Havelockia Pearson 1903

Genus Havelockia Pearson, 1903 Diagnosis (after Thandar, 1989: 292) Calcareous ring short, stout, only anterior projections of radial and interradial plates free; posterior paired processes of radial plates divided into several pieces. Body wall ossicles tables with a squarish to oval disc usually p...

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Main Authors: Martinez, Mariano I., Thandar, Ahmed S., Penchaszadeh, Pablo E.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6150605
https://zenodo.org/record/6150605
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6150605
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Echinodermata
Holothuroidea
Dendrochirotida
Sclerodactylidae
Havelockia
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Echinodermata
Holothuroidea
Dendrochirotida
Sclerodactylidae
Havelockia
Martinez, Mariano I.
Thandar, Ahmed S.
Penchaszadeh, Pablo E.
Havelockia Pearson 1903
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Echinodermata
Holothuroidea
Dendrochirotida
Sclerodactylidae
Havelockia
description Genus Havelockia Pearson, 1903 Diagnosis (after Thandar, 1989: 292) Calcareous ring short, stout, only anterior projections of radial and interradial plates free; posterior paired processes of radial plates divided into several pieces. Body wall ossicles tables with a squarish to oval disc usually perforated by four large central and four smaller peripheral holes, the latter sometimes reduced or absent; spire of two pillars joined at apex and terminating in few blunt teeth. Type species : Havelockia herdmani Pearson, 1903 (by original designation). Havelockia pegi sp. nov. (Figures 1–3) Diagnosis. Tentacles purple in colour; body wall ossicles scarce, only few detected, especially from the anal region and base of tube feet, comprising tables with a 2 -pillared, often regressed spire; tentacles and introvert with rosettes. Etymology. The specific name pegi is used to honour the Martinez-Ferreyra family to whom this name is quite significant. It is a noun in apposition. Material examined. Holotype : 86 mm length, one male individual and 3 slides with ossicles, Villarino, Golfo San José, Chubut Province (Sep. 2006), (42 ° 25 ’S – 64 ° 31 ’W), 10 m. MACN-In 39019. Paratypes : 32,70 mm, 55,95 mm, Buenos Aires Province (9 Sep. 2009), (38 ° 15 ’S – 57 ° 15 ’W), 48 m., MACN-In 39021 (2 paratypes); 35,55 mm, Villarino, Golfo San José, Chubut Province (42 ° 25 ’S – 64 ° 31 ’W), 10m, MACN-In 39020 (1 paratype); 30,43 mm length, one individual and 1 slide with ossicles; El sótano, Golfo San Matías, Río Negro Province, Argentina (Nov. 2011), (41 º00’ S – 65 º08’ W), 15 m, ICML-UNAM 5.195.0 (1 paratype); 40 mm, one individual; San Matías, Río Negro Province (16 Nov. 2009), (41 º 20 ’S – 62 º 59 ’W), 34 m, CNP-INV 415 (1 paratype). Description. All specimens partially eviscerated; length up to 86 mm. Body form U-shaped to cylindrical. Colour in life and in alcohol, brown; tentacles purple in life, turning to light violet or brown in alcohol. Tube feet scattered, covering entire body with no indication of any regular arrangement (Fig. 1). Larger tube feet around 2 mm in length, suckers well developed. Tentacles 10, bushy, ventral two reduced to quarter the size of large tentacles. Anal teeth present. Calcareous ring short-tubular with plates compact, fused for most of their length; posterior paired processes of radial plates of moderate length, divided into 3–4 pieces of calcite. Polian vesicle single, saccular, free, on left side of mesentery; stone canal long, straight, on right side of mesentery, madreporite lenticular. Gonad of holotype mature, in two tufts, attached to the middle of body, each with numerous undivided branches, filling greater part of coelom. Respiratory trees, each with two branches, extending along the total length of body, the right tree slightly longer. Longitudinal muscle bands well developed. Retractor muscles attach to the radial plates. Cloaca elongate, about quarter to one fifth the total length of body. Body wall ossicles rare, only a few detected, especially in the anal region and bases of tube feet, comprising tables with an oblong or irregular, often regressive disc (65–160 µm) with 4–8 holes and a low, 2 -pillared spire, pillars sometimes fused (Fig. 2 a, 3 a). Tube feet ossicles as tables with a quadrilocular, straight or slightly curved disc (115–172 µm), with four central holes and often an additional hole at each end; spire 2 -pillared, ending in several blunt teeth or spire regressive or absent (Fig. 2 b, 3 b), end-plate circular, ca. 225 µm, with small central holes and larger ones outside these in no regular arrangement (Fig. 2 c). Introvert and tentacles with closed rosettes, 30–62 µm (Fig. 2 d). Habitat : sand, broken shells and gravel. Distribution : South Atlantic Ocean, from Buenos Aires Province, Mar del Plata (38 ° 15 ’S – 57 ° 15 ’W) to Chubut Province, Villarino (42 ° 25 ’S – 64 ° 31 ’W) Depth : 10– 48 m. Remarks . In all individuals examined, the tentacles, calcareous ring and the first part of the gut are partially eviscerated. The dark purple colour of the tentacles, in living, and brown or light-violet in preserved specimens, is quite distinctive in comparison with that of some other Argentinian dendrochirotids. The family Sclerodactylidae (sensu Pawson & Fell 1965) comprises over 80 species with a world-wide distribution, but it is surprising that besides Pseudothyone belli (Ludwig, 1887) and the recently described Coronatum baiensis Martins & Souto, 2012, no other true sclerodactylid has been recorded from the south-western Atlantic Ocean so far. In comparison with most species of the genus, Havelockia pegi sp. nov. has scarce body wall ossicles, a circular end-plate, and rosettes in both the introvert and tentacles. These features in combination make it distinctive. There are only a couple of Havelockia species with scarce or no body wall deposits. These are H. discolor (Sluiter, 1901) with no body wall deposits and H. conciliatrix (Sluiter, 1901) with scarce deposits, restricted to the podia. Both are warm-water West Pacific species and differ from the new species in many features, e.g. H. conciliatrix has conical papillae and naked dorsal interradii and H. discolor has rods in the tentacles and no deposits in the body wall and tube feet. In comparison with the other sclerodactylids (sensu Panning, 1949, non Pawson & Fell, 1965) from South America, C. baiensis has tables with oval, knobbed disc while Pseudothyone belli has knobbed buttons instead of tables in the body wall. The new species might be mistaken to represent a Pentamera, notably P. chiloensis, which also occurs in Argentinian waters. However, the genus Pentamera is well characterized by the ambulacral restriction of the tube feet, a different type of calcareous ring and well developed body wall ossicles, often accompanied by plates. P. chiloensis in particular, although lacking plate-like ossicles, has well-developed table deposits with numerous holes, table spires with 1–4 pillars and stellate end-plates (Pawson 1969). Thandarum hernandezi differs from H. pegi in the ambulacral restriction of the tube feet and the presence of 4 -pillared tables in the body wall. However, both species have a northern distribution, but restricted to the Rio de la Plata and are not found further north as the low salinity prevent their influx into the northern waters. Perhaps the same factor intervenes to prevent Brazilian species extending southwards (Tommasi et al. 1988 b, Martinez & Brogger 2012). More collections along the long Argentinian coastline will undoubtedly reveal more dendrochirotids as this order is notorious for its distribution in temperate waters of all the world’s oceans. In fact, the temperate waters of most continents or subcontinents of the southern hemisphere, including New Zealand, are well endowed with endemic dendrochirotids—so Argentina may not be an exception. : Published as part of Martinez, Mariano I., Thandar, Ahmed S. & Penchaszadeh, Pablo E., 2013, A new species of Havelockia Pearson, 1903 from the Argentine Sea (Holothuroidea: Dendrochirotida: Sclerodactylidae), pp. 583-588 in Zootaxa 3609 (6) on pages 584-587, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3609.6.3, http://zenodo.org/record/215563
format Text
author Martinez, Mariano I.
Thandar, Ahmed S.
Penchaszadeh, Pablo E.
author_facet Martinez, Mariano I.
Thandar, Ahmed S.
Penchaszadeh, Pablo E.
author_sort Martinez, Mariano I.
title Havelockia Pearson 1903
title_short Havelockia Pearson 1903
title_full Havelockia Pearson 1903
title_fullStr Havelockia Pearson 1903
title_full_unstemmed Havelockia Pearson 1903
title_sort havelockia pearson 1903
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2013
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6150605
https://zenodo.org/record/6150605
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.533,-62.533,-76.100,-76.100)
ENVELOPE(-63.717,-63.717,-64.283,-64.283)
ENVELOPE(-64.264,-64.264,-65.244,-65.244)
ENVELOPE(-61.070,-61.070,-73.198,-73.198)
geographic Pacific
New Zealand
Argentina
Argentine
Chubut
Pablo
Buttons
Pawson
geographic_facet Pacific
New Zealand
Argentina
Argentine
Chubut
Pablo
Buttons
Pawson
genre South Atlantic Ocean
genre_facet South Atlantic Ocean
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6150605
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6150605 2023-05-15T18:21:26+02:00 Havelockia Pearson 1903 Martinez, Mariano I. Thandar, Ahmed S. Penchaszadeh, Pablo E. 2013 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6150605 https://zenodo.org/record/6150605 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/215563 http://publication.plazi.org/id/030530354B52FFABBD29FF9CFFACFFEA http://zoobank.org/9269ABC0-246F-407F-8B42-550C1B3F3C59 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3609.6.3 http://zenodo.org/record/215563 http://publication.plazi.org/id/030530354B52FFABBD29FF9CFFACFFEA https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.215564 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.215565 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.215566 http://zoobank.org/9269ABC0-246F-407F-8B42-550C1B3F3C59 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6150604 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Echinodermata Holothuroidea Dendrochirotida Sclerodactylidae Havelockia article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2013 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6150605 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3609.6.3 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.215564 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.215565 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.215566 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6150604 2022-04-01T11:10:15Z Genus Havelockia Pearson, 1903 Diagnosis (after Thandar, 1989: 292) Calcareous ring short, stout, only anterior projections of radial and interradial plates free; posterior paired processes of radial plates divided into several pieces. Body wall ossicles tables with a squarish to oval disc usually perforated by four large central and four smaller peripheral holes, the latter sometimes reduced or absent; spire of two pillars joined at apex and terminating in few blunt teeth. Type species : Havelockia herdmani Pearson, 1903 (by original designation). Havelockia pegi sp. nov. (Figures 1–3) Diagnosis. Tentacles purple in colour; body wall ossicles scarce, only few detected, especially from the anal region and base of tube feet, comprising tables with a 2 -pillared, often regressed spire; tentacles and introvert with rosettes. Etymology. The specific name pegi is used to honour the Martinez-Ferreyra family to whom this name is quite significant. It is a noun in apposition. Material examined. Holotype : 86 mm length, one male individual and 3 slides with ossicles, Villarino, Golfo San José, Chubut Province (Sep. 2006), (42 ° 25 ’S – 64 ° 31 ’W), 10 m. MACN-In 39019. Paratypes : 32,70 mm, 55,95 mm, Buenos Aires Province (9 Sep. 2009), (38 ° 15 ’S – 57 ° 15 ’W), 48 m., MACN-In 39021 (2 paratypes); 35,55 mm, Villarino, Golfo San José, Chubut Province (42 ° 25 ’S – 64 ° 31 ’W), 10m, MACN-In 39020 (1 paratype); 30,43 mm length, one individual and 1 slide with ossicles; El sótano, Golfo San Matías, Río Negro Province, Argentina (Nov. 2011), (41 º00’ S – 65 º08’ W), 15 m, ICML-UNAM 5.195.0 (1 paratype); 40 mm, one individual; San Matías, Río Negro Province (16 Nov. 2009), (41 º 20 ’S – 62 º 59 ’W), 34 m, CNP-INV 415 (1 paratype). Description. All specimens partially eviscerated; length up to 86 mm. Body form U-shaped to cylindrical. Colour in life and in alcohol, brown; tentacles purple in life, turning to light violet or brown in alcohol. Tube feet scattered, covering entire body with no indication of any regular arrangement (Fig. 1). Larger tube feet around 2 mm in length, suckers well developed. Tentacles 10, bushy, ventral two reduced to quarter the size of large tentacles. Anal teeth present. Calcareous ring short-tubular with plates compact, fused for most of their length; posterior paired processes of radial plates of moderate length, divided into 3–4 pieces of calcite. Polian vesicle single, saccular, free, on left side of mesentery; stone canal long, straight, on right side of mesentery, madreporite lenticular. Gonad of holotype mature, in two tufts, attached to the middle of body, each with numerous undivided branches, filling greater part of coelom. Respiratory trees, each with two branches, extending along the total length of body, the right tree slightly longer. Longitudinal muscle bands well developed. Retractor muscles attach to the radial plates. Cloaca elongate, about quarter to one fifth the total length of body. Body wall ossicles rare, only a few detected, especially in the anal region and bases of tube feet, comprising tables with an oblong or irregular, often regressive disc (65–160 µm) with 4–8 holes and a low, 2 -pillared spire, pillars sometimes fused (Fig. 2 a, 3 a). Tube feet ossicles as tables with a quadrilocular, straight or slightly curved disc (115–172 µm), with four central holes and often an additional hole at each end; spire 2 -pillared, ending in several blunt teeth or spire regressive or absent (Fig. 2 b, 3 b), end-plate circular, ca. 225 µm, with small central holes and larger ones outside these in no regular arrangement (Fig. 2 c). Introvert and tentacles with closed rosettes, 30–62 µm (Fig. 2 d). Habitat : sand, broken shells and gravel. Distribution : South Atlantic Ocean, from Buenos Aires Province, Mar del Plata (38 ° 15 ’S – 57 ° 15 ’W) to Chubut Province, Villarino (42 ° 25 ’S – 64 ° 31 ’W) Depth : 10– 48 m. Remarks . In all individuals examined, the tentacles, calcareous ring and the first part of the gut are partially eviscerated. The dark purple colour of the tentacles, in living, and brown or light-violet in preserved specimens, is quite distinctive in comparison with that of some other Argentinian dendrochirotids. The family Sclerodactylidae (sensu Pawson & Fell 1965) comprises over 80 species with a world-wide distribution, but it is surprising that besides Pseudothyone belli (Ludwig, 1887) and the recently described Coronatum baiensis Martins & Souto, 2012, no other true sclerodactylid has been recorded from the south-western Atlantic Ocean so far. In comparison with most species of the genus, Havelockia pegi sp. nov. has scarce body wall ossicles, a circular end-plate, and rosettes in both the introvert and tentacles. These features in combination make it distinctive. There are only a couple of Havelockia species with scarce or no body wall deposits. These are H. discolor (Sluiter, 1901) with no body wall deposits and H. conciliatrix (Sluiter, 1901) with scarce deposits, restricted to the podia. Both are warm-water West Pacific species and differ from the new species in many features, e.g. H. conciliatrix has conical papillae and naked dorsal interradii and H. discolor has rods in the tentacles and no deposits in the body wall and tube feet. In comparison with the other sclerodactylids (sensu Panning, 1949, non Pawson & Fell, 1965) from South America, C. baiensis has tables with oval, knobbed disc while Pseudothyone belli has knobbed buttons instead of tables in the body wall. The new species might be mistaken to represent a Pentamera, notably P. chiloensis, which also occurs in Argentinian waters. However, the genus Pentamera is well characterized by the ambulacral restriction of the tube feet, a different type of calcareous ring and well developed body wall ossicles, often accompanied by plates. P. chiloensis in particular, although lacking plate-like ossicles, has well-developed table deposits with numerous holes, table spires with 1–4 pillars and stellate end-plates (Pawson 1969). Thandarum hernandezi differs from H. pegi in the ambulacral restriction of the tube feet and the presence of 4 -pillared tables in the body wall. However, both species have a northern distribution, but restricted to the Rio de la Plata and are not found further north as the low salinity prevent their influx into the northern waters. Perhaps the same factor intervenes to prevent Brazilian species extending southwards (Tommasi et al. 1988 b, Martinez & Brogger 2012). More collections along the long Argentinian coastline will undoubtedly reveal more dendrochirotids as this order is notorious for its distribution in temperate waters of all the world’s oceans. In fact, the temperate waters of most continents or subcontinents of the southern hemisphere, including New Zealand, are well endowed with endemic dendrochirotids—so Argentina may not be an exception. : Published as part of Martinez, Mariano I., Thandar, Ahmed S. & Penchaszadeh, Pablo E., 2013, A new species of Havelockia Pearson, 1903 from the Argentine Sea (Holothuroidea: Dendrochirotida: Sclerodactylidae), pp. 583-588 in Zootaxa 3609 (6) on pages 584-587, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3609.6.3, http://zenodo.org/record/215563 Text South Atlantic Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Pacific New Zealand Argentina Argentine Chubut ENVELOPE(-62.533,-62.533,-76.100,-76.100) Pablo ENVELOPE(-63.717,-63.717,-64.283,-64.283) Buttons ENVELOPE(-64.264,-64.264,-65.244,-65.244) Pawson ENVELOPE(-61.070,-61.070,-73.198,-73.198)