a4da-07eb7316d36b
1447-2554
1298027
Triasemperia stola
O’Loughlin
sp. nov.
Zoobank
LSID
.
http://zoobank.org:act:B8F02EEE-7711-4519BC96-DE02BD4433F3
Figures 9
,
10
.
Material
examined
.
Holotype
. N
Australia
,
Joseph Bonaparte Gulf
,
12.32°S
129.94°E
, shell and sand substrate,
RV
Solander
,
46 m
,
AIMS
& GA,
5 Aug 2010
,
NMV
F174889 (GA specimen 29084, SOL 5117, 013BS010; UF tissue lot
MOLAF1541
)
.
Paratypes
. NE
Australia
,
Queensland
,
Yeppoon
, dredged off
Middle Island
,
23.13°S
150.74°E
,
9–37m
,
B. J. Smith
,
6 Sept 1967
,
NMV
F204083 (1)
;
same data,
NMV
F204088 (1).
Description
. Form cylindrical, elongate, upturned oral and anal ends, tapered orally, long taper anally, U-shape up to
45 mm
wide (preserved); hard, thick, calcareous body wall, ‘prickly’ to touch; mouth anterior, anus posterior, lacking anal teeth; tube feet scattered over body, withdrawn, inconspicuous (preserved), diameters about
0.2 mm
, paired radial series of tube feet on withdrawn introvert; 20 dendritic tentacles, 15 large, 5 inner small; calcareous ring composite, comprising small calcareous pieces, radial and inter-radial composite plates adjoin to create tubular ring, radial plates elongate with thin posterior distal prolongations adjoining inter-radial plate elongations, radial plates with median division for most of the length, inter-radial plates with deep posterior notch; single polian vesicle; gonad tubules with numerous branches; respiratory trees extending throughout the coelom.
Ossicles throughout body wall densely crowded thick tables, table discs triangular, typically with 6 large marginal knobs and 6 small perforations, discs 80–120
µ
m wide, spires with 3 pillars and 6 pointed spines distally, disc width and spire height sub-equal. Introvert and tube feet with tables, rods, endplates; tables smaller, irregular, some lacking spires, perforations up to 19, discs up to 56–104
µ
m wide; smooth rods with distal ends enlarged and perforated, up to 120
µ
m long; endplates with diameters about 136
µ
m, tube foot support ossicles tables only. Tentacles with rods, rosettes, tables; fine to thick smooth rods with swollen perforated ends; tables rare, form regular or irregular, some not knobbed, discs up 96
µ
m wide.
Figure 8. SEM images of ossicles from the holotype of
Massinium
keesingi
O’Loughlin
sp. nov.
(NMV F203008). A, peri-anal body wall tables and endplate fragment, discs with smooth margins, spires with 1 or 2 pillars (scale bars 10
µ
m); B, oral disc tables, table discs with smooth margin, spires with single or 2 partly fused pillars, apical spines short and blunt (scale bars 10
µ
m); C, tentacle rods (scale bars 10
µ
m).
Live colour red-brown to brown, preserved colour brown to off-white with residual violet colouration.
Distribution
. Northern
Australia
, from Joseph Bonaparte Gulf to Yeppoon
Queensland
,
9–
53 m.
Etymology
. Named
stola
with reference to the genus
Stolus
that has species with heavily knobbed button-like ossicles that are similar to the table discs of this species.
Remarks
. The distinguishing morphological character of
Triasemperia stola
is the presence of table spires with three pillars. The calcareous ring and ossicles are similar to those of
Stolus crassus
Liao and Pawson, 2001
, but
S. crassus
from the South
China
Sea is described as having 10 tentacles and only 2 pillars in the table spires.
Family
Thyonidiidae
Heding and Panning, 1954
(
sensu
Smirnov 2012
)
Remarks
.
Heding and Panning (1954)
initially described the
Thyonidiinae
as a sub-family within the
Phyllophoridae
Östergren, 1907
. Based on the absence of posterior segmented prolongations on the calcareous ring
Pawson and Fell (1965)
transferred the
Thyonidiinae
to a sub-family within the
Cucumariidae
Ludwig, 1894
. Based on the presence of more than 10 tentacles and table ossicles
Smirnov (2012)
raised
Thyonidiinae
to family status as
Thyonidiidae
. The plate ossicles in
Parathyonidium
Heding (in
Heding and Panning), 1954
and “reduced” ossicles in
Athyonidium
Deichmann, 1941
and
Patallus
Selenka, 1868
suggested to
Smirnov (2012)
that these genera were probably unrelated to the genera with tables.