Rhabdoploca curvispiculifera var. geniculatus ( Topsent, 1928 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5398.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E233F731-D5FA-4032-B3A4-CEFE5A809C49 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10580733 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BF4E397F-FFD4-3160-9786-FDBDBFDA0273 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Rhabdoploca curvispiculifera var. geniculatus ( Topsent, 1928 ) |
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Rhabdoploca curvispiculifera var. geniculatus ( Topsent, 1928)
( Fig. 5D View FIGURE 5 )
Hymeraphia geniculata Topsent, 1892: 115 , pl. I fig. 13, pl. XI fig. 4–5.
Hymerhabdia curvispiculifera ; sensu Topsent 1894: 22.
Rhabderemia geniculata ; Topsent 1894: 23.
Rhabdoploca curvispiculifera View in CoL ; sensu Topsent 1904: 158.
Rhabdoploca curvispiculifera var. geniculata View in CoL ; Topsent 1928: 43.
Cerbaris curvispiculifer View in CoL ; sensu Alvarez & Van Soest 2002: 751.
The variety was originally described by Topsent as Hymeraphia geniculata from the Azores, Prince Albert 1 er Cruises Stat. 247, 38.3917°N 30.3389°W, 318 m depth (holotype in MOM, a slide of the type in MNHN reg. nr. DT 944). Topsent changed his mind several times and decided ultimately to reassign H. geniculata to Rhabdoploca curvispiculifera View in CoL ( Carter, 1880: 43 as Microciona View in CoL , from the Gulf of Mannar, Sri Lanka, approximate coordinates 9°N 79°E, type not identified) as a distinct Atlantic variety. Alvarez & Van Soest (2002) transferred Carter’s (1880) Rhabdoploca curvispiculifera View in CoL to Cerbaris Topsent, 1898 View in CoL , and by this implicitly transferred the var. geniculata View in CoL also to that genus. A difference between Carter’s curvispiculifer View in CoL and Topsent’s geniculatus is found in the small tylostyles, which are entirely smooth in Carter’s typical variety and entirely spined in Topsent’s variety. Other skeletal characters of the two are strikingly similar: the length of the (rhabdo)styles, in Carter’s species 207 x 13, and Topsent’s species 90–200 x 10–12 µm. The ‘toxostrongyles’ of both species are on average approximately the same (207 x 9 µm vs 125–195 x 6–8 µm, respectively). I agree with Topsent (1928) that geniculatus has a small but distinct difference, and to acknowledge the geographic separation I propose here to elevate the variety to the rank of species as Cerbaris geniculatus (Topsent, 1892) .
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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Rhabdoploca curvispiculifera var. geniculatus ( Topsent, 1928 )
Van Soest, Rob W. M. 2024 |
Cerbaris curvispiculifer
Alvarez, B. & Van Soest, R. W. M. 2002: 751 |
Rhabdoploca curvispiculifera var. geniculata
Topsent, E. 1928: 43 |
Rhabdoploca curvispiculifera
Topsent, E. 1904: 158 |
Hymerhabdia curvispiculifera
Topsent, E. 1894: 22 |
Rhabderemia geniculata
Topsent, E. 1894: 23 |