Psolus thandari, Martins & Tavares, 2019

Martins, Luciana & Tavares, Marcos, 2019, Two new species of Psolus Oken from Brazil (Holothuroidea: Psolidae), with neotype designation and redescription of Psolus vitoriae Tommasi, 1971, and a key to the southwestern Atlantic and Magellanic species, Zootaxa 4563 (3), pp. 531-546 : 538-542

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4563.3.7

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2CDCC248-043B-4E47-8F2F-78CE91702EB2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5933838

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7B520279-FF8E-4F12-31F1-28C2C260A09C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Psolus thandari
status

sp. nov.

Psolus thandari sp. nov.

( Figs. 5–6 View FIGURE 5 View FIGURE 6 ; Table1)

Type material. Holotype, 5.7 mm ( MZUSP 593 View Materials ), Campos Basin , southeastern Brazil, 21°41’S, 40°20’W, Campos Basin Monitoring Program coll., xii.1991 to i.1992, 44 m. GoogleMaps Paratypes: same data as the holotype, 3 spms 4.5–5 mm ( MZUSP 1634 View Materials ) GoogleMaps .

Type locality. Campos Basin , southeastern Brazil, 21°41’S, 40°20’W, 44m. GoogleMaps

Distribution. Known only from the type locality.

Etymology. This species is named in honour of Prof. Ahmed Thandar, in recognition for his dedication and contributions to the taxonomy of Holothuroidea.

Diagnosis. Body elongate, low profile. Dorsum covered by multi-layered imbricating scales adorned with granules on their surface. Mouth surrounded by five to seven, triangular valves of equal size, anus surrounded by variable number of small, irregular valves not distinctive between anus and body. Calcareous ring notched only in the radial plates. Ventrolateral ambulacra with two rows each of podia in each. Dorsum with knobbed, perforated plates. Venter with knobbed as well as smooth, perforated plates. Tube feet with knobbed, perforated rods and end plate.

Description. Body elongate, of low profile, 4.5–5.7 mm long up to 2.5–2.7 mm wide ( Fig. 5A View FIGURE 5 ). Mouth surrounded by five to seven triangular valves of equal size and anus surrounded by a variable number of small and irregular valves that intergrade with surrounding scales ( Fig. 5A, B View FIGURE 5 ). Oral teeth lacking. Demarcation between body wall scales and oral valves distinct. Anal valves and surrounding scales poorly demarcated ( Fig. 5A View FIGURE 5 ). Dorsum with conspicuous, imbricating scales, covered with granules ( Fig. 5A View FIGURE 5 ; 6A, B View FIGURE 6 ) on their surface; lacking tube feet. Marginal dorsolateral scales of the same size as dorsal scales. Sole thin, lacking scales, tube feet restricted to ventrolateral ambulacres, arranged into two longitudinal rows with inner row of large tube feet and outer series of smaller tube feet ( Fig. 5C View FIGURE 5 ); mid-ventral rows of tube feet absent. Polian vesicles not observed. Ten dendritic tentacles, eight large and two small ventrally. Calcareous ring simple, lacking posterior processes, radial plate notched, interradial plate not notched ( Fig. 5D View FIGURE 5 ). Dorsum with multi-perforated, knobbed plates, with small, round holes 5–20 µm in diameter, with undulating margins and irregular in outline (90–160 µm long) ( Fig. 6C View FIGURE 6 ). Sole with similar plates ( Fig. 6D, E View FIGURE 6 ), and smooth, perforated plates, with undulating margins and irregular in outline (90–110 µm long) ( Fig. 6F View FIGURE 6 ). Tube feet with curved, perforated rods, knobbed margins (100–260 µm long) ( Fig. 6G, H View FIGURE 6 ), and end plate (100–120 µm long). ( Fig. 6I View FIGURE 6 ).

Remarks. Psolus thandari sp. nov. differs from P. vitoriae , P. antarcticus and P. patagonicus in having 6–7 oral valves instead of 5 oral valves, and in having several, inconspicuous anal valves instead of 5 conspicuous anal valves. Psolus thandari sp. nov. can be separated from P. segregratus and P. murrayi in lacking mid-ventral tube feet, present in these latter species. The new species differs from P. lawrencei in having knobbed perforated plates in the body wall, instead of cups as in P. lawrencei . It can be distinguished from P. tommasi sp. nov. by its tuberculate instead of smooth dorsal scales.

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