Lipotrapeza vestiens ( Joshua, 1914 )

O’Loughlin, P. Mark, Barmos, Shari & VandenSpiegel, Didier, 2012, The phyllophorid sea cucumbers of southern Australia (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea: Dendrochirotida: Phyllophoridae), Memoirs of Museum Victoria 69, pp. 269-308 : 275-278

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.24199/j.mmv.2012.69.05

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12212446

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7E4A044D-1912-FFA4-9938-FF2A90608A72

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Lipotrapeza vestiens ( Joshua, 1914 )
status

 

Lipotrapeza vestiens ( Joshua, 1914) View in CoL

Figures 4 View Figure 4 , 5a View Figure 5 , 6 View Figure 6

Phyllophorus vestiens Joshua, 1914: 5 View in CoL , pl. 1 fig. 2a–f.

Lipotrapeza vestiens View in CoL .—H. L. Clark, 1938: 496–497.—H. L. Clark, 1946: 412.— Heding and Panning, 1954: 176, fig. 84 (from Joshua 1914).— Rowe, 1982: 462, pl. 31.2.— Rowe and Gates, 1995: 311.— Edgar, 1997: 369.—Gowlett-Holmes, 2008: 263.

Material examined. Holotype. Victoria, Torquay , NMV F45144 View Materials .

Paratypes. Torquay, NMV F45145 View Materials (1); slide of body wall, NMV F45146 View Materials (mounted body wall, 33 mm long, 20 mm wide, not from either type specimen, endplates and support rods only) .

Other material (selection). Victoria, Cape Conran , 2 Oct 1988, NMV F73832 View Materials (1) ; Walkerville south, Bear Gully , 7 Mar 1982, NMV F73838 View Materials (1) ; Cape Paterson Survey ( CPA), 1982, Petrel Rock, NMV F73823 View Materials (1) ; Shack Bay , NMV F73824 View Materials (1) ; Cape Paterson , NMV F73825 View Materials (1) ; Harmers Haven , NMV F73822 View Materials (1) ; Westernport Bay Survey by MRG , 1969–71, Merricks , NMV F45239 View Materials (3) ; 29 Oct 1980, NMV F75976 View Materials (many) ; 28 Jan 1983, NMV F73831 View Materials (2) ; Shoreham , NMV F73854 View Materials (1) ; Flinders , 26 Feb 1977, NMV F74235 View Materials (5) ; 10 Mar 1980, NMV F73830 View Materials (many) ; Port Phillip Bay, Beaumaris, Ricketts Point , 25 Apr 2008, NMV F157402 View Materials (1) ; Cheltenham beach after storm, 20 Jul 1891, NMV F73856 View Materials (6) ; Mordialloc beach, May 1897, NMV F73857 View Materials (4) ; Sandringham , Jul 25 1891, NMV F73858 View Materials (4; no. 60642–5; det. by Joshua 1914; det. as Phyllophorus ventripes by F. W. E. Rowe 1976) ; Kennett River , 29 Dec 1982, NMV F73827 View Materials (2) ; Marengo , 26 Mar 1977, NMV F73850 View Materials (2) ; Portland , MRG, 23 Feb 2007, NMV F125356 View Materials (1).

Tasmania. Bass Strait, Lulworth , 22 Nov 1982, NMV F174904 View Materials (13) ; North Head, mouth of Tamar River , 28 Aug 1978, NMV F97070 View Materials (1).

South Australia. Gulf St Vincent, Willunga Reef, 23 Nov 1976, SAM K2583 View Materials (1) ; Cape Jervis, 3–5 m, 22 Apr 2005, SAM K2590 View Materials (1, PK0296) ; S side of Kangaroo I., Hanson Bay , rocky shallows, 6 Mar 1978, AM J12559 (3) ; Whittlebee Point, 1 Mar 1975, SAM K2591 View Materials (4) ; Baird Bay , 27 Feb 1975, SAM K2596 View Materials (3).

Western Australia, Two Peoples Bay , 5 Dec 1968, WAM Z31964 View Materials (1) ; Cape Naturaliste , 31 Dec 1971, WAM Z31971 View Materials (1) ; Yanchep , 31°33'S 115°41'E, reef flat, 1959, WAM Z8994 View Materials GoogleMaps (1).

Diagnosis. Up to 175 mm long, up to 35 mm diameter (preserved, tentacles withdrawn, largest WAM Z8994), cylindrical body with slight anal taper, thick soft body wall; external anal scales not detected; 20 tentacles, 5 outer pairs large, 5 inner pairs small; complete cover of close tube feet, not contiguous, sometimes more concentrated ventrally than dorsally, diameter about 0.7 mm, radial to scattered tube feet cross introvert; calcareous ring with 10 posterior composite tapering projections arising predominantly from radial plates but sometimes jointly from both radial and inter-radial plates, posterior ends free thin tails comprising small elongate plates, ring not tubular, posterior projections shorter than combined height of plates and anterior projections, form of plates and composite components variable; short stone canal, madreporite multi-lobed, close to vascular ring; up to 5 polian vesicles, variable sizes, frequently one; longitudinal muscles flat, longitudinal indentation along centre of muscle; gonad tubules arise in series along gonoduct on each side of dorsal mesentery, tubules not branched.

Mid-body wall lacking ossicles; tube foot ossicles endplates and support rods and narrow plates only; endplates with denticulate or smooth margin, irregular perforations similar size, endplate diameters up to 480 µ m; endplate support rods and narrow plates straight to curved, larger ossicles perforate and denticulate, up to 200 µ m long; tentacles with rods and rosettes, larger rods branched and denticulate distally, sometimes with small perforations, up to 160 µ m long, rosettes oval to irregular, up to 80 µ m long; peri-oral region with tentacle-like rods and rosettes; introvert with rosettes, fine rods up to 80 µ m long; anal ossicles tube foot endplates and support rods, tentacle-like rods, rosettes, 5 scales with base up to 320 µ m wide and digitiform column up to 360 µ m long, base and column comprising massed short branched rods.

Juveniles. For specimen 20 mm long tentacles 20; for specimen 10 mm long tube feet radial only; for specimen 15 mm long calcareous ring cucumariid-like, lacking posterior projections, not composite; for specimens 7 mm long and smaller, tables present in mid-body wall, discs regular and irregular with frequently 8 perforations, lobed margin, discs typically 72 µ m long, spires with 4 pillars, spires up to 64 µ m long.

Colour (preserved). Body pink-brown, dark brown orally and anally; tube feet off-white; large tentacle branches dark brown, trunks off-white, small tentacles off-white.

Distribution. Southern Australia, from E Victoria, Cape Conran, west to S Western Australia (Yanchep); rocky shallows, 0– 5 m.

Remarks. Cherbonnier 1988 referred five small specimens (up to 20 mm long) from Madagascar to Lipotrapeza ventripes ( Joshua and Creed, 1915) . As noted above and discussed below we make Lipotrapeza ventripes ( Joshua and Creed, 1915) a subjective junior synonym of Phyllostauros vercoi ( Joshua and Creed, 1915) . In his observations Cherbonnier 1988 based his referral of these specimens to Lipotrapeza ventripes on Clark 1938. We judge from their descriptive remarks that both authors are referring to Lipotrapeza vestiens ( Joshua, 1914) . The Madagascar specimens have the diagnostic characters of the presence of tentacle rods, the form of the calcareous ring, presence of tube foot endplates and support rods, and absence of ossicles in the mid-body wall that characterize Lipotrapeza vestiens . But Lipotrapeza vestiens specimens attain a much larger size (up to 175 mm long), have five distinct pairs of inner small tentacles (not two circles of five), do not normally have fewer dorsal than ventral tube feet, and lack the “pseudoplates” referred to by Cherbonnier 1988. We judge that the Madagascar specimens are not Lipotrapeza vestiens . Lipotrapeza vestiens ( Joshua, 1914) is distinguished from the other species of Lipotrapeza in the key (above).

NMV

Museum Victoria

SAM

South African Museum

AM

Australian Museum

WAM

Western Australian Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Echinodermata

Class

Holothuroidea

Order

Dendrochirotida

Family

Phyllophoridae

Genus

Lipotrapeza

Loc

Lipotrapeza vestiens ( Joshua, 1914 )

O’Loughlin, P. Mark, Barmos, Shari & VandenSpiegel, Didier 2012
2012
Loc

Lipotrapeza vestiens

Edgar, G. J. 1997: 369
Rowe, F. W. E. & Gates, J. 1995: 311
Rowe, F. W. E. 1982: 462
Heding, S. G. & Panning, A. 1954: 176
Clark, H. L. 1946: 412
Clark, H. L. 1938: 496
1938
Loc

Phyllophorus vestiens

Joshua, E. C. 1914: 5
1914
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