Thyone vilis ( Sluiter, 1901 )

Thandar, Ahmed S., 2021, Nomenclatural changes in some sea cucumbers with the erection of a new genus and description of a Thyone? juvenile (? n. sp.) from the Gulf of California (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea: Dendrochirotida), Zootaxa 5026 (4), pp. 507-526 : 519

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5026.4.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A3AA106D-527A-4934-953C-C2EA746659FE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5307841

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DC1543-FF96-4A00-FF08-FF0EFB64F96F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Thyone vilis ( Sluiter, 1901 )
status

 

Thyone vilis ( Sluiter, 1901)

Figures 8 View FIGURE 8 & 9 View FIGURE 9

Cucumariia vilis Sluiter, 1901: 86 , pl 7, fig. 5.

Thyone villis Panning, 1949: 467 (lapsus calami).

Diagnosis (see Sluiter 1901).

Material examined. ZMUA, H1114 View Materials , Banda , herein designated as lectotype, 1 spec. ; Molo Strait, ZMUA, H1109 View Materials (not conspecific with former), 1 spec. ; USNM E48738 View Materials , North Pacific Ocean, Philippines, La Union, Luzon Island, San Fernando , Sta. 5442 (16° 30’ N, 120° 11’ E), 45 m, 10 May 1909, Albatross R /V, Philippines Expedition, det. Deichmann, E., 1 spec. GoogleMaps

Description. Specimen (USNM E48738 View Materials ) small, barrel-shaped, about 33 mm long and 11 mm wide in midbody; calcareous ring and associated structures absent. Colour, in alcohol, uniformly greyish white. Tube feet mostly retracted, usually in ambulacra but few also scattered in interambulacra, 1.5 mm long when extended, suckers well- developed. Anal teeth present. Body wall wrinkled, soft, smooth, fairly thick. Gonad (testis) well- developed, mature, tubules unbranched. Respiratory trees well-branched, one extending to about three quarter of body length. Longitudinal muscles unpaired, cylindrical. Ossicles of the body wall comprise plates and tables. Plates small, smooth, spire-less, circular to triangular, with thin margins and three or more holes of varying size ( Figure 9A & B View FIGURE 9 ). Tables also with a thin-margined disc with usually four large holes ( Figure 9C View FIGURE 9 ), sometimes more with a reduced two-pillared spire, ending in two clusters of teeth or teeth absent, transverse bar lacking. Table discs 73–95 µm long, 53–71 µm wide, holes 25–33 µm wide. Tube feet ossicles ( Figure 9D View FIGURE 9 ) as rods, up to 237 µm long, swollen in the middle, perforated by four large central holes and a few holes at each end. End plates with large marginal and smaller medial holes.

Distribution. West Pacific ( Indonesia and Philippines).

Remarks. Despite the absence of the calcareous ring and its associated structures the identity of this specimen is in no doubt. It does possess the characteristic thin-walled tables and plates reminiscent of those of one of the syntypes of Thyone vilis (cf. Figure 8B View FIGURE 8 & 9A–C View FIGURE 9 ). In support of this, the tube feet rods ( Figure 9D View FIGURE 9 ), which Sluiter (1901) refers to as tables, are identical to those illustrated by him for his species ( Figure 8C View FIGURE 8 ) and so is also the spire of the body wall tables. I have had the opportunity to study both Sluiter’s syntypes at the ZMUA. The two specimens, one from Banda (H1114) and the other from Molo Strait (H1109), are well preserved. However, the calcareous ring and its associated structures are only present in the Banda specimen ( Figure 8A View FIGURE 8 ); the Molo Strait specimen lacks the calcareous ring. The calcareous ring and ossicles of the Banda specimen illustrated in Figure 8 View FIGURE 8 are copied from Sluiter’s figure, whereas those from the current specimen are illustrated in Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 . It is apparent from Sluiter’s figure that all his illustrated ossicles came from the Banda specimen, except for a single large plate ( Figure 8G View FIGURE 8 ) which presumably came from the Molo Strait specimen. The large plate of the Molo Strait specimen I examined is here illustrated in Figure 8F View FIGURE 8 ). From this it is apparent that both Sluiter’s specimens are not conspecific and the Molo Strait specimen may represent another species but its lack of the calcareous ring prevents any identification. The Banda specimen is therefore here designated the lectotype. The plate illustrated by Sluiter (1901) ( Figure 8G View FIGURE 8 ) and herein from the Molo Strait specimen ( Figure 8F View FIGURE 8 ) are larger, overlapping and often broken. The calcareous ring ( Figure 8A View FIGURE 8 ) of the Banda specimen is of the typical Thyonidae type with a tube broken into a mosaic and processes of the radial plates long, distally coiled and also subdivided. The present USNM specimen appears to be a true Thyone vilis and there is no doubt that it is the second record of this species, judging from the literature at hand. Although correctly identified by Deichmann, it is regrettable this record was not published.

ZMUA

Zoological Museum, University of Athens

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Echinodermata

Class

Holothuroidea

Order

Dendrochirotida

Family

Phyllophoridae

Genus

Thyone

Loc

Thyone vilis ( Sluiter, 1901 )

Thandar, Ahmed S. 2021
2021
Loc

Thyone villis

Panning, A. 1949: 467
1949
Loc

Cucumariia vilis

Sluiter, C. P. 1901: 86
1901
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