Ascidians from the tropical western Pacific
Author
Monniot, Françoise
Author
Monniot, Claude
UPESA 8044, Laboratoire de Biologie des Invertébrés marins et Malacologie, Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, 55 rue Buffon, F- 75005 Paris (France) monniot @ mnhn. fr.
monniot@mnhn.fr
text
Zoosystema
2001
23
2
201
383
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5391440
1638-9387
5391440
Cystodytes hapu
Monniot C. & Monniot F., 1987
(
Figs 26
;
27
;
116C
)
Cystodytes hapu
Monniot C. & Monniot F., 1987: 64
, fig. 23A-D, pl. IVE-F.
Type
locality: New Caledonia. MATERIAL EXAMINED. —
Palau
.
Koror
, Ngerikuul Pass,
7°19.22’N
,
134°29.24’E
,
7 m
,
23.V.1994
(MNHN A3 CYS 96).
Maldives
.
S
Male
Atoll, oceanside North reef,
4°07.54’N
,
73°30.55’E
,
7 m
,
1.X.1997
(
MNHN
A3
CYS
105).
DISTRIBUTION. — Polynesia,
Palau
, and
Maldives
Islands.
DESCRIPTION
The colonies are encrusting,
5 mm
thick, grey, with a round edge. The smooth surface is pierced by slits that are the openings of amphipodsheltering cavities. The systems are not very regular. The superficial tunic is translucent and without spicules but contains brown, round pigment cells (
Fig. 116C
), which are also found around the zooids in formalin preserved specimens. Deeper inside the colony the spherical brown cells are irregularly scattered.
FIG. 26. —
Cystodytes hapu
Monniot C. & Monniot F., 1987
;
A
,
B
, zooid in two parts;
C
, incubating zooid;
D
, right side of the larva;
E
, anterior part of the left side of the larva. Scale bars: A, B, D, E, 0.5 mm; C, 1 mm.
Numerous small spherical spicules made of concentric needles are distributed through the subsurface thickness of the tunic, but are more numerous below that and between the zooids. They have an average diameter of 50 µm (
Fig. 27
). Disc-shaped spicules 600 to 800 µm in diameter (
Fig. 27
) make capsules around the zooids and around the larvae. There are very few spicules of intermediate size.
The zooids lie perpendicular to the colony surface. The oral siphon has six to eight lobes, the cloacal siphon six to seven lobes (
Fig. 26A
). The thoraces are too contracted to count the stigmata or to distinguish a body-wall fold on the waist.
The digestive loop has the common shape of the genus, with a large central space containing the rosette of testis lobes. Ten to 12 oval testis lobes converge on the sperm duct, which runs straight from its origin (
Fig. 26B
). The oocytes are locat- ed near the oesophagus. Developed larvae are incubated in a pouch protruding on a short and narrow peduncle from the waist of the zooid (
Fig. 26C
) (giving the species its Polynesian name). The larval size varies, with a maximum trunk length of
1.4 mm
. The three anterior papillae, in a line, are encircled by a ring made of four fused pairs of ampullae (
Fig. 26D, E
), a common structure in the genus
Cystodytes
. On the left side only, an ampullar structure with a deeply toothed margin lies over the anterior part of the larval body (
Fig. 26E
). The larvae are not gemmiparous, but two stigmata rows are soon pierced. Each larva has its own capsule of flat spicules.
REMARKS
This sample from
Palau
differs from the
type
of
C. hapu
Monniot C. & Monniot F., 1987
from Polynesia in the abundance of small spicules, and the tooth-edged structure on the larva. Nevertheless, thin vascular processes are also present on the left larval body side in Polynesian colonies. Specimens collected in the Indian Ocean have both small spicules and larger ones in capsules and larvae in a pedunculate brood pouch with ampullae on the left side. They are assigned to the same species.
Two New Caledonian species have spicules in pin-cushions.
Cystodytes luteus
Monniot F., 1988
has a different anatomy of its zooids and larvae, and
Cystodytes mucosus
Monniot F., 1988
has numerous siphonal lobes, abundant mucus, and no dark pigment, and its larvae are incubated at the stomach level.