AnimaliaNot EvaluatedacceptedspeciesAccepted
Pyura pilosa

Pyura pilosa

Monniot C. & Monniot F., 1974

GBIF:154507598

0year

ABOUT

Descriptions(2)

Remarks. This is the deepest record of the species, increasing its bathymetric range in 600 m. This is also the northernmost record of the species in the SW Atlantic Ocean, increasing its known range of distribution which also includes the South Western Pacific and Southern Indian Oceans.
Maggioni, Tamara, Taverna, Anabela, Reyna, Paola B., Alurralde, Gastón, Rimondino, Clara, Tatián, Marcos (2018): Deep-sea ascidians (Chordata, Tunicata) from the SW Atlantic: species richness with descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 4526 (1): 1-28, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4526.1.1
Material examined: Two individuals; trawl; - 38.0083 lat. - 54.4178 long. (station 11); 1200 m; 12 August 2012. The specimens are rounded and flattened dorso-ventrally. They measure two and 2.5 cm in diameter. Both were strongly attached to the substratum, adhered by the left side of the body. The tunic is delicate, transparent and thin, but it is completely covered by a thick layer of grains of sand and a few foraminifera. The mantle is yellowish and remarkably thick. The atrial and oral apertures are inconspicuous; both placed at the level of the border of the tunic. Both apertures are four-lobed. There are from 13 to 21 oral tentacles distributed on a single ring. They are filiform but stout and have small branches of the first order. There is a wide velum with undulated margins that extends from the base of the oral tentacles to the base of the oral aperture. The dorsal tubercle is small. It was Vshaped in one specimen and oval-shaped in the other. The pre-pharyngeal band could only be distinguished in the smaller specimen. It forms a deep dorsal V surrounding the dorsal tubercle. The dorsal lamina is divided into approximately 28 equally short pointed languets. Thick musculature covers the totality of the body. Closely packed circular bands surround both apertures and extend almost to the base of the animal. The longitudinal fibers are more separately distributed. They radiate from the apertures and reach the mid-ventral line of the body. The branchial sac has six folds on each side. There are around six to eight rectangular stigmata per mesh. The branchial formula on the right side corresponding to the smallest specimen is: E- 4 - 7 - 1 - 9 - 2 - 11 - 2 - 14 - 2 - 11 - 2 - 10 - 0 - DL The smooth-walled stomach is small and elongated transversely. It is completely covered by several branched hepatic lobes. The primary loop of the gut is widely open. The border of the anus is smooth. There is one gonad on each side. They consist of approximately 11 sac-like testicular follicles aligned on both sides of a central tubular ovary. The oocytes are big and spherical; almost the same size as each individual testicular sac. No endocarps are present.
Maggioni, Tamara, Taverna, Anabela, Reyna, Paola B., Alurralde, Gastón, Rimondino, Clara, Tatián, Marcos (2018): Deep-sea ascidians (Chordata, Tunicata) from the SW Atlantic: species richness with descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 4526 (1): 1-28, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4526.1.1

Export occurrence data

Darwin Core Archive (ZIP)

CLASSIFICATION

Taxonomic Classification Tree

Occurrences with images

Source Information

Deep-sea ascidians (Chordata, Tunicata) from the SW Atlantic: species richness with descriptions of two new species

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Maggioni, Tamara, Taverna, Anabela, Reyna, Paola B., Alurralde, Gastón, Rimondino, Clara, Tatián, Marcos (2018): Deep-sea ascidians (Chordata, Tunicata) from the SW Atlantic: species richness with descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 4526 (1): 1-28, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4526.1.1

Abstract

The understudied deep-sea benthic communities from the Southwestern Atlantic continental slope (200 m– 3000 m depth) were sampled on August 2012 in an area located around 38°S that included the Mar del Plata submarine canyon. In these samplings we found a total of 16 ascidian species from six different families, of which two corresponded to new species. These were: Aplidium meridianum (Sluiter, 1906); Aplidium variabile (Herdman, 1886); Aplidium marplatensis Maggioni & Tatián (sp. nov. present work); Aplidium solitarium Maggioni & Tatián (sp. nov. present work); Synoicum georgianum Sluiter, 1932; Synoicum molle (Herdman, 1886); Synoicum sp.; Polysyncraton trivolutum (Millar, 1960); Sycozoa umbellata (Michaelsen, 1898); Ascidia meridionalis Herdman, 1880; Cnemidocarpa drygalskii (Hartmeyer, 1911); Styela squamosa Herdman, 1881; Pyura pilosa Monniot C. & Monniot F., 1974; Molgula pyriformis Herdman, 1881; Molgula setigera Ärnbäck-Christie-Linde, 1938 and Asajirus indicus (Oka, 1913). Based on morphological evidence, we propose the new synonymy: Molgula setigera Ärnbäck-Christie-Linde, 1938 = Molgula marioni Millar, 1960 = Molgula robini Monniot C. & Monniot F., 1983. We also propose to maintain Molgula pyriformis and Molgula malvinensis as separate species. We report: the extension of the distribution range of Aplidium meridianum, Synoicum georgianum, Polysyncraton trivolutum, Sycozoa umbellata, Cnemidocarpa drygalskii, Pyura pilosa and Molgula setigera, being the first time they are collected off La Plata River; the deepest registers for Synoicum georgianum, Poylsyncraton trivolutum, Sycozoa umbellata, Ascidia meridionalis, Pyura pilosa, Molgula pyriformis and Molgula setigera; and the shallowest register for Synoicum molle.

Maggioni T, Taverna A, Reyna P B, Alurralde G, Rimondino C, Tatián M, plazi (2018). Deep-sea ascidians (Chordata, Tunicata) from the SW Atlantic: species richness with descriptions of two new species. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4526.1.1 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-15.

CC0Published 11/28/2018View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
154507598
Dataset Key
4d211ac6-cbb8-4ef7-b710-44d4f34873ef
Origin
source
Backbone Key
2331779
Taxon ID
A0769C75756AFFB10BB63277117E36D0.taxon
Last Crawled
6/10/2026
Last Interpreted
6/10/2026