Pyura curvigona, Tokioka, 1950

Monniot, Françoise, 2009, Some ascidians from Indonesian marine lakes (Raja Ampat Islands, West Papua), Zootaxa 2106, pp. 13-40 : 33-35

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.274849

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4690215

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/59092776-8A61-9938-6BE3-89C5FE6FFD0E

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Plazi (2016-04-19 13:51:20, last updated 2023-10-30 01:21:46)

scientific name

Pyura curvigona
status

 

Pyura curvigona ? Tokioka, 1950

( Figures 15 View FIGURE 15. A B, 16, 17)

Pyura curvigona Tokioka, 1950: 147 , fig. 23, pl.10 figs 4–6; 1967: 199, figs 88–89; Tokioka & Nishikawa, 1975: 339, figs 37–40; Millar, 1975:312; Kott, 1985:296, figs 143a–b, 144. Cole & Vorontsova, 1998: 4, fig. 3.

Material. Indonesia. West Papua, Gam Island,, NW. Gam Island, Danau Ctenophore marine lake, 00°27.289’S – 130°29.580’E, 1m, 26/X/2007, coll. L.J. Bell and L.E. Martin, DCG 0 35 ( MNHN S2 PYU 433).

Information supplied by the collector indicate that specimens settled in exposed locations are red, those under overhangs are pale. Both specimens studied here are brown, 55mm and 35mm in size. The apertures are iridescent ( Fig. 15 View FIGURE 15. A B), densely covered with long spinules which have an enlarged round base ( Figs 16 View FIGURE 16 A,B).These spinules constitute one of the main characteristics of the species with the wide rectum. The internal organs ( Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 A,B) are those reported in previous descriptions: poorly ramified oral tentacles, 6 branchial folds ( Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 B), a long digestive loop with an enlarged rectum and endocarps in a row along its whole external side. The liver has small digitate lobes at the cardiac side of the stomach and a cauliflower massive lobe at the pyloric end. The gonads are curved ( Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 A) and each lobe wears several endocarps. The heart is long and wide. In the smallest specimen only 4 small endocarps are spaced along the ventral side of the heart, and look like dermato-branchial bridges, but in the largest specimen the endocarps are well developed and form a continuous line along the heart ( Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 A). No other endocarps were detected elsewhere on the body wall. The latter structure is similar to that described and figured for Pyura gangelion ( Savigny, 1816) by Monniot C. (2001) and its junior synonym Pyura albanyensis Michaelsen, 1927 described by Monniot C. (1989), but they have different spinules.

The spinule shape and the enlarged rectum in a Pyura with 6 branchial folds indicate these specimens as P. curvigona , but the presence of endocarps on the heart is disturbing as they have not been reported before. As they are few and hardly visible in one specimen, it is possible that they have been previously overlooked or their presence variable.

Monniot, C., Monniot, F., Griffiths, C. L. & Schleyer, M. (2001) South African Ascidians. Annals of the South African Museum, 108 (1), 1 - 141.

Monniot, C. (1989) Ascidies de Nouvelle Caledonie VI. Pyuridae et Molgulidae. Bulletin du Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, (4) 11 A (3), 475 - 507.

Cole, L. & Vorontsova, M. (1998) Species of Pyuridae (Ascidiacea) from South Vietnam. Bulletin of Marine Science, 62 (1), 1 - 6.

Kott, P. (1985) The Australian Ascidiacea. Part 1. Phlebobranchiata and Stolidobranchiata. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 23, 1 - 440.

Michaelsen, W. (1927) Einige neue westaustraliche ptychobranchiate Ascidien. Zoologische Anzeiger, 71, 193 - 203.

Millar, R. H. (1975) Ascidians from the Indo-west-Pacific region in the Zoological Museum, Copenhagen (Tunicata, Ascidiacea). Steenstrupia, 3, 205 - 336.

Yokioka, T. & Nishikawa, T. (1975) Contributions to the Japanese ascidian fauna XXVII. Some ascidians from Okinawa with notes on a small collection from Hong-Kong. Publications of the Seto Marine Biological Laboratory, 22 (5), 323 - 341.

Savigny, J. C. (1816) Memoires sur les animaux sans vertebres, Paris 1816, 2, 1 - 239.

Tokioka, T. (1950) Ascidians from the Palao Islands. I. Publications of the Seto Marine Biological Laboratory, 1 (3), 115 - 150.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 16. Pyura curvigona? spinules of the internal side of the siphons: A, with SEM, B, in light microscopy. A, B, scale bar = 100 µm.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 17. Pyura curvigona?: A, Body opened along the ventral line; B, branchial sac.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 15. A, Polycarpa insulsa. B, Pyura curvigona?

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Ascidiacea

Order

Pleurogona

Family

Pyuridae

Genus

Pyura