Antarctic and Sub-Antarctic species of Psolidium Ludwig (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea: Psolidae)
Author
O’Loughlin, P. Mark
Marine Biology Section, Museum Victoria, GPO Box 666, Melbourne, 3001, Victoria, Australia (email: pmo @ bigpond. net. au)
email: pmo@bigpond. net.au
Author
Ahearn, Cynthia
Department of Invertebrate Zoology, MRC- 163, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, PO Box 37012, Washington DC, 20013 - 7012, USA
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2008
2008-12-31
65
23
42
https://museumsvictoria.com.au/collections-research/journals/memoirs-of-museum-victoria/volume-65-2008/pages-23-42/
journal article
10.24199/j.mmv.2008.65.2
1447-2554
10665899
Psolidium gaini
Vaney
Figures 1e
;
5
a-c; 6a, b
Psolidium gaini
Vaney, 1914: 18–20
, pl. 1 figs 7–9, pl. 4 figs 6–14.—
Ekman, 1925: 5
, 117–19, text-fig. 28.—
Ekman, 1927: 414–15
.—
Grieg, 1929a: 13
.—
Grieg, 1929b: 9
.—
Pawson, 1969: 38
, map 3.—
Arnaud 1974: 651
.—
Cherbonnier, 1974: 608
.—
Gutt, 1988: 23
, 28, 30, 32, 65, 73, 77.—
Gutt, 1991a: 147
, 149, 152, 153.—
Gutt, 1991
b: 324.
Psolidium
sp.
MoV 2081.—
O’Loughlin et al., 1994: 552
, 554.
Material examined
.
Antarctic Ocean
,
South
Orkney
Is
,
298–302 m
,
USNM
E40558
(
1 specimen
);
South
Shetland
Is
,
Aspland I.
,
163–180 m
, AMLR-03 stn 90,
20 Mar 2003
, NMV F104812 (2);
Antarctic Peninsula
,
Joinville I.
,
210–220 m
,
USNM
E40559
(10)
;
Graham Land
,
91 m
, E40561 (2);
Palmer Archipelago
,
85–130 m
, E40552 (2)
;
102 m
, E40553 (1);
38–70 m
, E40554 (2);
70–150 m
, E40555 (2);
55 m
, E40562 (1).
Ross Sea,
Terra
Nova
stn 340,
76°56’S
164°12’E
,
293 m
, BM(NH) 1932.8.11.253 (2);
NZOI
Endeavour
stns A461,
0–550 m
, NIWA 43882 (1); A
534, 366 m
, NIWA 43884 (2); A
537, 546 m
, NIWA 43885 (1); E209B,
163 m
, NIWA 43886 (2);
Discovery
stn 1660, Pennell Bank,
0–351 m
, BM(NH) 2008.3183-3189 (7);
Tangaroa
stn 0802/
100, 451–447 m
, NIWA 45696 (4).
Figure 5. Photos of ossicles of species of
Psolidium
Ludwig, 1886
(a, SEM by Cynthia Ahearn; b–f, by Chris Rowley). a–c,
P. gaini
Vaney,1914
: a, dorsal scale and tube foot support plate (bottom left), USNM E40551; b, dorsal tube foot support plates, NMV F68112; c, plates from sole, NMV F68112. d–f,
P. normani
sp. nov.
: d, dorsal scale, paratype SAM K2341; e, dorsal tube foot support plates, paratype NMV F68662; f, plate from sole, paratype SAM K2341.
Figure 6. Photos of ossicles of species of
Psolidium
Ludwig, 1886
(a–c, SEM by Cynthia Ahearn; d, e, by Chris Rowley; f, by Cynthia Ahearn). a–b,
P. gaini
Vaney, 1914
, USNM E40551: a, plate from sole; b, tentacle ossicle. c–f,
P. tenue
Mortensen, 1925
: c, dorsal scale, USNM E40783; d, dorsal scale, with tube foot endplate in tube foot canal, and absence of tube foot support plates, NMV F107442; e, tentacle rod-plates, NMV F68113; f, tentacle rod-plates, largest 780
μ
m long.
Victoria
Land
,
640–646 m
,
USNM
E40556
(2)
;
598–613 m
,
E40560 (1);
573–576 m
,
USNM 1082084
(1)
;
598–613 m
,
USNM 1112624
(1)
;
Balleny Is
,
55-146 m
, E40551 (19);
150–157 m
, E40557 (1);
Tangaroa
stn 0602,
140–150 m
, NIWA 44712 (1).
Adelie Land, BANZARE stn 90,
66°21’S
138°28’E
,
640 m
, SAM K2340 (1).
Prydz Bay, Four Ladies Bank,
298–301 m
, NMV F68112 (1).
Diagnosis
.
Psolidium
species
up to
27 mm
long (up to
40 mm
in
Vaney, 1914
); body elongate, transversely rounded form (preserved), sole narrower than body width; dorsal and lateral tube feet conspicuous, numerous, cover body closely; dorsal and lateral scales inconspicuous.
Sole: outer peripheral single series of smaller tube feet; inner peripheral single series of larger tube feet; lacking mid-ventral (sole) radial series of tube feet.
Dorsal ossicles: thick, smooth to irregularly thickened, single-layered, perforated plates (scales), up to 950
μ
m long, perforations small, up to 3 canals or marginal indentations for tube feet per scale; irregular, asymmetrical, curved tube foot support plates, 4–8 perforations, digitiform to bluntly spinous (South
Shetland
Is) to pointed spines (Prydz Bay) on one margin, opposite margin lacking projections, plates up to 176
μ
m long.
Sole ossicles: thick, regular, 4-holed buttons, variably knobbed to bluntly spinous marginally, 160–190
μ
m long; intergrade with thick, smooth, perforated plates, sometimes slightly concave, sometimes slightly knobbed marginally, sometimes margin upturned, number of perforations variable, size of plates variable; plates up to 14 perforations, up to 184
μ
m long, many knobbed marginally (South
Shetland
Is); plates up to 19 perforations, up to 255
μ
m long (Ross Sea); plates up to 17 perforations, up to 224 (rarely 272)
μ
m long, slight swellings marginally (Prydz Bay).
Distribution
.
South Georgia
, South
Orkney
Is, South
Shetland
Is, Weddell Sea, Antarctic Peninsula to Ross Sea to Prydz Bay;
19–
795 m.
Remarks
.
Vaney (1914)
reported the sizes of the
two type
specimens as 40 and
30 mm
long. It is incongruous that none of the numerous specimens seen in this study is longer than
26 mm
.
Ekman (1925)
noted some differences between the specimen that he examined and the description by
Vaney (1914)
, and made a point that what Vaney described as “cups” dorsally, were for him tube foot support ossicles. We agree with
Ekman (1925)
that there are numerous tube foot support ossicles dorsally, that have the form of irregular curved perforated plates that are superficially cup-like. The dorsal and lateral tube feet in
Psolidum gaini
,
P. emilyae
sp. nov.
(above) and
P. normani
sp. nov.
(below) are conspicuous because of the presence of support ossicles, whereas the dorsal and lateral tube feet of
Psolidium poriferum
(below),
P. pawsoni
sp. nov.
(below),
P. schnabelae
sp. nov.
(below),
P. tenue
(below) and
P. whittakeri
sp. nov.
(below) have at most rare tube foot support ossicles and are inconspicuous.
We noted plates from the sole of Antarctic Peninsula specimens (
type
region) up to 200
μ
m long with up to 13 perforations. Sole plates from Adelie Land specimens were up to 300
μ
m long with up to 23 perforations. Other variations are noted in the diagnosis above. The variations are significant, and suggest that there may be more than one species.
Grieg (1929a
, b) reported
Psolidium gaini
from
South Georgia
(
55 m
)
and
Graham Land
(
60–90 m
)
,
and noted reports of
P. gaini
from the
South
Shetland
Is
(
19 m
)
and
Emperor William Land
(
360 m
)
.
Gutt (1988)
reported
P. gaini
from the
Weddell Sea
(
260–795 m
)
.