Psolidium nigrescens H. L. Clark
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.24199/j.mmv.2008.65.2 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8064945 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FC87C9-5617-FFB2-A10F-FBA8FE4FF705 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Psolidium nigrescens H. L. Clark |
status |
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Psolidium nigrescens H. L. Clark View in CoL
Psolidium nigrescens H. L. Clark, 1938: 505-507 View in CoL , fig. 50.—H. L. Clark, 1946: 414–15.— Cannon and Silver, 1987: 29.—Rowe (in Rowe and Gates), 1995: 318.
Material examined. New South Wales, Broken Bay, Hawkesbury River, Yeomans Bay , Smith-MacIntyre Grab, mud sediment, G. Phillipson, Oct 1992 (specimen not lodged in museum) ; Port Jackson, Middle Harbour , N bank W of Spit Bridge, 33°48'S 151°15'E, steeply sloping bottom with telestacean bed, live and dead mussels, Tethia sp. and compound ascidians, 8 m, J. K. Lowry, 9 Jun 1981 GoogleMaps , J24097 View Materials (1); Botany Bay, off Dolls Point , dredged, 7–11 m, D. F. McMichael, Oct 1949 , J6789 (4); Port Hacking, Gunnamatta Bay , 34°04'30"S 151°08'54"E, on shells of Anadara, I. Bennett , 2 Nov 1948, AM J6821 (6) GoogleMaps ; Batemans Bay, Clyde R, edge of channel near southern bank downstream from Princes Hwy road bridge, 35°42'34"S 150°11'3"E, 5 m, clump of hairy mussels, Australian Museum party, 30 Mar 2004 GoogleMaps , J24092 View Materials (3).
Description. Psolidium species up to 40 mm long (preserved); body elongate; dorsal and lateral body scales thick, up to 4 mm wide, covered by fairly thick integument; scales tapered to projecting rounded point orally and anally; dorsal and lateral tube feet conspicuous, up to 5 pass through a scale.
Sole with peripheral band of tube feet, about 5 wide, outermost tube feet not smaller; mid-ventral radial series of tube feet predominantly 2 wide.
Dorsal and lateral ossicles: multi-layered ossicles (scales) with tube foot canals; thick knobbed buttons, 3-10 perforations, up to 192 μ m long, intergrade with multi-layered ossicles; branched rods with pointed ends (“thorn” ossicles), irregular form, 3-5 arms, flat to 3-dimensional, up to 56 μ m long; rosettes, densely branched, up to 40 μ m long.
Sole ossicles:perforated plates, slightly concave, irregularly round, knobbed marginally, up to 14 perforations, up to 152 μ m long; very shallow, marginally knobbed, 4-perforation cups and cupped crosses, typically 96 μ m long; rare rosettes; rare “thorn” ossicles.
Tentacle ossicles include: rosettes, up to 40 μ m long; “thorn” ossicles, up to 40 μ m long.
Colour (preserved). Dorsal and lateral body black to brown to dark grey, with fine white spotting over scales; tube feet off-white; sole pale brown to cream, with some fine brown flecking; tentacle trunks dark brown, tentacle dendritic ends off-white.
Distribution. Eastern Australia, central New South Wales, Broken Bay to Batemans Bay, estuarine; 0– 11 m.
Remarks. The distinguishing characters of Psolidiumnigrescens H. L. Clark, 1938 are the “thorn” ossicles in the body wall, and very dark brown to black colour.
AM |
Australian Museum |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Psolidium nigrescens H. L. Clark
O’Loughlin, P. Mark & Ahearn, Cynthia 2008 |
Psolidium nigrescens H. L. Clark, 1938: 505-507
Cannon, L. R. G. & Silver, H. 1987: 29 |
Clark, H. L. 1946: 414 |
Clark, H. L. 1938: 507 |