Ascidia protecta Van Name, 1945

Nishikawa, Teruaki & Namikawa, Hiroshi, 2021, A Detailed Description of the Long-Overlooked Tunicate Ascidia protecta (Ascidiacea), Based on the Type and Non-Type Specimens from the Gulf of California, Species Diversity 26 (1), pp. 1-5 : 2-3

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.12782/specdiv.26.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FED7D8D3-F9F5-4D12-A606-A8DEAB7D3B55

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4734662

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D8B279-9A3F-FFD4-FC7A-FE101A175403

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Ascidia protecta Van Name, 1945
status

 

Ascidia protecta Van Name, 1945 ( Figs. 1–2 View Fig View Fig ; Table 1 View Table 1 )

Ascidia sydneiensis protecta Van Name, 1945: 190–191 .

Description. Body 26.0– 61.7 mm long, with oval outline, flattened laterally, and attached to substratum usually by entire right (usually more or less depressed) side (entire left side in paralectotype). Both siphons conspicuous, 6-lobed, completely surrounded by a longitudinally elongate, conspicuously ridged oval ring ( Fig. 2A, F View Fig ) (a low ridge only on right side in AMNH Ch. 1739), with minute conical or round papillae, up to 0.5 mm tall ( Fig. 2A View Fig ) (type specimens), or elongate conical projections extending onto ridge and siphon vicinity, up to 3 mm long (NSMT-Pc 4481) ( Fig. 2F View Fig ). Tunic cartilaginous; thick (up to 7 mm), rather tough, translucent pale yellowish (49.0– 61.7mm specimens), thin but tough, translucent white (26.0–34.0 mm specimens). Surface sometimes covered with hydrozoan colonies.

Mantle body often damaged on right side at time of collection ( Fig. 2C, H View Fig ). Branchial siphon terminal, base of more or less elongated atrial siphon at anterior two-fifths of mantle proper (3 larger specimens), near midpoint of mantle (2 smaller specimens); both siphons 6-lobed. Siphonal musculature very well developed; mantle musculature developed only along entire dorsal edge, comprising short, thick, dense, yellowish or fleshy pink transverse fibers ( Fig. 2B, C, G, H View Fig ); muscles absent around neural complex. Epidermis and connective tissue of mantle wall narrowly thickened around siphonal area ( Fig. 2B View Fig ), probably underlying oval tunic ridge. Tentacles simple, mostly elongated of variable size, distribution crowded, numbering ca. 100 (smaller specimens) to ca. 180 (largest specimen); prebranchial zone narrow, smoothsurfaced. Ciliated groove basically C-shaped with both horns rolled inwards ( Fig. 2D View Fig ), but often somewhat complicated ( Fig. 2E View Fig ); a narrow longitudinal groove behind dorsal tubercle 1.5 to 3.5 times as long as tubercle, a neural complex along groove. Edge of dorsal lamina markedly serrated by tips of ribs projecting beyond laminal edge, each rib derived from adjoining transverse vessel. Number of inner longitudinal vessels 36 (L) and>40 (R, uncertain due to damage) in lectotype, 44 (L) and 44 (R) in paralectotype, 24 (L) and 35 (R) in NSMT-Pc 4481, 45 (L) and 50 (R) in NSMT-Pc 4482; up to 140 transverse vessels; secondary papillae distinct, but lacking intermediate papillae. Up to 12 stigmata per mesh in larger specimens, 3–4 stigmata in smaller specimens. Stomach usually oval ( Fig. 2B View Fig ), rarely cylindrical ( Fig. 2G View Fig ), located at postero-dorsal corner of mantle body; internal plication obscure. Intestine almost isodiametric (except in lectotype—bottom part of second loop weakly swollen; Fig. 2B View Fig ). Visceral mass occupying posterior 75% (lectotype) to 90% of mantle body proper, usually anteriorly well beyond anterior base of atrial siphon ( Fig. 2G View Fig ) (except lectotypevisceral mass extending to midlevel of atrial siphon; Fig. 2B View Fig ). A tunic vessel issuing from mantle near stomach in lectotype ( Fig. 2B View Fig ) and paralectotype. Bottom (=distal) half of first intestinal loop bent dorsad at 90 degrees or deeper, its axis almost parallel to that of second loop (long axis) of stomach ( Fig. 2B, G View Fig ). Second loop very deep, narrow and closed, its axis passing through middle to end of proximal (pre-bent) half of ascending branch of first loop. Rectum short, with bi-lobed anus. Gonad more or less mature in bottom half of first loop, even in smallest specimen (NSMT-Pc 4482, 34.0 mm long).

Remarks. The examined specimens from the Gulf of California can all be regarded as conspecific on the basis of similarities in the tunic depression around the siphonal area with distinct siphons, the mantle musculature (excepting siphonal musculature) situated only along the entire dorsal edge and comprising dense short thick transverse fibers, and a massive visceral mass with a markedly curved first intestinal loop and deep narrow second loop (see also Table 1 View Table 1 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Ascidiacea

Order

Enterogona

Family

Ascidiidae

Genus

Ascidia

Loc

Ascidia protecta Van Name, 1945

Nishikawa, Teruaki & Namikawa, Hiroshi 2021
2021
Loc

Ascidia sydneiensis protecta

Van Name, W. 1945: 191
1945
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