Psolidium berentsae, O’Loughlin & Ahearn, 2008

O’Loughlin, P. Mark & Ahearn, Cynthia, 2008, Australian species of Psolidium Ludwig (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea: Psolidae), Memoirs of Museum Victoria 65, pp. 1-22 : 13

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.24199/j.mmv.2008.65.2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8070628

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FC87C9-5614-FFAE-A2B2-FF1AFB2FF70D

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Psolidium berentsae
status

sp. nov.

Psolidium berentsae View in CoL sp. nov.

Table 1 View Table 1 , Figures 2a View Figure 2 , 5a–c View Figure 5

Material examined. Holotype: Queensland, Lizard I., off western side of Palfrey I., washings from coral blocks, 14°40'S 145°28'E, 6 m, P. B. Berents and P. A. Hutchings, 12 Jan 1976, stn 76 LIZ 16B, AM J24098 View Materials . GoogleMaps

Paratypes: type locality and date, J24099 View Materials (2); type locality and date, stn 76 LIZ 16A, J24100 View Materials (1).

Other material (up to 6 mm long; no cups detected): Chinamans Head, washings from coral blocks, 14°36'S 145°37'E, 6 m, P. A. Hutchings and P. B. Weate, 10 Jan 1976 GoogleMaps , stn 76 LIZ 15, J24101 View Materials (1); off Chinamans Head , reef rock, 14°40'S 145°28'E, 7 m, P. A. Hutchings and P. B. Weate, 27 May 1976 GoogleMaps , stn 76 LIZ B-00-03-3, J24102 View Materials (1); No Name Reef , southwest end, rubble from base of bommie, 14°40'S 145°39'E, 15 m, I. Loch, 19 Dec 1984, J24106 View Materials (1). GoogleMaps

Other material (up to 11 mm long; no ossicles; presumably initial formalin preservation): Lizard I, off Chinamans Beach, coral block, 14°40'S 145°28'E, 7 m, P. A. Hutchings, Apr 1978, stn D15-27-1, J24104 View Materials (1); Outer Yonge Reef, 14°37'S 145°38'E, 18 m, P. A. Hutchings, 15 Jan 1977, stn 77 LIZ 47-4, J24105 View Materials (3).

Description. Psolidium species up to 12 mm long (preserved); body rounded in transverse section ventrally; dorsal and lateral scales thick, up to 1.3 mm wide; oral, anal and mid-body scales frequently tapering to projecting, bluntly pointed distal end, body surface very uneven.

Sole with peripheral band of tube feet, outer single series of slightly smaller tube feet, inner series 2 wide; mid-ventral radial series 2 wide; sole not discrete in very small specimens (4-6 mm long), small scales conspicuous.

Dorsal and lateral ossicles: multi-layered ossicles (scales), thick, with tube foot canals; buttons numerous, perforated, thick, irregularly oval, thickly knobbed, up to 176 μ m long, up to 12 perforations, intergrade with multi-layered ossicles; in larger specimens (12 mm long) cups numerous, deeply cupped, thick cruciform base, rim bluntly spinous, cups sometimes “bridged” with transverse branches from rim joined, cups 56–96 μ m long; in small specimens (4–6 mm long) numerous thin cupped crosses and cups, with elongate pointed spines on rim, cups up to 80 μ m long; rosettes numerous in larger specimens, densely branched, irregularly oval in form, up to 56 μ m long.

Sole ossicles: numerous knobbed plates, elongate, irregular in shape, large marginal and surface knobs, 3-12 perforations, up to 240 μ m long; rare smooth elongate, perforated plates, up to 240 μ m long.

Tentacle ossicles include abundant rosettes, densely branched, up to 40 μ m long.

Colour (preserved). Dorsal and lateral dark to pale brown, sometimes with brown flecking; sole off-white; tentacle trunks brown, dendritic branches off-white; introvert off-white.

Distribution. Queensland, Lizard I, 14°36'– 14°40'S 145°28'– 145°39'E, coral rocks and rubble; 6– 18 m.

Etymology. Named for Dr Penny Berents (Scientific Officer, Marine Invertebrates, Australian Museum), with appreciation of her contribution to Australian marine invertebrate research, and with gratitude for her gracious assistance with loans and research in the Australian Museum.

Remarks. Some of the paratype specimens are small, 4 mm long ( J24099 View Materials (2)). In this material the cups and cupped crosses are much finer than in the larger type material. This is judged to be a developmental difference. Some of the non-type specimens assigned to the new species are small, with specimen lengths 4 mm ( J24101 View Materials ), 5 mm ( J24102 View Materials ) and 6 mm ( J24106 View Materials ). No cups or cupped crosses were detected, and this was judged to be a sampling inadequacy for this very small material, since fine cups and cupped crosses were found in 4 mm long paratype. The specimens have the same appearance as the types, and are from the type locality and eco-niche. Further collecting and study might reveal the presence of an additional species.Other additional material judged to be P. berentsae sp. nov. has the body form and scale outlines of the species, but lacks calcareous material.The preservation history presumably included time in acidic formalin solution. Specimen lengths are 5 mm ( J24104 View Materials ) up to 11 mm ( J24105 View Materials ). A rounded ventrum, absence of discrete sole and presence of conspicuous scalesventrallyappeartobejuveniledevelopmentalcharacteristics. The distinguishing characters of P. berentsae sp. nov. are the tapered body scales, rounded ventrum, fine cups with long pointed spines in small specimens, and thick cups with blunt spines and sometimes “bridges” in large specimens.

AM

Australian Museum

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