Eudistoma magalhaensis ( Michaelsen, 1907 )

Sanamyan, Karen & Schories, Dirk, 2007, Redescription of Eudistoma magalhaensis (Michaelsen, 1907) (Ascidiacea) from Guaitecas Islands, Chile, Zootaxa 1514, pp. 65-68 : 65-68

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.177272

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6243399

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6B291147-9657-8108-FF31-FB3FFB94FD21

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Eudistoma magalhaensis ( Michaelsen, 1907 )
status

 

Eudistoma magalhaensis ( Michaelsen, 1907)

( Figures 1 View FIGURE 1 , 2 View FIGURE 2 )

Paessleria magalhaensis Michaelsen, 1907: 69 .

Polycitor magalhaensis: Van Name, 1945: 132 and synonymy (only where it refers to the type material). Sigillina (Paessleria) magalhaensis: Kott, 1969: 39 .

Material examined: Chile, Guaitecas Islands ( KBPIG 1316, 1317). Melinka, island in front of Falso Faro ( KBPIG 1313, 1315); old landing stage, in front of the town ( KBPIG 1314). Several specimens in each lot. The specimens were collected in 2004 and 2005 by scuba diving at 5–8 m depth by D. Schories. They are deposited in the Kamchatka Branch of the Pacific Institute of Geography ( KBPIG).

Description. The colonies consist of one to several small (about 1 cm diameter), rounded, semitransparent heads on short cylindrical stalks (0.5–1.5 cm long, 0.5 cm diameter) arising from common basal test. The stalked heads are unevenly distributed on the basal test (figure 2B) and are never crowded. The heads are clear and soft, and are clearly demarcated from the supporting stalks by their greater diameter and the softer consistency of the test. This demarcation is especially evident between heads and stalks in living specimens with inflated heads, but can also be seen in preserved specimens. The stalks and basal tunic are firm and opaque and usually are covered by fine sediment, sparse sand grains and epibionts. Inner layers of the test may contain scattered minute sand grains but generally are free from embedded matter. The largest colony photographed in situ is about 10 cm in maximum extent, although preserved specimens are fragments less than 2–3 cm long (figure 2A). Both living and preserved specimens are almost colourless, with a slight yellowish tint. Pigment granules were not detected in test, zooids or larvae. In preserved material contracted zooids are mostly located in the heads of the colony, and only occasionally abdomina extend down the stalk. Zooids are parallel to each other and open on the upper surface of the heads. Occasionally atrial siphons of two or three zooids open close to each other forming a rudimentary system, but generally these systems were not detected, and may not always be present.

Preserved zooids are strongly contracted, 3.5–5.5mm long. Atrial and branchial siphons are prominent, muscular, with six-lobed margins around each aperture. Longitudinal muscles are in 10–12 separate, well spaced narrow bands on each side of the thorax. These converge to form a wide band along each side of the mid-ventral line of the abdomen to the posterior end of the zooid. Numerous transverse thoracic muscles are much thinner than the longitudinal muscles and are discernible only after staining. Branchial tentacles are relatively numerous (about 20) and are arranged in three distinct circles. Stigmata are in three rows, the anterior row is straight at its dorsal end (not curved anteriorly as in some other species). About 12–14 stigmata are in each half row, but these were counted only in a few less contracted zooids. The esophagus is long, as is characteristic of Eudistoma . A small slightly asymmetrical stomach is at the posterior end of the abdomen, its wall generally is smooth or it has shallow, irregular, longitudinal creases that appear to be a result of contraction or collapse. An oval posterior stomach and mid-intestine were observed in some zooids. Neither gastric vesicle nor pyloric gland were detected. Large oval male follicles fill the posterior end of the abdomen, about 15 being counted in one zooid. Some zooids have one or two large embryos or larvae in the atrial cavity. Larvae are large, the trunk being 0.75–0.85 mm long. Three adhesive organs are in the antero-median line. They have thick short stalks and wide platforms of numerous closely packed columnar cells in shallow epidermal cups. Adhesive organs alternate with three thick-walled median ampullae. Also one shallow lateral ampulla sometimes is discernible.

Remarks. This is the first record of this species since it was described originally 100 years ago. Originally it was described from the Strait of Magellan and the present record from Guaitecas Islands is several degrees to the north of the type locality. However, many common species known from the Strait of Magellan are often present in material collected by SCUBA diving in the Guaitecas Islands and even further to the north e.g. Aplidium variabile ( Herdman, 1886), A. fuegiense Cunningham, 1871, Sycozoa sigillinoides ( Lesson, 1830) , Trididemnum auriculatum Michaelsen, 1919 , Didemnum studeri Hartmeyer, 1911 and Paramolgula gregaria ( Lesson, 1830) . Eudistoma magalhaensis is relatively rare, only few colonies having been found among the numerous ascidians collected in this region.

The present material corresponds well with the original description. Michaelsen's (1907) figures 1 and 2 (taf.1) represent a single cormidium, not a whole colony. Longitudinal stomach folds described and figured by Michaelsen (1907, taf.3, fig. 12) are seen to be artefacts of fixation, the stomach in this species being smooth, as is characteristic of Eudistoma .

Originally described as a type species of the genus Paessleria Michaelsen 1907 , this species then was variously assigned to Polycitor , Sigillina (see synonymy) or Eudistoma (see Kott, 1990: 192). The present material confirms it as congeneric with species of Eudistoma and that Paessleria and Eudistoma are synonyms. A proposal that precedence be given over Paessleria Michaelsen, 1907 to Eudistoma Caullery, 1909 was accepted by the International Commission for Zoological Nomenclature which ruled that the name Eudistoma Caullery, 1909 be given precedence over Paessleria Michaelsen, 1907 whenever the two names are considered to be synonyms ( Tubbs 1997).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Ascidiacea

Order

Enterogona

Family

Polycitoridae

Genus

Eudistoma

Loc

Eudistoma magalhaensis ( Michaelsen, 1907 )

Sanamyan, Karen & Schories, Dirk 2007
2007
Loc

Polycitor magalhaensis:

Kott 1969: 39
Van 1945: 132
1945
Loc

Paessleria magalhaensis

Michaelsen 1907: 69
1907
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