Angursa lanceolata Renaud-Mornant, 1981
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2019.510 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BF58E108-2C6C-4A80-BD7D-47FEF5805B06 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5941831 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D3878D-FF90-5812-1C48-605DD95AFB33 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Angursa lanceolata Renaud-Mornant, 1981 |
status |
|
Angursa lanceolata Renaud-Mornant, 1981 View in CoL
Fig. 4 View Fig
Emended diagnosis
Angursa with bulbous primary clavae terminating in apices shorter than lateral cirri; pedestals of primary clavae and lateral cirri present; flat secondary clavae present; morphology of tertiary clavae unknown; lance-like cirri E; Leg I sensory organs present; legs II and III sensory organs absent; leg IV sensory organs each as elongate papilla with short apical spine; anal papillae absent.
Material examined
Paratype
ATLANTIC OCEAN • 1 adult; mounted with the dried out holotype; Dinet leg.; AE128.
Remarks
The primary clavae were described as leaf-shaped by Renaud-Mornant (1981), but the primary clavae of the paratype we observed were bulbous papillae (8 μm long, 6 μm in diameter) with blunt apices (the apex were only recognised in one of the clavae) ( Fig. 4A View Fig ). Their neighbouring sensory organs, the lateral cirri (17 μm) ( Fig. 4A View Fig ), were apparently longer than reported in the original description (11 μm) ( Renaud-Mornant 1981). As it was drawn in the original description, the pedestals that support the primary clavae and the lateral cirri were apparent ( Fig. 4A View Fig ). We recognised the flat secondary clavae ( Fig. 4A View Fig ) which had already been mentioned as slightly hollow formations by Renaud-Mornant (1981), but their contours were difficult to observe. The presence and morphology of the tertiary clavae could not be revealed in this study. The characteristic cirri E ( Fig. 4B View Fig ) were confirmed, but their proportion seem slightly different that the drawing provided by Renaud-Mornant (1981). We recognised the short, apical spines of the leg IV sensory organs ( Fig. 4B View Fig ) which were overlooked in the original description ( Renaud-Mornant 1981). Other measurements of the paratype are as follows: body length. 136 μm; median cirrus, 3 μm; internal cirrus, 6 μm; external cirrus, 6 μm; cirrus E, 11 μm; leg I sensory organ, 6 μm; leg IV sensory organ, 5 μm.
Angursa lanceolata View in CoL closely resembles A. lingua View in CoL by the bulbous primary clavae shorter than the lateral cirri, the apparent pedestals that support these two sensory organs, and the elongate leg IV sensory organs with apical spines ( Renaud-Mornant 1981; Bussau 1992). However, these two species are easily distinguished from each other by the longer cephalic cirri and cirri E in A. lingua View in CoL (median cirrus, 10 μm; internal cirrus, 9 μm; external cirrus 13 μm; lateral cirrus 28 μm; cirrus E, 20 μm (body length, 145 μm)) and by the lance-shaped cirri E in A. lanceolata View in CoL versus tongue-shaped cirri E in A. lingua View in CoL (Renaud- Mornant 1981; Bussau 1992).
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Angursa lanceolata Renaud-Mornant, 1981
Fujimoto, Shinta & Hansen, Jesper Guldberg 2019 |
A. lingua
Bussau 1992 |
A. lingua
Bussau 1992 |
A. lingua
Bussau 1992 |
Angursa lanceolata
Renaud-Mornant 1981 |
A. lanceolata
Renaud-Mornant 1981 |