On some lesser known sea cucumbers in the Natural History Museum, UK (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea)
Author
Thandar, Ahmed S.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-10-23
4688
3
361
381
journal article
25163
10.11646/zootaxa.4688.3.3
a9af11dc-d705-48ed-96fb-3b323accc19e
1175-5326
3516791
B8F6F528-F616-4EA1-8CA7-FA2FA89A34B9
Stolus canescens
(
Semper, 1867
)
Figures 2
&
3
Cucumaria canescens
Semper, 1867: 48
, pl. 13, fig. 6; pl. 14, figs. 3, 9, 10; pl. 15, figs. 2–3.
Stolus canescens
Clark & Rowe, 1971: 182
, pl. 29, fig. 7;
Liao & Clark, 1995: 497
, fig. 301, pl. 13, fig.6.
Material examined
.
NHMUK 1892.1
.14.27,
Holothuria
Bank
(
13 25’ S
,
126 0’ E
), presented by Lords of the Admiralty,
1 spec.
FIGURE 2.
Stolus canescens
Semper, 1868
. Admirality Is. NHMUK 1892.1.14.27. A. Specimen entire; B. Part of calcareous ring; C. Introvert ossicles; D. Rods from tentacle branches; E. Ossicles from tentacle stalk; F. Buttons and plates from body wall; G. Tube feet tables. (All ossicles drawn to same scale). MDIR = mid-dorsal interradial plate.
FIGURE 3.
Scanning electron micrograph of ossicles of
Stolus canescens
Semper, 1868
.Admirality Is. NHMUK 1892.1.14.27. A. Tentacle ossicles; B. Tube feet tables; C. Tube foot end-plate; D. Body wall ossicles.
Description
. Specimen fusiform, pentagonal in cross section, U-shaped with an attenuated posterior end; length
35 mm
, breadth in mid-body
4 mm
. Skin rigid, white in alcohol. Tube feet in rows only in ambulacra, ventral feet longer than dorsal, elongated, in double rows mid-ventrally but reducing to single rows anteriorly and posteriorly. Dorsal tube feet only in single rows per ambulacrum, with one or two also scattered in interambulacra dorso-laterally. Mouth and anus terminal. Anal teeth present but cannot be demonstrated with ease. Calcareous ring complex, radial and interradial plates asymmetrical and fused; radial plates deeply incised, i.e. bifurcating before the posterior margin of the interradial plates; interradial plates with triangular anterior edge; both radial and interradial plates with incipient fragmentation, posterior processes also fragmented. Polian vesicle single and saccate. Stone canal single, short, straight, embedded in dorsal mesentery; madreporite small, oval. Retractor muscles well developed, attached to anterior tip of radial plates of calcareous ring.
Ossicles of body wall circular to oval table-like buttons with undulating margin (
51–120 µm
, average
69 µm
), perforated with 4–8 holes and 9–12 large knobs, with a half ring on one side and a spire on opposite side; spire swollen at base by the characteristic double knobs, usually ending in a single blunt point or usually a tripartite spire with a bi-nodular base bearing a central projection; some buttons without spire and/or half ring. Tube feet tables with curved disc usually perforated by a single hole at each end; spire two-pillared, with or without a horizontal bar, pillars fused for most of their length, ending in a single blunt point. Length of disc
73–108 µm
(average
94 µm
); height of spire ca.
40 µm
. Tentacle stalk contains three
types
of ossicles: large rods (average length
137 µm
), minute rods (average length
86 µm
) and rosettes (average
27 µm
). Large rods of stalk perforated at ends with short marginal projections; minute rods smooth, rosettes of the closed
type
. Tentacle branches with both medium to minute rods (
26–56 µm
, average
40 µm
), medium-sized rods delicate, may be perforated at ends; slender rods minute, curved, usually perforated at ends, sometimes branched, branches with or without perforations. Introvert devoid of ossicles.
Distribution
.
China
,
Philippines
and East Indies (
Liao & Clark 1995
) and now
Holothuria Bank
(Western Australia).
Remarks
. This is a well-known West-Pacific form originally described by Semper (1868) from
Bohol
,
Philippines
. It is well illustrated by Semper and more recently by
Liao & Clark (1995)
and its distribution recorded by
Clark & Rowe (1971)
and
Rowe & Gates (1995)
. However, judging from the literature it has not been encountered frequently. Its most characteristic feature are the large knobs on the buttons, a varying number of marginal knobs and usually a tripartite spire with a bi-nodular base bearing a central projection.
Thandar (2005)
provides a useful key to the species of
Stolus
then known.
The above Admiralty Island record is the first record of the species with locality data in the NHMUK online catalogue, last updated
03.02.2017
. The existing record is without locality or other data.