Pyura gangelion, (SAVIGNY, 1816)

Monniot, Claude, 2002, Stolidobranch ascidians from the tropical western Indian Ocean, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 135 (1), pp. 65-120 : 100

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1046/j.1096-3642.2002.00017.x

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5490284

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/436F3F3C-FFF3-FF8D-FF4E-FC0DFB621F12

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Pyura gangelion
status

 

PYURA GANGELION ( SAVIGNY, 1816) View in CoL ( Figs 14D View Figure 14 , 27A View Figure 27 )

Cynthia gangelion Savigny, 1816: 90–147 – Red Sea.

Halocynthia gangelion: Sluiter, 1905: 15 View in CoL – Djibouti.

Pyura gangelion: Monniot C., 1973: 57 View in CoL – Red Sea; Monniot F. & Monniot C., 2001: 344, figs 106,108A and 130B.

Pyura (Halocynthia) sansibarica Michaelsen, 1908: 251 View in CoL – Zanzibar.

Pyura sansibarica: Michaelsen, 1918: 8 View in CoL – Red Sea; Millar, 1956 – Mozambique; Vasseur, 1969: 926 – Madagascar.

Pyura obesa View in CoL not Sluiter, 1912; Hartmeyer, 1919: 14 – Western Australia; Kott, 1985: 315 – Australia.

Pyura robusta Hartmeyer, 1922 View in CoL ; Kott, 1998: 185 and synonymy – Australia.

Pyura albanyensis Michaelsen, 1927: 193 View in CoL – Albany; Hartmeyer & Michaelsen, 1928: 435; Monniot C., 1989: 490 – New Caledonia and synonymy; Monniot C. & Monniot F., 1991: 441 – New Caledonia; Monniot F. & Monniot C., 1996: 263 – Papua New Guinea; Kott, 1992: 645 – Australia.

Material

Red Sea, Eilat, coll. ISRSE, 1962.

Mozambique: Ibo Island, coll. C. Monniot, 1995.

Djibouti, 3–35 m, coll. C. Monniot, 1996.

Description

The mature specimens measure 1.5 cm to 6.5 cm across. They are attached by their ventral side. The largest have epibionts. The thick tunic is reddishbrown, with deep ridges. The youngest specimens have lower protuberances that are more regularly spaced on the sides of the body, and they show double brown lines between the four pale lobes of the siphons ( Fig. 14D View Figure 14 ). The sessile siphons are well apart with obvious spinules. The spinules are dense, about 100 m m in length ( Fig. 27A View Figure 27 ).

The internal anatomy corresponds to the descriptions by Monniot (1973) and Monniot & Monniot (1996). The oral tentacles have few ramifications. The prepharyngeal band has two thick crests. The round dorsal tubercle opens in a C. The branchial sac has six high folds on each side, each with 25 longitudinal vessels, and each fold is separated by three to five vessels. There are parastigmatic vessels.

The gut does not widen much at the stomach. The hepatic gland is made of several lobes. One of the lobes, on the pyloric stomach wall is particularly voluminous, in the shape of a cauliflower, with a green colour that remains in formalin. The gaping anus has a plain edge.

There is one gonad on each side, made of numerous lobes. The left gonad lies in the gut loop.

Endocarps are present above the gonads, along the outer curve of the intestine, and on each side of the heart.

Remarks

This species is widely distributed in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Among Pyura species with six branchial folds, it is characterized by the disposition of the endocarps and by its siphonal spinules. Its recent collection in the Indian Ocean allows a diverse synonymy to be established here.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Ascidiacea

Order

Stolidobranchia

Family

Pyuridae

Genus

Pyura

Loc

Pyura gangelion

Monniot, Claude 2002
2002
Loc

Pyura robusta

Kott P 1998: 185
1998
Loc

Pyura albanyensis

Kott P 1992: 645
Hartmeyer R & Michaelsen W 1928: 435
Michaelsen W 1927: 193
1927
Loc

Pyura obesa

Kott P 1985: 315
Hartmeyer R 1919: 14
1919
Loc

Pyura sansibarica: Michaelsen, 1918: 8

Vasseur P 1969: 926
Michaelsen W 1918: 8
1918
Loc

Pyura (Halocynthia) sansibarica

Michaelsen W 1908: 251
1908
Loc

Halocynthia gangelion:

Sluiter CP 1905: 15
1905
Loc

Cynthia gangelion

Savigny JC 1816: 147
1816
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