Echiniscus becki (Schuster and Grigarick, 1966)
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https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.jcz.2023.02.004 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8171601 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EE752F-FF91-FFD8-FFF6-FA64FBE0FAE8 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Echiniscus becki |
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3.3. Revised morphological characters for Echiniscus becki View in CoL and Echiniscus laterosetosus
An analysis of the type material of E. becki revealed new traits crucial in determining its phylogenetic position. The dorsal plate sculpturing comprises tightly arranged, polygonal endocuticular pillars ( Fig. 9A View Fig ); they lack centrally positioned pores typical for the blumi-canadensis complex of species and Testechiniscus ( Gąsiorek et al., 2018) . In contrary to the original description ( Schuster and Grigarick, 1966), the species does not have dark red eye spots, which always dissolve in Hoyer’ s medium, but large black crystalline eyes identifiable in all examined paratypes ( Fig. 9B View Fig ). An erroneous ascribing of the red colour most probably resulted from a strong orange-reddish glow enclosing eyes. In fact, already the description in Schuster and Grigarick (1966) raised suspicions as the authors drew well-identifiable eyes in the mounted holotypic female, whereas red carotenoid eyes in echiniscids in the vast majority of cases vanish within an hour from preparing a permanent slide with a tardigrade. Echiniscus becki exhibits also a pair of exceptionally shaped subcephalic plates, which extend from the lateral portions of the head and twist in a boomerang-like manner at the level of pharynx ( Fig. 9B View Fig ).
Representatives of E. laterosetosus , collected in the high mountains of Honshu, allowed for providing the morphological details relevant to its taxonomy. Eye spots, drawn in the original description without stating their colour ( Ito, 1993), are small and black ( Fig. 10A View Fig ). The dorsal plate sculpturing consists of well-developed endocuticular pillars, each joined by striae with four or five neighbouring pillars, and pores distributed between them ( Fig. 10B View Fig ).
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