Paraleptopentacta tergestina, Mezali & Thandar & Khodja, 2020

Mezali, Karim, Thandar, Ahmed S. & Khodja, Ihcene, 2020, Paraleptopentacta, a new Mediterranean and north-west Atlantic sea cucumber genus, with the first record of P. tergestina n. comb. (Echinodermata Dendrochirotida: Cucumariidae) from the north-western Algerian coast, Zootaxa 4860 (2), pp. 199-210 : 206-208

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4860.2.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B56DDE49-7959-41D8-B412-DB82B666D24F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4537687

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/314C87C5-FFFE-353F-ECF2-6FF03F8EFE3E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Paraleptopentacta tergestina
status

comb. nov.

Paraleptopentacta tergestina View in CoL n. comb. ( Sars, 1859)

Figures 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3

Cucumaria tergestina Sars, 1859: 127 View in CoL ; Koehler, 1921: 158–160.

Trachythyone tergestina Tortonese, 1965: 83–85 View in CoL .

Leptopentacta tergestina Panning, 1966: 62 View in CoL (passim).

Remarks. Paraleptopentacta (n. gen.) tergestina n. comb. is a cucumariid sea cucumber, a fairly well known Mediterranean species. Unlike its sister species P. elongata , which has spread into the North-West Atlantic, P. tergestina n. comb. is restricted to the Mediterranean sea ( Tortonese 1965), being reported from France ( Koehler 1921), Italy ( Tortonese 1965; 1977; Milisenda et al. 2017), the Malta Islands ( Tanti & Schembri 2006), the Aegean Sea ( Voultsiadou et al. 2011), the Adriatic Sea ( Petovic 2011) and the Marmara Sea ( Turkey) ( Öztoprak et al. 2014). It is often caught by trawlers as a bycatch, frequenting muddy, detrital waters and Posidonia and Caulerpa bottoms.

The specimens here studied correspond well with the description of the species by Koehler (1921) and require no further comment.

Material examined. LPVCMRMS2020.101, Mostaganem, Algeria, 36º 6.38374’N, 0º 8.34821’E, 60 m, March 2020, 5 spec. GoogleMaps

Description. Contracted individuals 20-50 mm in length and 10-15 mm in breadth. Body somewhat pentagonal, curved, with a broad mid-body and narrower posterior end. Tegument rigid, smooth, dark brown, interradial areas devoid of pedicels ( Figure 2A View FIGURE 2 ). Pedicels light brown, rigid, non-retractable, in five double rows arranged in a zigzag fashion, elongated, slender in living specimen and short, thorn-shaped in preserved individuals. Tentacles 10, dendritic, ventral two reduced, white, with brown spots ( Figure 2B View FIGURE 2 ). Each tentacle consists of a central trunk from which lateral branches emerge, giving rise to terminal papillate branches.

Ossicles. Ossicles from the anterior end ( Figure 3A View FIGURE 3 ), dorsal surface ( Figure 3B View FIGURE 3 ), ventral surface ( Figure 3C View FIGURE 3 ), anal region ( Figure 3D View FIGURE 3 ) and podia ( Figure 3E View FIGURE 3 ) appear identical, without any noticeable differences. They include an external layer of small baskets and an inner layer of thick, multilocular, non-imbricating plates of various sizes, with smooth margins and nearly always with a paired series of small holes, plates of the dorsal surface are smaller and thinner than those of the ventral surface. The plates occur in a variety of shapes, usually elongated, but often round- ed or oval, the elongated ones are the most abundant with a maximum length of 844.901 µm and a maximum width of 169.774 µm [according to Koehler (1921), they can reach up to 1.5 mm (1500µm) in length]. The baskets have a quadrilocular base and a rim bordered by numerous thick projections directed outward and inward. The baskets occur dorsally and at the anal end. The rosettes are characteristic of this species and do not occur in the congenerics but are present in at least one species of Leptopentacta (s.s.). They occur in the dorsal body wall and in the anal region. The body wall also contains rods, which are present at the anterior end, in the anal region, the podia and tentacles. The tentacles ( Figure 3F View FIGURE 3 ) contain plates like those of the body wall and curved, thin rods provided with a few perforations, whereas only perforated plates like those of the body wall characterize the introvert ( Figure 3G View FIGURE 3 ). The podia also contain plates of different shapes like those of the body wall as well as rods; end plates are reduced.

Behaviour (in vitro). The specimen kept alive in a tank usually adheres to the wall of the tank with its posterior end while waving and twisting the unattached end freely in the water column ( Figure 2C View FIGURE 2 ). This behavior was described by Monticelli (1896) as one of the three autotomy mechanisms in Ocnus planci ( Brandt, 1835) , of fission by constriction and stretching. According to Crozier (1917), sometimes the posterior part, which is glued to the substrate, can divide again. When exposed to intense light the tentacles retract, which may indicate that the species exhibits the “shade-seeking” behavior described by Yoshida (1966).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Echinodermata

Class

Holothuroidea

Order

Dendrochirotida

Family

Cucumariidae

Genus

Paraleptopentacta

Loc

Paraleptopentacta tergestina

Mezali, Karim, Thandar, Ahmed S. & Khodja, Ihcene 2020
2020
Loc

Leptopentacta tergestina

Panning, A. 1966: 62
1966
Loc

Trachythyone tergestina

Tortonese, E. 1965: 85
1965
Loc

Cucumaria tergestina

Koehler, R. 1921: 158
Sars, M. 1859: 127
1859
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF