Aplidiopsis pannosum Ritter 1899

Aplidiopsis pannosum (Ritter, 1899) (Figure 9) Polyclinum pannosum Ritter, 1899: 519 Polyclinum globosum Ritter, 1899: 518 Aplidiopsis pannosum : Van Name, 1945: 67. Tokioka, 1960: 194. Nishikawa, 1990: 80. Sanamyan, 1998: 107. Aplidiopsis helenae Redikorzev, 1927: 382 Material examined. Matua Islan...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sanamyan, Karen, Sanamyan, Nadya
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2017
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6049281
https://zenodo.org/record/6049281
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Summary:Aplidiopsis pannosum (Ritter, 1899) (Figure 9) Polyclinum pannosum Ritter, 1899: 519 Polyclinum globosum Ritter, 1899: 518 Aplidiopsis pannosum : Van Name, 1945: 67. Tokioka, 1960: 194. Nishikawa, 1990: 80. Sanamyan, 1998: 107. Aplidiopsis helenae Redikorzev, 1927: 382 Material examined. Matua Island, Point Kluv, 16 m, 24.08.2016, one colony, collector E. Drashev (#150); 16 m, 23.08.2016, two colonies (#159, 161). Description. The colonies are thick potato-like dirty brown irregular masses, often embracing stems of algae (e.g. Agarum ) (Figure 9 B). The surface sometimes has sparse sand grains but in general is more or less clear. The test is tough, firm, cartilaginous, opaque, the zooids are not visible from the exterior. The zooids are arranged into circular systems. They are about 8 mm long in somewhat contracted condition. The branchial siphon is short and has six pointed lobes. The atrial lip is long and wide, always simple. The thoracic muscles, about eight or ten in number, are fine, weak, and probably not expand to the abdomen, there is no discernible ventral band of muscles in abdomen, which occurs in some other species of this and related genera. The branchial sac has 16 rows of stigmata with about 15 stigmata in each row on each side. The stigmata are short, small, or even oval, especially closer to the endostyle on both sides of the branchial sac. The abdomen is shorter than the thorax, the shape of the gut loop is characteristic for the genus with the oesophagus bent ventrally at the right angle to enter the smooth-walled asymmetric stomach. The post-stomach differentiation of the intestine is pronounced and well defined (Figure 9 A). The postabdomen is attached to the left side of the abdomen by a narrow neck and filled by parenchymatous tissue in the zooids examined. Numerous larvae are incubated in the atrial cavity. The trunk is about 0.9 mm long. Three adhesive organs alternate with four median ampullae. Large lateral ampullae are in two rows anteriorly (one row on each side). Two groups of vesicles, dorsal and postero-ventral, are on each side of the larval trunk. This feature is rather characteristic for the genus. Remarks. The species is common in NW Pacific. Although many colonies were studied previously, the material is insufficient to decide if all of them are conspecific: the variations of the shapes of colony and the number of rows of stigmata seems to be a little too big for a single species (see Sanamyan, 1998). Shallow-water potato-like dirty yellowish brown or grey colonies, we had chance to document underwater during several recent years at Kamchatka (Sanamyan & Sanamyan, 2010), appear to be certainly conspecific with the material from Matua Island described here. On the other hand, a single available photo of this species from Commander Islands shows vivid bright red colony (see Sanamyan &Sanamyan, 2015). : Published as part of Sanamyan, Karen & Sanamyan, Nadya, 2017, Shallow-water Ascidians from Matua Island (central Kuril Islands, NW Pacific), pp. 301-321 in Zootaxa 4232 (3) on pages 312-313, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4232.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/293689 : {"references": ["Ritter, W. E. (1899) A contribution to the knowledge of the tunicates of the Pribilof Islands. In: Jordan, D. S. (Ed.), Fur seals and fur-seal islands of the north Pacific ocean, pt. 3, pp. 511 - 537.", "Van Name, W. G. (1945) The North and South American ascidians. Bulletin of American Natural History, 84, 1 - 476.", "Tokioka, T. (1960) Contribution to Japanese ascidian fauna. 16. On some ascidians from the northern waters of Japan and the neighbouring subaring subarctic waters. Publications of the Seto Marine Biological Laboratory, 8 (1), 191 - 204.", "Nishikawa, T. (1990) The ascidians of the Japan Sea 1. Publications of the Seto Marine Biological Laboratory, 34 (4 / 6), 73 - 148.", "Sanamyan, K. (1998) Ascidians from the North-Western Pacific region. 4. Polyclinidae and Placentelidae. Ophelia, 48 (2), 103 - 135.", "Redikorzev, V. (1927) Zehn neue ascidien aus dem Fernen Osten. Zoologische Jahrbucher, 53, 373 - 404.", "Sanamyan, K. & Sanamyan, N. (2010) Ascidians (Tunicata: Ascidiacea) of coastal waters of Starichkov Island. Biota of Starichkov Island and adjacent waters of Avacha Gulf. In: Proceedings of Kamchatka Branch of Pacific Institute of Geography, Far Eastern Division, Russian Academy of Sciences. Fol. 8. Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Kamchatpress, pp. 241 - 249. [in Russian]", "Sanamyan, K. & Sanamyan, N. (2015) List of shallow water ascidians (Tunicata: Ascidiacea) of waters of Commander Islands. In: Conservation of biodiversity of Kamchatka and coastal waters. Proceedings of XF international scientific conference Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, 18 - 19 November 2014., Kamchat Press, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, 76 - 84. [in Russian]"]}