Afrocucumis africana ( Semper, 1867 )

Shaikh, Iqra, Ali, Qadeer Mohammad, Thandar, Ahmed & Ahmed, Quratulan, 2023, Afrocucumis africana (Semper, 1867) (Holothuroidea: Dendrochirotida: Cladolabidae), new addition to the holothuroid fauna of Pakistan, Zootaxa 5343 (1), pp. 74-82 : 75-80

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5343.1.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0E0B7D60-5878-49AB-8F15-708AFA464FA2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8326528

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2E21CF1D-CE27-FF9C-FF63-FA65FB9FFC9F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Afrocucumis africana ( Semper, 1867 )
status

 

Afrocucumis africana ( Semper, 1867) View in CoL View at ENA

( Figures 2 View FIGURE 2 & 3 View FIGURE 3 )

Cucumaria africana Semper, 1867: 53 , 270, pI. 15, fig. 16; Théel, 1886: 108; Ludwig, 1887: 1236.

Pseudocucumis africana Ludwig, 1888: 815 View in CoL ; Lampert, 1896: 61; Sluiter, 1901:107; Mitsukuri, 1912: 257, text-fig. 52, pI. 8, fig. 66; H.L. Clark, 1923: 417.

Phyllophorus transvectus Sluiter, 1914: 19 , fig. 7a, b.

? Orcula cucumiformis Semper, 1867: 244 View in CoL , 274, pI. 40, figs. 8,9.

Cucumaria assimilis Bell, 1886: 27 View in CoL ; Ludwig, 1899: 56l.

Pseudo cucumistheeli Ludwig, 1887: 1236 ,. pl. 15, figs. 12–16.

Discucumaria africana H.L. Clark, 1946: 404 .

Afrocucumis africana Deichmann, 1944: 736 View in CoL ; 1948: 358; Heding and Panning, 1954: 109, text fig. 39; Clark and Rowe, 1971: 182 (dist.), text fig. 95g, pI. 30, fig. 3; Rowe and Doty, 1977: 226, fig. 2a.

Thandar, 1989: 298, text fig. 5, 9d; 2022: 69. Fig. 15; Kerr, 1994: 171; Marsh, 1994: 11; Rowe & Gates, 1995: 321; Massin,1996: 39, text fig. 27, A–E; Liao, 1997: 179, text fig. 104, a–b; Massin, 1999: 96, text fig. 79, 113c; Samyn & Vanden Berghe: 2000, 5, 18, 32; Samyn, 2003: 180, 194, text fig. 1A–C, 51A; Teo, 2010: 65, text figs. 1–4; Purwati & Wirawati, 2012: 244, fig. 10, 11 A–E; Ong, 2016: 297, text figs. 4A, 22.

? Afrocucumis stracki Massin, 1996: 40 View in CoL , plate 28, figs. A–J.

Diagnosis (after Semper 1867, Thandar 2022, amended herein). A small species of Afrocucumis , reaching a length of just over 40 mm; colour in life reddish-violet, dull brown in alcohol. Tentacles in 2(?3) circles. Posterior radial processes of calcareous ring short, broken into three pieces. Ossicles in the form of thick, discoidal, lenticular plates with tiny, often occluded, holes and pyramidal knobs or low spines on surface. Sometimes with rosette-like miliary granules in body wall and/or tube feet.

Remarks. The above diagnosis is a taken from Semper (1867) and Thandar (2022) with slight amendation to include the sometimes presence of rosette-shaped granules in the body wall and/or tube feet. Both authors mention a single polian vesicle and stone canal, in contrast to Heding& Panning (1954) who state that there are numerous polian vesicles and stone canals. Whether these are intraspecific or geographic variations is unknown as the holotype came from Querimba, while Thandar’s (1990, 2022) specimens came from the east coast of southern Africa and those Heding & Panning (1954) from Bowen, Australia. Orcula cucumiformis Semper, 1867 from Zanzibar was synonymized with A. africana by Heding & Panning (1954) while Massin’s (1996) A. stracki from Ambon, Indonesia, is here also synonymized with A. africana , both with a query. In view of this and the number of synonyms this species needs to be thoroughly re-examined based on materials from different parts of the world.

Material examined. Gariyan Beach , Jiwani Makran Coast, Balochistan, Pakistan. (25º01’57’’N, 61º46’38’’E), collectors Dr. Qadeer Mohammad Ali, Iqra Shaikh and Ateeqa Baloch, 2nd December 2021, 2 specimens, intertidal zone, shallow water (cat no. MRCC-Holo 25) GoogleMaps .

Description. Length and weight of preserved specimens 35 mm x 2 g and 40 mm x 2. 3 g. Live coloration dark purplish-black; preserved specimens turn black within 24 hrs. Body wall leathery, cylindrical, slightly rough to the touch; body tapering a little at each end. Mouth and anus terminal. Body wall thick (ca. 2.0 mm). Mouth surrounded by two circles of tentacles, an outer ring of 15 very bushy tentacles and an inner ring of 5 small tentacles. Anal teeth absent. Podia long, large, arranged in two rows along each radius.

Calcareous ring elongated; interradial plates pointed or tapering anteriorly; radial plates sub-rectangular, enlarged basally; radial processes of calcareous ring fragmented into three pieces. Single free stone canal (5 mm long); madreporite (1.3 mm), slightly wider and clearly distinguishable from stone canal ( Figure 3F View FIGURE 3 ). Gonad yellowish, immature, tubules unbranched, in two tufts.

Ossicles. The large lenticular plates with pyramidal knobs/spines, described by all authors for this species, were not observed perhaps due to the juvenility of the specimens or they were affected by formaldehyde after first preservation. Such ossicles are stated to measure 246–324 µm across. However, their supposed precursors, found in our material, measured only 150–200 µm in diameter ( Figure 2A View FIGURE 2 and 3C & D View FIGURE 3 ) but are here suspected to develop into the characteristic large lenticular plates. Introvert ossicles ( Figure 2B View FIGURE 2 and 3E View FIGURE 3 ) appear as elongated straight or curved rods with 1–4 holes at each end. Tube feet deposits appear as straight or slightly curved rods (165–195 µm long) ( Figure 2F View FIGURE 2 , 3C View FIGURE 3 ), multilocular at their ends but with one or more lateral projections). Tentacle ossicles ( Figure 2G View FIGURE 2 . 3D View FIGURE 3 ), comprise straight rods, 155–285 µm long, also perforated at their extremities.

Distribution. Afrocucumis africana is among the most common dendrochiotid holothuroids in the shallow tropical-sub tropical waters of the Indo-West Pacific region but can reach a depth of 200 according to Rowe & Gates (1995). Its distribution is well documented by Clark & Rowe (1971) and Massin (1996). Rowe & Doty (1977) reported it from ( Guam, Micronesia); Rowe & Gates from various localities in Australia; Marsh & Morrison (2004) from Western Australia; Samyn et al. (2006) from East Africa; Liao (1997) from China; Massin (1999) from south-west Sulawesi, Indonesia, and Thandar (1989, 2022) from southern Africa. The synonymy given above indicates there are many other records.

Habitat. The specimens were taken from the intertidal zone, from under rock crevices but hardly attached to rocks.

Remarks. We compared our specimen with those diagnosed and illustrated by Thandar (1989, 2022), Massin (1996) and Samyn et al., (2006). Massin (1996) described the morphological features and taxonomic characters of A. africana as uniform grey-black; body wall with large (246–324 µm) lenticular, perforated plates covered with prominent pyramidal teeth. We suspect such plates are derived from small knobbed perforated plates which we illustrate in Figure 2C View FIGURE 2 . According to Massin (1996) the tube feet are strengthened by straight rods perforated at their extremities (see Figure 2F View FIGURE 2 ). The tentacles are provided with straight rods, 155–285 µm long, also perforated at their extremities ( Figure 2 G View FIGURE 2 ). Thandar (1989) described his specimen as reddish-violet in life and dull brown in alcohol, the radial processes of the calcareous ring are broken into three segments, but one of the ventral radial plate in juvenile was fragmented transversely into two pieces, “probably an artifact or an abnormal development”. Smooth, simple, multilocular plates, common in the smaller individual (17 mm), are perhaps precursors of the large lenticular plates (144 µm -213 µm) of adults. Samyn et al. (2006) described their specimen as dark brown to nearly black, with darker podia and the typical body wall ossicles, which were large plates with diameter ranging from (100 to 290 μm) and appeared to be thick, nodular, convex, perforated, lens-like deposits; the podial deposits appear as small, multi-perforated plates and rods with terminal perforations; tentacles rods are perforated at the ends.

In our specimens the large lenticular plates with pyramidal knobs, mentioned by other workers, were not observed but the other plates are similar to those illustrated by Massin (1996) and others. The rods of the tube feet of our specimens are perforated at the ends and appear similar to those illustrated by Thandar (1989), Massin (1996) and Samyn et al. (2006). Tentacle rods are also perforated at the ends and are similar to those illustrated by Thandar (1989) and Massin (1996). The differences between our materials and that described by other workers are perhaps age-related or geographic or intraspecific variation. Interestingly Massin (1996) describes a similar species which he called Afrocucumis stracki , from Indonesia, differing from A. africana in the presence of miliary granules (which, in his illustration, appear as mulberry-like rosettes) in the tube feet; rods that are multilocular at the ends, and posterior radial processes undivided, perhaps indicating some speciation in the Indonesian region. However, on closer look we see that such granules have also been described in the tube feet of Orcula cucumiformiis by Semper himself, long regarded as a synonym of Afrocucumis africana . Whether these species are separate or not can only be determined if Semper’s A. africana from Querimba and O. cucumiformis from Australia, are re-examined. Hence, both these species are here indicated with a query (?) under the synonymy of A. africana .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Echinodermata

Class

Holothuroidea

Order

Dendrochirotida

Family

Sclerodactylidae

Genus

Afrocucumis

Loc

Afrocucumis africana ( Semper, 1867 )

Shaikh, Iqra, Ali, Qadeer Mohammad, Thandar, Ahmed & Ahmed, Quratulan 2023
2023
Loc

Afrocucumis stracki

Massin, C. 1996: 40
1996
Loc

Afrocucumis africana

Rowe, F. W. E. & Doty, J. E. 1977: 226
Clark, A. M. & Rowe, F. W. E. 1971: 182
Heding, S. G. & Panning, A. 1954: 109
Deichmann, E. 1948: 358
Deichmann, E. 1944: 736
1944
Loc

Phyllophorus transvectus

Sluiter, C. P. 1914: 19
1914
Loc

Pseudocucumis africana

Clark, H. L. 1923: 417
Mitsukuri, K. 1912: 257
Lampert, K. 1896: 61
Ludwig, H. 1888: 815
1888
Loc

Pseudo cucumistheeli

Ludwig, H. 1887: 1236
1887
Loc

Cucumaria assimilis

Bell, F. J. 1886: 27
1886
Loc

Cucumaria africana

Ludwig, H. 1887: 1236
Theel, H. 1886: 108
Semper, C. 1867: 53
1867
Loc

Orcula cucumiformis

Semper, C. 1867: 244
1867
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