Sea cucumbers of the Kerguelen Plateau, with descriptions of new genus and species (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea)
Author
O'Loughlin, P. Mark
Author
Skarbnik-López, Jessica
Author
Mackenzie, Melanie
Author
VandenSpiegel, Didier
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2015
2015-12-31
73
59
93
https://museumsvictoria.com.au/collections-research/journals/memoirs-of-museum-victoria/volume-73-2015/pages-59-93/
journal article
10.24199/j.mmv.2015.73.07
1447-2554
12213223
Paracaudina championi
O’Loughlin & Skarbnik-López
sp. nov.
Zoobank LSID.
http://zoobank.org:act:86F7DB87-F210-4732-
9A77-2FC03915134B
Tables 1–3
,
5
,
6
; figures 1, 11–13.
Molpadiidae
sp. nov.
(HOL 11).—Hibberd & Moore, 2009: 119, 145.
Material examined
.
Holotype
.
Southern Ocean
, S
Kerguelen Plateau, NE
Heard Island
,
North-east Plateau
,
AAD
Southern Champion
cruise 46 haul 479, beam trawl, -50.67 74.62,
708 m
,
30 Jul 2007
,
NMV
F165736
(
UF
tissue sequence code
MOL
AF666
) (
AAD
species code:
HOL 11
).
Paratypes
(
AAD
species code:
HOL 11
)
.
HIMI
,
Western Plateau
, SC26(162), -52.44 72.67,
287 m
,
30 Apr 2003
,
TMAG
H3539
(3)
;
SC26(165), -52.34 72.50,
462 m
,
30 Apr 2003
,
TMAG
H3434
(1).
Other material (AAD species code: HOL 11). Southern
Shell Bank
, SC26(264), -51.87 75.78,
779 m
, AAD;
Shell Bank
MR, SC46(125), -51.69 76.19,
234 m
, AAD; North-east Plateau, SC46(473), -50.48 74.60,
905 m
, AAD; SC46(474), -50.46 74.79,
942 m
, AAD.
Figure 11.
Paracaudina championi
O’Loughlin & Skarbnik-López
sp. nov.
holotype photo of lateral view (oral end left) (insert with drawing of radial (left) and inter-radial plates of the calcareous ring) (NMV F165736).
Figure 12. SEM images of ossicles from the holotype of
Paracaudina championi
O’Loughlin & Skarbnik-López
sp. nov.
(NMV F165736). a, irregular knobbed cup-like ossicles from the mid-body wall, with cross base evident mid-left and bottom right; b, irregular knobbed cup-like ossicles from the caudal body wall, with cross base evident upper middle and right.
Figure 13. Microscope photos of table ossicles from the peri-anal body wall of paratypes of
Paracaudina championi
O’Loughlin & SkarbnikLópez
sp. nov.
Two left tables from large specimen (TMAG H3434); single right table from small specimen (TMAG H3539).
Description
. Preserved body up to
115 mm
long (strongly contracted), tapering posterior body and tail
40 mm
long, mid-body up to
30 mm
diameter; body wall thick, leathery, wrinkled with transverse creases, pale brown to off-white to pale grey in colour; body form cylindrical, slight taper to blunt oral end, about one third of the body tapered to thin posterior tail (end of tail missing in
holotype
), tail not discretely delineated. Lacking anal scales or papillae. Tentacles 15, digitiform, lacking terminal digit or digits. Calcareous ring solid, plates fused; radial plates with two anterior projections, one with longitudinal muscle attachment and small anterior notch, separated by a bigger notch from the second lateral anterior projection, plates with tapered posterior projection with small bifid notch posteriorly; inter-radial plates with tapered anterior projection, wide rounded posterior indentation. Tentacle ampullae variable in length, up to twice the height of the ring in length. Single polian vesicle, tubular, long. Longitudinal muscles broad, flat, each divided along mid-line by narrow gap. Long, thin, un-branched gonad tubules.
Mid-body and caudal, but not peri-anal, ossicles are similar; some but not most are fairly regular, thick, knobbed cups with a basal distally-knobbed cross; most have no regular form and are thick, knobbed, often three-dimensional, and very irregular; ossicles predominantly up to 40
µ
m long. Peri-anal body wall with irregular knobbed cups and irregular thick tables; knobbed cups as in mid-body wall; tables in smaller specimens with predominantly 3-pillar spires, one cross-bridge, few lateral blunt spines, 3 paired blunt spines apically, spires on tables in larger specimens complex with numerous distal blunt spines, spires up to about 170
µ
m high; table discs indented centrally, raised marginally, irregular angular margins, predominantly 6 central perforations, 2 outer circles of irregular perforations, discs up to about 180
µ
m across in small specimens, up to about 250
µ
m across in large specimens.
Distribution
. Southern Ocean, Kerguelen Plateau, N of
Heard Island
on North-east Plateau,
Shell Bank
, Western Plateau,
234–
942 m
.
Etymology
. Named
championi
for the fishing trawler
Southern Champion
that was commissioned by the AAD to serve this research expedition.
Remarks
. The
holotype
was donated to NMV by the AAD. Initial preservation was by freezing, with subsequent transfer to 70% ethanol. The presence of peri-anal 3-pillared, large, thick tables is a significant morphological addition to the diagnostic characters of
Paracaudina
Heding, 1932
that was provided by O’Loughlin
et. al.
(2011). Caudal ossicles in
Paracaudina
specimens have been discussed and illustrated by
O’Loughlin
et al.
(2011)
. No tables were observed in the mid-body wall or caudal region. In reporting on the
New Zealand
Caudinidae
species,
Davey & O’Loughlin (2013)
discussed
Hedingia
Deichmann, 1938
, and the
New Zealand
occurrence of
Hedingia albicans
(
Théel, 1886
)
. In
H. albicans
there are abundant three-pillared tables with irregular discs in the caudal region, and rarely in the mid-body wall.
Hedingia
species
lack thick, knobbed cup ossicles. The new caudinid species described here has the characteristic paracaudinid thick, knobbed cup ossicles throughout the body wall, but also has the characteristic tables of
Hedingia
in the posterior caudal region. We have provisionally assigned our new species to
Paracaudina
and await the evidence of molecular phylogenetic data for generic confirmation.
Apart from the significant diagnostic difference of presence or absence of caudal tables,
Paracaudina championi
O’Loughlin & Skarbnik-López
sp. nov.
is similar to
Paracaudina alta
Davey & O’Loughlin, 2013
with its very irregular ossicle forms. But the thick, knobbed cup ossicles are quite dissimilar to the more regular ossicles of all other species of
Paracaudina
. The illustration of
P. alta
body form (
Fig. 1B
) in
Davey & O’Loughlin (2013)
indicates that most of the body is cylindrical with a relatively short discrete tail, whereas for
Paracaudina championi
about one third of the body exhibits a long caudal taper. Body wall ossicles for
P. alta
are illustrated by
Davey & O’Loughlin (2013)
and also by
O’Loughlin
et al
. (2011)
for the earlier conspecific
Paracaudina
species.
We judge that amongst the very irregular ossicles of both species a basal distally-knobbed cross is sometimes evident amongst the ossicles of
P. championi
but not amongst those of
P. alta
. Their respective occurrences north and south of the Antarctic Convergence, and considerable geographical separation, also discourage us from thinking that they are conspecific. We await molecular phylogenetic data for insight into these relationships of current
Paracaudina
species.
TMAG
paratypes
have been confirmed by direct observation of TMAG loan material. “Other material” refers to lots that were identified in the AAD by comparison with voucher specimens that were identified by Mark O’Loughlin. These lots are held (unregistered) in the AAD and the determinations not confirmed by Mark O’Loughlin.