Scoliorhapis biopearli, O’Loughlin & VandenSpiegel, 2010

O’Loughlin, P. Mark & VandenSpiegel, Didier, 2010, A revision of Antarctic and some Indo-Pacific apodid sea cucumbers (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea: Apodida), Memoirs of Museum Victoria 67, pp. 61-95 : 78

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.24199/j.mmv.2010.67.06

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5A8C650E-A34A-4072-A797-0A75D218DD7C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12212338

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/365B627F-FF9C-FFC6-FF64-58CBFD115F45

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Scoliorhapis biopearli
status

sp. nov.

Scoliorhapis biopearli View in CoL sp. nov.

Figure 1c View Figure 1 ; tables 2, 3

Material examined. Holotype. South Shetland Is, 61.61°S 51.22°W, 1544 m, BAS stn EI–EBS–1, NMV F168633 About NMV . GoogleMaps

Diagnosis. Conical form, widest orally, tapered anally, dorsal projecting over ventral orally, 6 mm long; 10 tentacles, number of digits not evident; tentacle ossicles curved bracket-shaped rods with bluntly spinous distal outer edges, 112–120 µ m long; body wall ossicles sigmoid hooks only, in close transverse alignment, not clustered, hooks 168–184 µ m long.

Colour (preserved). White to translucent.

Distribution. South Shetland Is, 1544 m.

Etymology. Named for the British Antarctic Survey BIOPEARL expedition that collected and documented this specimen.

Remarks. This species is erected for a single, small BAS BIOPEARL specimen with tentacle and body wall ossicles that are eroded but retain distinguishable form and size. The presence of hooks only, and not wheels, in the body wall distinguishes this apodid specimen as a species of Scoliorhapis Clark. The distinctive presence of 10 tentacles distinguishes this species from the second new species of Soliorhapis Clark from Antarctica described below. Scoliorhapis biopearli sp. nov. is distinguished from the type species Scoliorhapis theeli (Heding) from eastern Australia by the larger size of the hooks (see Table 3) and transverse arrangement of the hooks in the body wall, and the spinous ends of the bracket-shaped tentacle ossicles.

BAS

Bulgarian Academy of Science

NMV

Museum Victoria

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