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
Metalia sternalis
(Lamarck, 1816)
Figures 66
,
67
1816
Spatangus sternalis
Lamarck
: p. 31.
1951
Metalia sternalis
(Lamarck)
.—Mortensen: p. 535–537; pl. 64: figs. 13, 17, 19, 22.
Material studied.
Seven denuded tests: WUSL/EI/70 and EI/71, from Baththalangunduwa 2 and WUSL/EI/122, EI/123, EI/124, EI/125, and EI/126 from Silavathurai,
Sri Lanka
.
Description.
Shape and size
—Test large,
60.6–84.5 mm
TL; width 89–92% TL; height 55–59% TL; outline of test elliptical to slightly angular in aboral view, with anterior slope more steeply angled forward than the posterior slopes to the periproct; slightly truncated posteriorly; anterior notch deep and broad.
Apical system
—Ethmolytic, with four large circular gonopores; posterior paired pores about 1.5 times larger than anterior ones; madreporite expanding beyond posterior oculars; situated anteriorly, 30–37% TL from anterior margin.
Ambulacra
—Ambulacrum III narrow and depressed aborally; paired ambulacra distinctly petaloid, deeply sunken towards margin, broad, elongate, somewhat rounded and closed distally; anterior paired petals extend laterally forming an angle of c. 175° from each other, c. 65% of TW; petal III length c. 33% TL (SD=2.3, N=7); interporiferous zone broad, of equal width in each petal; respiratory pores large, pores within one pair about equal in size, connected by deep groove; posterior paired petals 1.25 times longer than anterior ones; adapically posterior paired petals narrow; at about one quarter petal length, inner pore pairs rudimentary; posterior paired petals coalescing, elongate, slightly diverging posteriorly; at about half petal length, two poriferous zones are equal width, up to petal tip.
Interambulacra
—Aboral interambulacrum 5 raised, slightly convex to flat; but not keeled, not projecting above periproct; posterior end almost vertically truncated; interambulacra densely packed with perforate crenulate primary tubercles, larger tubercles inside peripetalous fasciole, particularly along petals; adapically no primary tubercles in interambulacrum 5 between posterior paired petals.
Fasciole
—Peripetalous fasciole well-developed, closely outlining petals, with indentations between petals; subanal fasciole broad, shield-shaped, wider than long; length 26–29% TL and width 31–39% TL; left and right halves joining at point near posterior edge of plastron; five to six pore pairs inside subanal fasciole on each side; anal branches present, extending aborally to points even with adapical margin of periproct.
Plastron
—Narrow, elongate, width 25–31% TL, slightly keeled.
Peristome
—Kidney-shaped; very close to anterior edge, 19–27% TL from anterior margin of test; about twice as wide as long; moderately large, length 8–10% TL, width 17–19% TL; labrum narrow and wide.
Periproct
—Elongate along anterior-posterior axis; pointed above and below; large, length 15–20% TL and width 8–11% TL.
FIGURE 66.
Denuded test of
Metalia sternalis
: A, aboral view (WUSL/EI/70); B, oral view (WUSL/EI/70); C, lateral view (WUSL/EI/70); D, posterior (WUSL/EI/72); E, sternal view (WUSL/EI/72).
FIGURE 67.
Distribution map of
Metalia sternalis
recorded in this study.
Geographic range.
Indo-West Pacific, from Islands of West Indian Ocean (
Bell 1884
),
Mauritius
(
De Loriol 1883
), East Africa &
Madagascar
(
Mortensen 1948c
), Red Sea (
Fourtau 1904
),
India
(
Bell 1888
), Bay of Bengal (
Clark 1925a
), East Indies (de
Meijere 1904
), North
Australia
(
Clark 1925a
) to NSW,
Australia
(
Miskelly 2002
),
Philippine Islands
(
Mortensen 1948e
;
Mooi & Munguia 2014
),
China
& South
Japan
(
Döderlein 1885
), South Pacific Islands (
Agassiz 1872
) and Hawaiian Islands (
Agassiz 1872
).
Bathymetric range.
Littoral zone to
90 m
(
Mortensen 1951
).
Observed occurrence in
Sri Lanka
.
Specimens were collected from a sandy bottom with sea grass beds in Silavathurai and Baththalangunduwa, north-western coast of Sri Lanka, at depth range of
10–20 m
(
Fig. 67
). This species was first recorded from Sri Lanka by
Clark (1915)
.
Remarks.
M. sternalis
can be distinguished from
Metalia
sp. by having a coalescence between the aboralmost regions of the posterior paired petals.