Cucumaria, de Blainville, 1830

Thandar, Ahmed S., 2019, On some lesser known sea cucumbers in the Natural History Museum, UK (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea), Zootaxa 4688 (3), pp. 361-381 : 377

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4688.3.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B8F6F528-F616-4EA1-8CA7-FA2FA89A34B9

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038C87E5-BF77-FF8B-FF50-FA057FAF67CC

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cucumaria
status

 

? Cucumaria View in CoL sp. indet.

Figure 10 View FIGURE 10

Material examined. 1850.7.3.24, Falmouth, 1 spec.

Description. Specimen cylindrical, 62 mm in length, 21 mm in breadth, apparently a mud or sand-dwelling form due to adhering sand grains, hence skin rough to touch. Tentacles 9, well branched, ventral two reduced. Calcareous ring far anterior, almost cartilaginous or much reduced. Tube feet restricted to radii in 2–4 rows per radii, well developed, short, but retractile, suckers well developed. Retractors and respiratory trees well developed, the former extend very far forward due to anterior displacement of calcareous ring. No ossicles detected in tentacles, introvert, tube feet and body wall.

Remarks. Because of the poorly developed calcareous ring and the lack of ossicles in any part of its body the definitive identification of this specimen is not possible. It may represent Cucumaria frondosa ( Gunnerus, 1767) but this species, although known to lose its ossicles with age has 10 equal tentacles and according to Mortensen (1927) is restricted to northern Europe. The current specimen is juvenile and hence should have retained at least some ossicles or all are perhaps dissolved in the preservative. For its size the calcareous ring is very much reduced to be almost cartilaginous.

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