Phallusia caguayensis ( Millar & Goodbody, 1974 )

Monniot, Françoise, 2018, Ascidians collected during the Madibenthos expedition in Martinique: 1 - Phlebobranchia, Zootaxa 4387 (3), pp. 451-472 : 462-465

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4387.3.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F0845057-D918-4693-8D80-E94E6CA6EE8C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5967761

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D9A066-FFF1-FFB7-F2C1-1B77FC65FDAD

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Phallusia caguayensis ( Millar & Goodbody, 1974 )
status

 

Phallusia caguayensis ( Millar & Goodbody, 1974)

Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11

Station: AM 0 1 (MNHN P5 PHA 125).

The single specimen is oval, 2cm long, with an apical oral siphon and an atrial siphon at mid length of the body. It is covered with thin tunic filaments and sand particles ( Fig. 11A View FIGURE 11 ). Out of the tunic the body is colourless except a faint yellow ring at the siphons which has quickly disappeared in formalin. The oral siphon has 10 round lobes, the atrial 6 lobes with orange ocelli between the lobes. The body wall has a much reduced musculature ( Fig.11 B View FIGURE 11 ). Only on the siphons there are thin short longitudinal fibres and a few circular ones at the tentacular level; while on the remaining body wall, a well delimited field of thick short transverse muscles occupies a part of the dorsal side. The fibres all stop at the same level making an elongated lozenge design from the neural ganglion, under the siphon aperture and down to the body posterior end ( Fig. 11B View FIGURE 11 ). There is no other musculature. There are more than a hundred crowded oral tentacles of about equal size are crowded on a rod ( Fig. 11C View FIGURE 11 ). The prepharyngeal groove is separated from the tentacles by a wide prepharyngeal area without papillae ( Fig.11C View FIGURE 11 ). The neural ganglion is close to the atrial aperture, covered by the neural gland. The neural duct opens by very numerous holes along its whole length and ends anteriorly by a small dorsal tubercle ( Fig. 11C View FIGURE 11 ).

The dorsal lamina begins with two blades which unite in a single rolled high blade with a smooth rim. The dorsal lamina overpasses the oesophagus on the left and reaches the branchial sac bottom. The branchial tissue ( Fig 11D View FIGURE 11 ) is flat with numerous longitudinal vessels. Five to 7 stigmata were counted in a mesh. There are spoon like papillae at the crossing of the longitudinal and transverse vessels; a tiny intermediate papillae is present between them ( Fig.11D View FIGURE 11 ).

The digestive tract occupies a large part of the left body side but does not reach the posterior body end ( Fig.11 B View FIGURE 11 ). After a narrow oesophagus the stomach has a few irregular internal folds. The primary gut loop is narrow. The descending intestinal limb is distended by faecal material and makes a closed secondary loop. The anus is damaged.

The ovary is ramified over the primary intestinal loop. The testis vesicles are mixed with the ovary lobes. The gonoducts are alongside the rectum.

All anatomical characters correspond to the original description but the new specimen is smaller. The peculiar design of the body wall musculature and the sand coated tunic isolate this species from all other Phallusia .

P. caguayensis is recollected here for the first time near the type region.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Ascidiacea

Order

Enterogona

Family

Ascidiidae

Genus

Phallusia

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