Phyllidia coelestis Bergh, 1905

Yonow, Nathalie, 2012, Opisthobranchs from the western Indian Ocean, with descriptions of two new species and ten new records (Mollusca, Gastropoda), ZooKeys 197, pp. 1-130 : 45-46

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.197.1728

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/676EB8E3-C150-D2DF-8820-39CCCF4AC81D

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Phyllidia coelestis Bergh, 1905
status

 

Phyllidia coelestis Bergh, 1905 Plate 62

Phyllidia coelestis . - Yonow et al. 2002: 862, fig. 16b (Chagos) and references therein; Apte 2009: 171, fig. 2r (Laccadive Islands).

Phyllidia elegans . - Edmunds 1972: 82, fig. 4b (Seychelles) (non Phyllidia elegans Bergh).

Phyllidia varicosa . - Gosliner 1987: 90, fig. 152 (South Africa) (non Phyllidia varicosa Lamarck).

Phyllidia alia Yonow, 1984: 224 figs. 6C, D, 7A, 8F, G (Sri Lanka).

Material.

Madagascar: 65 × 25 mm (PK-C), Ampangorina, Nosy Komba, 1 m depth on Acropora , 30 January 1992, leg. P Kemp. - Tanzania: photographs of two individuals, Mafia Island, shallow water, 15 January 2005 and 04 July 2005, A de Villiers. - Seychelles: 32 × 12 mm (PK-FF), Lilôt, NW Mahé, 15 m on encrusted coral, 26 April 1992, leg. P Kemp; 32 × 15 mm preserved (NHMUK acc. no. 2222), slightly curled, east side of East Channel, Aldabra, 1 m depth in coral, 25 September 1967, leg. JD Taylor; 49 × 15 mm preserved (NHMUK acc. no. 2222), Passe Femme, Aldabra, in shallow water beneath coral, 29 November 1967, leg. JD Taylor. - Maldives: 23 × 11 mm preserved (NHMUK ref. M/02/B/42), Gan, 04 September 1964, PSD Maldive Islands Expedition. - La Réunion and Mayotte: numerous individuals photographed, 20-45 mm in length http://seaslugs.free.fr/nudibranche/a_intro.htm.

Description.

Ground colour granular blue-white with three black lines: median line containing orange-tipped tubercles, two smooth lateral lines. Lateral lines normally meet anteriorly, and extend to margin usually as U-shape, but remain separated posteriorly. Outside the black lines, mantle bears tubercles, black flecks, and smaller scattered pustules toward edge; larger tubercles may have orange tips. Rhinophores bright orange, up to 16 lamellae; row of orange tubercles originates behind each rhinophore. Ventrally, propodium notched or deeply concave; all specimens have long tapering oral tentacles, grooved laterally and bearing black pigment on dorsal surfaces extending ventrally onto bases.

Distribution/Remarks.

These specimens and photographed individuals belong to the typical form of Phyllidia coelestis , a commonly recorded species in the western Indian Ocean and occurring as far south as South Africa. Another group of specimens also identified as Phyllidia coelestis ( Brunckhorst 1989, 1993; Yonow 2011 as dark form) has a central oval region where the ground colour is black and only a marginal band around it is blue-white. The edge of the central black area is irregular and may form short rays extending a little way into the blue-white margin, identical to that of Phyllidia (Fryeria) picta (p. 56), but this form has not been found in the western Indian Ocean.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Nudibranchia

Family

Phyllidiidae

Genus

Phyllidia