Taxonomy and distribution of irregular echinoids (Echinoidea: Irregularia) from Sri Lanka
Author
Arachchige, Gayashan M.
Author
Jayakody, Sevvandi
Author
Mooi, Rich
Author
Kroh, Andreas
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-01-03
4541
1
1
100
journal article
27715
10.11646/zootaxa.4541.1.1
9c3fecf1-4e11-4c79-a908-e0a5abbaf3ca
1175-5326
2617460
B11E734C-218B-418C-84E6-719AB3C58AFF
Genus
Sculpsitechinus
Stara & Sanciu, 2014
FIGURE 60.
Sculpsitechinus auritus
(A and C, WUSL/EI/59) and
Sculpsitechinus
sp. (B and D, WUSL/EI/58): A–B, aboral and C–D, oral views.
1778
Echinodiscus
auritus
Leske
: p. 138
1948b
Echinodiscus
auritus
Leske.
—Mortensen: p. 400–403; pl. 56: figs. 2, 3; pl. 57: fig. 7; pl. 71: figs. 1–5, 10–15, 17, 22. 2014
Sculpsitechinus auritus
(Leske, 1778)
—Stara & Sanciu: p. 348–351; pl. 21: figs. 1–7.
Material studied.
Five denuded tests: WUSL/EI/57, from Silavathurai, Mannar; WUSL/EI/59, from Kirinda; WUSL/EI/128, EI/129, and EI/130, from Mandathiv, Jaffna.
Description.
Shape and size
—Tests large,
62.6–111.7 mm
TL; outline of anterior of test rounded, posterior end truncated with two deep, open lunules; greatest width lies about half-way between apex and posterior edge; TW 98–104% TL; test depressed in lateral view, c. 8% TL in height; margin thin and sharp, anterior margin thicker than posterior; oral side flat, food grooves bifurcating, closely following lunules; oral ambulacra with much more densely packed and smaller tubercles than interambulacra.
FIGURE 61.
Distribution map of
Sculpsitechinus auritus
recorded in this study.
Apical system
—Monobasal, with four small, circular gonopores; subcentral, 44–51% TL from anterior margin.
Ambulacra
—Petaloid region medium-sized, length 44–47% TL; petals closed; petal III slightly longer (length 24% TL) and broader (10% TL in width) than others; anterior paired petals (mean 20.4% TL) and posterior paired petals (mean 19.8% TL) similar in length, 20% TL and width, c. 9% TL; interporiferous zones of petals small and about equal in width, c. 3% TL; poriferous zones and interporiferous zones about equal in width; pores are elongate anisopores with sharp furrows that deepen towards outer pore; 7–15 primary tubercles on ridges between furrows; food groves bifurcating close to peristome, with well-developed lateral branches encroaching upon interambulacra; 2 to 3 pairs of plates between ambulacral petals and lunules.
Lunules
—Open, slit-like; of variable length; width c. 5% TL; angle between lunules 57° to 60°; lunules surrounded by 3–4 plates per column on oral and 4–5 plates per column on aboral side.
Interambulacra
—Disjunction of oral interambulacra 1 to 4 variable, sometimes all in contact, in other specimens all are disjunct; interambulacrum 5 always disjunct. Five post-basicoronal plates in oral interambulacrum 5, two in column a and three in column b.
Peristome
—Round to subpentagonal, small, diameter 3–4% TL; 44–46% TL from anterior margin.
Periproct
—Small, diameter c. 2% TL; situated close to posterior margin of test, 14–19% TL from posterior edge; distance between periproct and peristome 29–35% TL.
Geographic range.
Indo-West Pacific, from
Mauritius
(
De Loriol 1883
), East Africa &
Madagascar
(
Brown 1910a
), Red Sea (Agassiz 18841), South East Arabia (
Mortensen 1948c
), Persian Gulf (
Mortensen 1940b
),
India
&
Pakistan
(
Clark 1925a
),
Sri Lanka
(
Clark 1915
;
Herdman
et al.
1904
), Bay of Bengal (
Koehler 1922
), East Indies (de
Meijere 1904
), North
Australia
(
Clark 1938
) to
Philippine Islands
(
Agassiz 1872
),
China
Sea & South
Japan
(
Mortensen 1948b
).
Bathymetric range.
Tidal zone to
50 m
(
Mortensen 1948b
).
Observed occurrence in
Sri Lanka
.
Specimens
were collected from sandy and muddy bottoms at three
Sri Lankan
localities:
Mandathiv
on the northern coast,
Silavathurai
on the north-western coast, and
Kirinda
on the southern coast at 1, 9, and
27 m
respectively (
Fig. 61
). Bathymetric range of this species in Sri Lanka is
1–29 m
. This species was first recorded in Sri Lanka by
Döderlein (1888)
.
Remarks.
In contrast to Stara & Sanciu’s (
2014
) description, Sri Lankan
S. auritus
has two pairs of ambulacral plates between the petal tips and lunules. The periproct is close to the posterior margin (mean=16% TL). However, in Stara & Sanciu’s (
2014
) examples, there are four to five pairs of plates between the petal tips and lunules, and the periproct is farther from the posterior margin (mean=21% TL).
Specimen WUSL/EI/58, collected at a depth of
12 m
from Palagala reef (
Fig. 1
) on the western coast of
Sri Lanka
, differs from the material described above and may represent a different species (or a hybrid). In contrast to typical
S. auritus
it has 1) a distinct anterior notch, 2) wide interporiferous zones (4–5% TL), and 3) a markedly structured oral side like in fossil
Amphiope
(
Fig. 60B, D
; in contrast to the rather flattened oral surface of typical
S. auritus
). Specimen WUSL/E1/58 is provisionally identified as
Sculpsitechinus
sp. until more material of
Sculpsitechinus
from
Sri Lanka
becomes available and the degree of intraspecific variation of the Sri Lankan population is better understood.
S. auritus
can be easily distinguished from other astriclypeids occurring in
Sri Lanka
(
E. bisperforatus
and
E.
cf.
truncatus
) by its open lunules.