Ototyphlonemertes (duplex) norenburgi 1863
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.12782/specdiv.23.13 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:870A4A76-9855-46CE-A0A5-7E7870F4E548 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5567316 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CF0387C3-D507-B159-FF36-A2F1FB16FCA9 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Ototyphlonemertes (duplex) norenburgi |
status |
sp. nov. |
Ototyphlonemertes (duplex) norenburgi sp. nov.
( Fig. 6 View Fig )
Material examined. Two specimens, both from Dam Ngoai; ICHUM 5355 View Materials (holotype); ICHUM 5356 View Materials (paratype) .
Description. Body length 7.8 mm (paratype) to 9.0 mm (holotype), width 0.2 mm (paratype) to 0.3 mm (holotype) (n =2). Epidermis whitish ( Fig. 6A, B View Fig ); cephalic furrow post-cerebrally; tissues around brain reddish ( Fig. 6C View Fig ); cirri present in both anterior and posterior ends of body. Foregut-intestine junction not distinct (intestinal caecum possibly present). Statoliths bipartite ( Fig. 6D View Fig ), 8.4 µm (paratype) to 9.6 µm (holotype) in diameter (n =2); statocyst 27.9 µm (holotype) to 30.5 µm (paratype) in diameter (n =2). Proboscis diaphragm short ( Fig. 6E View Fig ); two accessory stylet pouches, lateral to central-stylet basis, each containing 2–3 accessory stylets (n =2); in holotype, one of two accessorystylet pouch contained three accessory stylets all directing forward; another accessory-stylet pouch contained two accessory stylets each directing forward and backward; paratype had two accessory stylets per pouch both directing forward; middle chamber bulbous; central stylet smooth ( Fig. 6E, F View Fig ), 28.3 µm (holotype) to 33.0 µm (paratype) long; basis 26.4 µm (paratype) to 29.1 µm (holotype) long, 7.5 µm (holotype) to 9.3 µm (paratype) wide (n =2); basis length width ratio 2.84 (paratype) to 3.88 (holotype) (n =2); posterior chamber opaque, without specialized anterior portion. Intestinal diverticula shallow. Posterior adhesive plate containing cells with orange contents. Mature oocytes up to 70 µm in diameter, accounting for more than 40% of body width ( Fig. 6C View Fig ).
Distribution. Our unpublished sequence data indicate that O. ( duplex ) norenburgi sp. nov. is also distributed in Onnason, Okinawa-jima island, although it was recovered only from Dam Ngoai in the present study.
Etymology. The specific name is a noun in the genitive case, after the eminent nemertean biologist Dr Jon Laurence Norenburg at the Department of Invertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, USA, in respect of his distinguished achievement and contribution to the ribbon-worm systematics, including that of Ototyphlonemertes , as well as other interstitial animals.
Remarks. In the resulting phylogenetic tree, O. ( duplex ) norenburgi was sister to O. ( duplex ) envalli ( Fig. 2 View Fig ). Morphologically, O. ( duplex ) norenburgi may be distinguished from O. ( duplex ) envalli by the larger oocyte size relative to the body width: the oocyte/body-width ratio exceeds 0.4 in O. ( duplex ) norenburgi , while it is around 0.35 in O. ( duplex ) envalli [but see Remarks for O. ( duplex ) envalli above]. From O. ( duplex ) chernyshevi , O. ( duplex ) norenburgi may be distinguished by its thinner stylet basis: the basis length/width ratio was 2.84–3.88 in O. ( duplex ) norenburgi , while it was 2.28–2.80 in O. ( duplex ) chernyshevi .
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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