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Zootaxa
Magnolia Press
Zootaxa

Magnolia Press

1175-5326

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    Mata Atlantica enchytraeids (Parana, Brazil): A new genus, Xetadrilus gen. nov., with three new species, and four new species of Guaranidrilus Cernosvitov (Enchytraeidae, Oligochaeta)

    RUT COLLADORUDIGER M. SCHMELZJORG ROMBKE
    29页
    查看更多>>摘要:Seven new species of terrestrial Enchytraeidae (Oligochaeta) are described from soils of the southern Brazilian Atlantic rain forest. They were found in the framework of the German-Brazilian project SOLOBIOMA, which studied rain forest recovery. Specimens were investigated in vivo and as stained whole mounts. Three species belong to a new genus, named Xetadrilus. Xetadrilus is similar to Guaranidrilus Cernosvitov, 1937 and Tupidrilus Righi, 1974; it differs in the absence of lateral chaetae from segment VIII on and in peculiar structures of the prostomium: ganglia, inner papillae, and a frontal epithelial recess. Further peculiarities are small body size, absence of oesophageal appendages, and a variable pattern of pharyngeal glands. The three species are named X. maacki, X. aphanus, and X. fabryi. Three further nominal species are transferred to Xetadrilus: Marioninapituca Righi, 1974, Marionina righiana Xie & Rota, 2001, and Stercutus ugandensis Bell, 1954. The other four new species belong to Guaranidrilus, the species-richest genus at the sampling sites. They are named G andreolii, G. marquesi, G. cingulatus, and G. hoeferi. All species have elongate transverse epidermal gland cells, three pairs of post-pharyngeal ganglia, and a dorsal vesiclein the nephridial postseptale. These traits may be included in the genus diagnosis. In all species described here, most of the species-specific taxonomic traits are found in non-reproductive structures, which means that specimens of all age groups can be identified to the species level, juveniles included.

    Tardigrada from Santo Antao Island (Archipelago of Cape Verde, West Africa) with the description of a new species

    PAULO FONTOURAGIOVANNI PILATOOSCAR LISI
    11页
    查看更多>>摘要:Three tardigrade species from Santo Antao Island, Archipelago of Cape Verde are firstly reported from Republic of Cape Verde: Echiniscus scabrospinosus Fontoura, 1982, Echiniscus clavispinosus sp. nov. and Milnesium tardigradum Doyere, 1840. E. clavispinosus sp. nov. belongs to the 'viridis group' of species characterized by the green colour and plate ornamentation comprised of tubercles, fine dots and light spots, by lacking dorsal and lateral trunk appendages (cirrus A excluded) and well developedclaws. E. clavispinosus sp. nov. differs from all the known species of the 'viridis group' in having the area between the paired plate III and the terminal plate unsculptured, in details of the cuticular ornamentation, pointed clavae instead of papillateapices, and stronger spur on internal claws. A dichotomous key to the species of the Echiniscus viridis group and a list of Macaronesian species are also given.

    Five new species of Acanthobothrium van Beneden, 1849 (Cestoda: Tetraphyllidea) in elasmobranchs from the northwest Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico with first records from smooth-hound sharks and guitarfish

    ANNE M. VARDO-ZALIKRONALD A. CAMPBELL
    24页
    查看更多>>摘要:Five new species of Acanthobothrium van Beneden, 1849 are described from elasmobranchs from Atlantic coastal waters of the United States and western Gulf of Mexico. Acanthobothrium cairae sp. nov., a category 3 species, from the rough-tail stingray Dasyatis centroura (Mitchill), from New England coastal waters of Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island is differ-entiateoVfrom congeners by a combination of characteristics including hook lengths, testis number (82-166) and distribution, bilobed ovary and 8 large muscle fascicles symmetrically encircling the reproductive organs. Four new category 1 species of Acanthobothrium from four new host species from the Gulf of Mexico are Acanthobothrium lentigino-sum sp. nov. from the rhinobatid (guitarfish), Rhinobatoslentiginosis Garman; Acanthobothrium schalli sp. nov. from two species of triakid sharks, Mustelus canis canis Mitchill and M. norrisi Springer; and Acanthobothrium ulmeri sp. nov. and A. westi sp. nov., both from the skate Raja texana Chandler (Rajidae). Acanthobothrium floridensis Goldstein, 1964 is reported from a new host, R. texana off the Texas coast in the western Gulf of Mexico, a new locality for this species. These species are differentiated by a combination of characters including size, bothridial size, total hook length, ratio of total hook length to bothridium length, ratio of bothridial length to cephalic peduncle length, ovarian shape, position of the genital pore, testis number and distribution. Biogeographically these records from sharks and the guitarfish are new for Acanthobothrium and add two new host families to the distribution of Acanthobothrium in coastal waters of the western Atlantic Ocean. Acanthobothrium is now known to occur in six families of elasmobranchs in the Gulf ofMexico: skates (Rajidae), rays (Dasyatidae, Gymnuridae, Myliobatidae), sharks (Triakidae) and guitarfish (Rhinobatidae) making it the most diverse geographical region for these cestodes in the eastern coastal waters of North America.

    A new bent-toed gecko of the genus Cyrtodactylus Gray, 1827 (Reptilia, Gekkonidae) from Mount Tompotika, eastern peninsula of Sulawesi, Indonesia

    UMILAELADJOKO T. ISKANDARANGGA RACHMANSAH
    14页
    查看更多>>摘要:Cyrtodactylus batik is a new species described on the basis of seven specimens collected from Mount Tompotika, in the Balantak Mountains, eastern peninsula of Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. This large Cyrtodactylus (up to 115 mm snout-vent length), differs from all other congeners by the combination of striking velvety black dorsal coloration with four irregular dark bands and yellow markings, enlarged tubercles not differently colored from other parts of the dorsum except on the flanks, and the absence of precloacal and femoral pores. The new species, together with C. wallacei and C. jelles-mae appear to form an exclusive lineage in Sulawesi.

    First genetic data for species of the genus Haploniscus Richardson, 1908 (Isopoda: Asellota: Haploniscidae) from neighbouring deep-sea basins in the South Atlantic

    SASKIA BRIXTORBEN RIEHLFLORIAN LEESE
    6页
    查看更多>>摘要:The phylogenetic analysis in this study, based on a fragment of the CO 1 mtDNA gene, provides first evidence in favour of Brokeland's (2010) conclusion of recent or ongoing gene flow in Haploniscus rostratus (Menzies, 1962) across the Walvis ridge. Itadds the first evidence for the presence of either restricted gene flow or potential cryptic species in the Guinea Basin. The data suggest furthermore that distinct species within the H. unicornis complex occur sympatrically in the East Atlantic deep-sea basin north of the Walvis Ridge. However, without more specimens (males in particular) and more markers, other processes that may have generated this pattern cannot be excluded.

    Comment on "Taxonomy and the DNA Barcoding Enterprise" by Ebach (2011)

    MARK I. STEVENSDAVID PORCOCYRILLE A. D'HAESELOUIS DEHARVENG...
    4页
    查看更多>>摘要:Since Linnaeus (1735) proposed a now globally adopted classification scheme, taxonomists have benefited greatly from the 'Linnasan Binomial Enterprise'. Ebach's (2011) concerns, particularly that taxonomy "is slowly dying off, were around well beforeDNA barcoding began. Here we discuss the integrative potential of DNA barcoding with morphology, which contrary to Ebach's comments, has proved a useful addition to the taxonomists tool-kit; such molecular applications to taxonomy are not new and have been widely used by taxonomists for over 30 years (e.g., Kitchener et al. 1984). We argue that taxonomy, like the vast majority of disciplines, must continue to develop in response to changing technologies. Taxonomy is not the static science as Ebach portrays. Scanning Electron Microscopy (S.E.M.) is a good example of a valuable tool that has assisted taxonomists since it became commercially available around 1965; and now the use of environmental S.E.M., confocal microscopy and mini-CT scanners are proving useful as taxonomic tools (e.g., http://digimorph.org/). DNA barcoding enters this category. It has the added advantage that its application crosses many facets of science and we agree with Ebach that the benefits of DNA barcoding in biosecurity, foodsciences and forensics are certainly a clear highlight (see also Mitchell 2011).