Berthella cf. caledonica (Risbec, 1928)

Mehrotra, Rahul, A. Caballer Gutierrez, Manuel, M. Scott, Chad, Arnold, Spencer, Monchanin, Coline, Viyakarn, Voranop & Chavanich, Suchana, 2021, An updated inventory of sea slugs from Koh Tao, Thailand, with notes on their ecology and a dramatic biodiversity increase for Thai waters, ZooKeys 1042, pp. 73-188 : 73

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1042.64474

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9CF986D8-6A47-4E17-9A67-245C78FB8AFD

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E00BEE42-6E98-5AC4-BBEF-C83E1EF427A7

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Berthella cf. caledonica (Risbec, 1928)
status

 

* Berthella cf. caledonica (Risbec, 1928) Figure 8J View Figure 8

Material examined.

Three specimens 10-15 mm, TW.

Ecology.

Under coral rubble in shallow coral reef habitats. Depth 6-8 m.

Distribution.

Berthella caledonica is known from New Caledonia ( Risbec 1928), Mariana Islands ( Carlson and Hoff 2003), Hawaii ( Johnson 2002a), Marshall Islands ( Johnson 2002b), Australia ( Cobb 2009), and Japan ( Bolland 2002).

Remarks.

Overall colour variable from pink to light or dark brown, with numerous small, low tubercles across the dorsal surface, often surrounded by a brown ring, and with dark brown apices. A prominent brown mark surrounded by a diffuse ring of translucent white is located centrally on the dorsal surface. While specimens from Koh Tao resemble the description of Berthella caledonica (Risbec, 1928) rather well, records of Berthella africana (Pruvot-Fol, 1956) have also been made from Thailand, with an unclear locality ( Nabhitabhata 2009). Both species share external similarities, in particular the presence of a brown spot or ‘hole’ found centrally on the dorsum, and the need for clarification between both species has been noted ( Gosliner et al. 2008; Rudman 2009b). The present species is most similar to Berthella sp. 1 of Gosliner et al. (2018). With the Gulf of Thailand being distant from the type localities of both species (Morocco for B. africana and New Caledonia for B. caledonica ), and the Pacific range currently known for B. caledonica , the present species is treated as potentially distinct until such a time as closer examinations can be made.