Sclerothyone oloughlini, Martins & Tavares, 2019

Martins, Luciana & Tavares, Marcos, 2019, Two new species of Sclerothyone from the southwestern Atlantic Ocean, with a key to genera and species of Sclerothyoninae (Holothuroidea: Dendrochirotida: Sclerodactylidae), Zootaxa 4658 (2), pp. 375-382 : 379

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4658.2.11

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:68706766-E74E-4044-882E-2BF2EE22AC8A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5680364

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B687D4-5B3E-A128-FF2D-FF45A4D23039

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Sclerothyone oloughlini
status

sp. nov.

Sclerothyone oloughlini View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figs 2–3 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 ; Table 1 View TABLE 1 )

Type material. Ilha bela, São Paulo , Brazil, 23°46’S, 43°00’W, 2.ix. 1970, 150 m, holotype 10mm ( MZUSP 1884 View Materials ). Paratypes: same data as the holotype, 2 spms 4–6 mm ( MZUSP 1889 View Materials ). Cabo Frio, Rio de Janeiro GoogleMaps , Brazil, 23°36’ S, 43°23’ W, 4.ix. 1970, 475m, 4 spms, 3–5 mm ( MZUSP 1887 View Materials ). Campos Basin , Rio de Janeiro GoogleMaps , Brazil, 21°20’S, 40°15’W, Campos Basin Monitoring Program coll., xii.1991 to i. 1992, 185m, 3 spm 5–10 mm ( MZUSP 1888 View Materials ) GoogleMaps .

Etymology. This species is named in honor of Dr. Peter Mark O’Loughlin, in recognition for his enthusiasm and contributions to the systematics of Holothuroidea.

Diagnosis. Body barrel-shaped. Tube feet in double rows restricted to ambulacra. Calcareous ring plates undivided; posterior processes subdivided, long, length up to two times height of calcareous ring plate. Body wall with multilocular, two pillared tables; handles present and two-pillared tables; circular disc without handle. Plates (near the anus); tentacles with rods, introvert with rosettes. Tube feet with two pillared supporting tables, arched plates and end plates.

Description. Body barrel-shaped ( Fig. 2a View FIGURE 2 ). Ten dendritic tentacles ventral-most pair smaller. Anal papillae absent. Tube feet in double rows restricted to ambulacra. Radial and interradial plates of the calcareous ring of same length, entire, united at the base only ( Fig. 2b View FIGURE 2 ). Radial plates notched anteriorly for the passage of the radial nerves and radial canal; posterior processes subdivided. Interradial plates arrow-shaped, with an anterior depression. Longitudinal muscles thin, split in the anterior region of the body; retractor muscle short, flat, attached to the muscular process ( Fig. 2b View FIGURE 2 ). Internal organs degraded (i.e Polian vesicle, stone canal and madreporite not observed). Color white in ethanol.

Ossicles: Body wall with two-pillared tables; circular disc with handle, multiperforated and undulating margin; spire short, ending in a crown of teeth (60–110 μm long, Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 a–b); two-pillared tables; circular disc without handle (30–40 μm long, Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 c–d) and plates near anus (100–200 μm long, Fig. 3e View FIGURE 3 ). Tentacles with curved rods, perforated along entire length (150–220 μm long, Fig. 3f View FIGURE 3 ); introvert with rosettes (20–60 μm long, Fig. 3g View FIGURE 3 ). Tube feet with twopillared supporting tables; table disc curved, with four central holes, one perforation in both ends; short spire ending in four blunt teeth (80–100 μm long, Fig. 3h View FIGURE 3 ); arched plates (60–100 μm long, Fig. 3i View FIGURE 3 ) and end plates circular (up to 100 μm long).

Type locality. Brazil, São Paulo, Ilha Bela , 23°46’S, 43°00’W, 150 m. GoogleMaps

Distribution. Brazil (São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro), between 150- 475m.

Remarks. Sclerothyone oloughlini sp. nov. stands apart from Sclerothyone reichi sp. nov. and S. unicolumnus in that the multilocular tables from the body wall have handles ( Fig. 3a, b View FIGURE 3 ), whereas these are absent in the latter two species. The new species differs from S. velligera in having multilocular tables from body wall ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 a–d) instead of four-holed tables, and in having tentacles provided with rods only ( Fig. 3f View FIGURE 3 ), whilst in S. velligera the tentacles provided with rod and plates.

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