Thalia sibogae Van Soest, 1973
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5067.3.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AF3DF45F-B248-4BDD-904F-F55D735DC867 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5699643 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CC87DB-057F-FFE4-FF6C-AD85FA72FD98 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Thalia sibogae Van Soest, 1973 |
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Thalia sibogae Van Soest, 1973
Thalia sibogae Van Soest 1973: 204 , 205, Fig. 8; 1998: 235, Table 14.1. Kim et al. 2011: 147, Fig. 5. Purushothaman et al. 2017. Ishak et al. 2018: 454, 459–465, Figs. 4a–e View FIGURE 4 , 5.
Material examined. One solitary zooid ( MDAFWU 2018 /85), St.133, January 2018 ( Fig. 2D–F View FIGURE 2 ) .
Description. Solitary zooid: Transparent body bulky rounded with a very thick, smooth test, with two long (about one third of body length), tapering processes on the posterior end ( Fig. 2D–F View FIGURE 2 ); length without processes 7 mm. Atrial palps fairly small and bifurcate ( Fig. 2F View FIGURE 2 ); lateral projections very small, simple and not bifurcated ( Fig. 2D, F View FIGURE 2 ); medioventral projections are small and of unequal length, the anterior ones are the smallest ( Fig. 2E View FIGURE 2 ). Six body muscles broad; M I narrowly interrupted dorsally, M II–IV converged mid-dorsally, M V and M VI near but do not touch dorsally; M II–V in complete rings, M VI interrupted ventrally ( Fig. 2D View FIGURE 2 ). Totally (M I–VI) 60 muscle fibers. The nucleus (stomach + intestine) is close to the middle posterior projection ( Fig. 2D–F View FIGURE 2 ).
Aggregate zooid: Not collected.
Global distribution. The Central Indo-Pacific ( Van Soest 1973, 1998; van der Land 2008); Korean waters ( Kim et al. 2011); the east coast of Peninsular Malaysia ( Ishak et al. 2018). Type locality: Pulu Sanguisapio, Tawi-Tawi Island, Sulu archipelago ( Siboga -Expedition St. 93, 05°N, 120°E).
Remarks. Although Van Soest (1973) did not observe lateral projections on the type material of T. sibogae , tiny lateral projections may exist with solitary zooids of T. sibogae according to Kim et al. (2011) and Ishak et al. (2018). Therefore, the Sri Lankan specimen resembles the specimens of Kim et al. (2011) and Ishak et al. (2018). The total number of muscle fibres (M I–VI) in solitary zooids of Thalia democratica ( Forskål, 1775) shows a clinal variation, decreasing from higher to lower latitudes ( Van Soest 1975b); and there is a possibility to be such a variation in T. sibogae , but data is not enough in the literature for comparison.
Local name: Indi Gaduwa (in Sinhalese) [note: usually fishers use this term for tiny salps, while the Pegea -like larger salps are called ‘ Rata-indi Gadu ’ in Sinhalese and ‘ Pereechcham Katti ’ in Tamil].
Local importance: None [but, Pegea -like larger salps regularly clog into fishing nets (authors’ observations)].
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Thalia sibogae Van Soest, 1973
Karunarathne, Krishan D. & Croos, M. D. S. T. De 2021 |
Thalia sibogae
Ishak, N. H. B. A. & Adam, N. A. B. & Kassim, Z. 2018: 454 |
Kim, S. & Won, J. H. & Kim, C. B. 2011: 147 |
Van Soest, R. W. M. 1973: 204 |