Jorunna daoulasi Innabi, Stout & Á. Valdés, 2023

ミナミヒョウモンウミウシ Jorunna daoulasi
Photographed by
nobuhiko KIMOTO Nobuhiko
Location
Hachijo Island, Tokyo, Japan
Date
2015/10/06
Length
10mm
Depth
10.0m
Water temperature
22.1℃

Description

Body oval, narrow, elongate, completely covered with numerous caryophyllidia. Branchial and rhinophoral sheaths low, simple, circular; gill composed of nine short, tripinnate branchial leaves, imbricated, arranged upright, with the apices close to each other in the living animal. Rhinophores short, lamellated, with eight or nine lamellae. Body color grey, with a complex network of white lines of different thicknesses; in some specimens some of the lines are very thick and contain darker areas, whereas in others thicker lines form the main network and thinner lines form a secondary network and in others all lines are approximately the same thickness. Rhinophores and branchial leaves are the same color as the dorsum but the rhinophoral lamellae and in some cases the gill lamellae are white.Reproductive system with a long, narrow, curved ampulla that connects with the female gland complex and an elongate prostate. The prostate is as wide as the ampulla but narrows substantially before expanding into the short, curved, narrow deferent duct. The deferent duct is much narrower than the prostate. The penis is unarmed. The vagina is very elongate and wide distally, several times wider than the deferent duct, narrowing considerably proximally and connecting directly to the irregular bursa copulatrix. The oval seminal receptacle also connects to the bursa copulatrix next to the vaginal connection, and the short uterine duct that enters the female gland complex. The bursa copulatrix is ~ 3× as large as the seminal receptable. A large accessory gland connects to a narrow and convoluted duct that opens into the genital atrium, where a curved, sharp stylet is located.

Biology

Range includes New Caledonia and possibly Papua New Guinea and Japan (see Remarks section below); uncommon, found at ~ 6 m depth on an unidentified grey sponge on which it is highly cryptic. All the specimens were found directly on the sponges while SCUBA diving.

References