Taxonomy Study on Trepang collected from Karimunjawa, Situbondo, Spermonde and Ambon
Studi Taksonomi Teripang dari Karimunjawa, Situbondo, Spermonde dan Ambon.
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Date
2013Author
Setyastuti, Ana
Zamani, Neviaty P.
Purwati, Pradina
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Trepang is a group of sea cucumbers or holothurians (Class Holothuroidea, Phylum Echinodermata) which has been consumed as food and traditional medicine mostly by Chinese communities worldwide. Due to the increasing demand of trepang recently, trepang industries tend to expanse fast both national (Indonesia) and international. The numbers of countries involving in trepang industries become doubled during a period of two decades. Indonesia was the largest trepang (beche-de-mer) producer countries before the year 2000, and the main importer country is Hong Kong SAR (China). Lacking of regulation has been threatening the trepang’s populations in the nature and issues of over-exploitation and depleting resources have already been pronounced from Indonesia and other contries. The large volume of trepang in world markets has been attracted many countries and generates the CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) to discuss the population’s status and potential of trepang in each producer country. Problems that encounter Indonesia to participate in CITES conservation efforts are: (1) list of trepang species traded in Indonesia which has been taxonomic confirmed is not available; (2) some processed trepang (dried or salted) losses most of the body characteristics, making them difficult to identify the species. Therefore, the objectives of this research are (1) to identified the species of trepang which are collected from Karimunjawa, Situbondo, Spermonde and Ambon based on their morphology and ossicles characteristics and (2) to possibly trace their species identity from processed trepangs (dried and salted). Samples for this study were collected from December 2011 to February 2013, from four different areas: Karimunjawa, Situbondo, Spermonde and Ambon. Samples of trepang were collected from the fishermens and trepang collector. Trepang samples collected in various conditions: fresh (from Karimunjawa and Situbondo), salted (from Spermonde) and dried (from Ambon). Species identification was done through (1) determining macroscopic characteristic of body morphology and anatomy (calcareous ring, tentacle ampulae, polian vesicle, longitudinal muscle, respiratory tree, cuvierian tubulus, gonad) and (2) observing ossicles from the body wall, tentacle, dorsal papillae, ventral tube feet, longitudinal muscle, gonad, respiratory tree, cloaca, cloaca retractor muscle and cuvierian tubulus under a compound microscope. Thirty four (34) specimens have been succesfully collected from Karimunjawa (6 specimen), Situbondo (11 specimen), Spermonde (9 specimen) and Ambon (8 specimen). Those were grouped into 27 species: 14 species were considered common trepang traded in the international market (Actinopyga lecanora, Bohadschia vitiensis, B. subrubra, Holothuria nobilis, H. fuscopunctata, H. edulis, H. atra, H. scabra, H. fuscocinerea, H. coluber, Pearsonothuria graeffei, Stichopus chloronotus, Thelenota anax and T. ananas); 13 species have been rarely or never been reported as trepang in the local or international market (Holothuria excellens, H. lessoni, H. cf. albiventer, H. turriscelsa, H. cf. imitans, Stichopus vastus, S. pseudohorrens, S. monotuberculatus, S. quadrifasciatus, S. noctivagus); and 3 Bohadschia species which were unable to be identified. Concerning the species composition, it was difficult to determine whether the fishermen did not have any preference on the species or there has been a species composition change due to depleting the main species targets. Disagreeing the previous reports, processed trepang in the present study (salted and dried) were still able to be species identified. Even though most of the external body characters has been damage, the ossicles remained recognizable. Thus, in order to determine trepang species that enter the markets, both fresh and processed specimens can be sampled and identified.
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