Ascidiacea (Tunicata) from deep waters of the continental shelf of Western Australia
Author
Kott, Patricia
text
Journal of Natural History
2008
2008-04-30
42
15 - 16
1103
1217
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930801935958
journal article
10.1080/00222930801935958
1464-5262
5219188
Didemnum plebeium
Kott, 2005
(
Figure 18D
)
Didemnum plebeium
Kott, 2005a
, p. 245
.
Distribution
Previously
recorded (see
Kott 2005a
):
Western Australia
(Dampier Archipelago. New record:
Western Australia
CSIRO
SS10
/05 (
Point Hillier
,
Stn
20, 419 m
, 22.11.05,
QM
G328451
).
Description
The newly recorded specimen is a solid, white, irregular sheet about
5 cm
in maximum dimension. Ripple marks are on the base of the colony probably as a result of the tightly packed spicules. Zooids are small, the thoraces comma-shaped, being reduced in diameter posteriorly. A fine, tapering retractor muscle projects from the oesophageal neck just posterior to the end of the thorax. Stellate spicules, crowded throughout, are to
0.05 mm
diameter with 9–11 conical pointed or blunttipped rays in optical transverse section.
Remarks
The newly recorded specimen is larger than the
syntypes
, which are small colonies to
0.5 cm
in maximum dimension with spicule-filled surface papillae associated with each aperture. Other characters conform to the description of the types. Possibly the differences are the result of age or intraspecific variation over the extensive range represented by the two existing records of this species.
The comma-shaped thoraces are not unusual in this genus (see
Kott 2001
), being reported for
D. membranaceum
Sluiter, 1909
(which differs from the present species in having characteristic giant spicules),
D. granulatum
Tokioka, 1954
and
D. perplexum
Kott, 2001
(both with larger spicules with fewer rays) and
D. delectum
Kott, 2001
(with same-sized spicules but with fewer and more rod-like rays than the conical rays of the present species). The spicule rays of the present species are shorter than the long, pointed rays of
D. multiampullae
and
D. ossium
and they have fewer rays. Kott (2005) recorded the diameter of the spicules of this species as
0.06 cm
, although spicules of that diameter were not detected in the present specimen. The spicules are otherwise characteristic of this species.