Glossoscolex (Glossoscolex) cardosoi, Feijoo-Martínez & Brown, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5255.1.21 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FDA06316-7926-499D-8C92-893F99110489 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7751945 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB3B5A-FFA0-FF9C-0ED4-FE2BA8B74815 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Glossoscolex (Glossoscolex) cardosoi |
status |
sp. nov. |
Glossoscolex (Glossoscolex) cardosoi sp. nov.
( Figs. 2 View FIGURE 2 )
Etymology. The name of the species is given in honor of Guilherme Cardoso, for his contributions to earthworm collections in the Caratuva Massif, where 13 new earthworm species were collected ( Cardoso et al., 2014).
Holotype. BRPR1849 , one adult collected from the surface soil layer (0-20 cm depth), 20 April , 2012, Pico Paraná State Park, Campina Grande do Sul, Paraná state, Brazil; 25.236378°S, 48.839709°W, V. Tedeschi, A. Feijoo, G.G. Brown, and G. Cardoso, colls. GoogleMaps
Paratype. MZUSP5358 View Materials (formerly BRPR 1848 ) , one adult, same collection data as holotype GoogleMaps .
Other material examined. BRPR0439 , one adult and BRPR0437 , 4 adults without posterior ends, 7 juveniles (4 without posterior ends), same collection data as holotype GoogleMaps . BRPR1019 , three juveniles collected from the surface soil layer (0-20 cm depth), 14 December , 2011, Pico Paraná State Park, Campina Grande do Sul, Paraná state, Brazil; 25.23646°S, 48.84003°W, H. Nadolny, G.G. Brown, W. Maschio, L. Clasen, V. Tedeschi and G. Cardoso, colls. GoogleMaps BRPRDNA0005, one adult and BRPRDNA0040, one adult without posterior end, collected from the surface soil layer (0-20 cm depth), 05 July , 2012, Pico Paraná State Park , Campina Grande do Sul , Paraná state, Brazil; 25.23762°S, 48.83823°W, Lina Clasen, M. Vencatto, G.G. Brown, H. Nadolny and G. Cardoso, colls. GoogleMaps BRPRD- NA0108, one sub-adult, collected from the surface soil layer (0-20 cm depth), 09 March , 2012, Pico Paraná State Park, Campina Grande do Sul, Paraná state, Brazil; 25.23646°S, 48.84003°W, G. Brown, G. Cardoso, L. Clasen, V. Tedeschi, I. Lange, colls GoogleMaps .
Description. Endogeic species with cylindrical body, lacking pigmentation. Holotype: length of preserved holotype 237 mm, diameter 3.5 mm in the preclitellar region, 5.6 mm in the clitellum, and 4.8 mm in the postclitellar region. Number of segments: 363. Paratype: length 192 mm long and widths of 4.4 mm (segment 10), 4.6 mm (segment 20) and 4.6 mm (segment 38). Number of segments: 314. Prolobic prostomium ( Fig. 2A View FIGURE 2 ) with first segment invaginated. Eight rows of closely paired setae with a, b visible from segment 23, and c, d from 26. Setae ratio in segment 40: aa:ab:bc:cd:dd = 15.3:1:3.3:0.8:14.7. Segments 6, 7, and 8 are biannular, while 9-14 are triannular. The saddle-shaped clitellum occupies 9-10 segments in 15–23,24 (in one indivual: BRPRDNA0005), with tubercula pubertatis in segments 17-19 (=3) ( Fig. 2B View FIGURE 2 ). The male pores are located in segment 17, within a groove in a small uplifted mound, and female pores are pre-setal in segment 14, in line with nephropores. In one specimen (BRPR0439), the clitellum has one of the male pores displaced to segment 18 ( Fig. 2C View FIGURE 2 ). The nephropores are close to b setae line.
Internal anatomy. Septa of segments 6/7–9/10 are thick, conical and interpenetrated. Round and thick gizzard in segment 6. A pair of oval calciferous glands are found in segment 12, with composite tubular structure (Kompositenschlauchtaschen), and lumen greatly irrigated with blood vessels that completely fill the interior spaces of the gland ( Fig. 2D View FIGURE 2 ). Oesophagus-intestine transition in segment 14 and typhlosole beginning in segment 14, consisting of three simple thick and short blades ( Fig. 2E View FIGURE 2 ). Intestinal caeca absent. Five pairs of lateral-oesphageal hearts in segments 7–11. One pair of holonephridia per segment. Ovaries and ovarian funnels in segment 13. One pair of seminal vesicles restricted to segment 12. Male sexual system metandric, testes and funnels in single midventral subesophageal sac in segment 11, with vas deferens beginning in segment 11, extending backwards, penetrating the copulatory chambers and exiting at the male pore in segment 17. Bean-shaped copulatory chamber in segment 17 (except in the specimen BRPR0439, where one is in 17 and the other in segment 18, following the male pore position displacement; Fig. 2C, F View FIGURE 2 ).
Cocoons. The cocoons are oblong and have a long strand on one side and a smaller strand on the other (cocoon on right in Fig. 2G View FIGURE 2 ), and give rise to a single individual ( Fig. 2H View FIGURE 2 ).
Remarks. Glossoscolex (G.) cardosoi sp. nov. is close to G. (G.) riograndensis Bartz & James, 2018 (Rosário do Sul, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil) and G. (G.) riograndensis pollulus Bartz & James, 2018 (Santa Maria, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil) by the presence of a saddle-shaped clitellum, male pores in 17, but is separated by the presence of tubercula pubertatis, seminal vesicles restricted to segment 12 and the position and shape of the copulatory pouches, as well as the setal distances. In the truncatus group, only two other species have triple typhlosole like G. (G.) cardosoi : G. pastivus Bartz & James, 2018 and G. pampas Bartz & James, 2018 , both from Rio Grande do Sul. Adult individuals are generally over 20 cm long in the field, but preserved individuals measure from 150 to 240 mm ( Fig. 2I View FIGURE 2 ).
V |
Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
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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