Paulodora drepanophora Artois & Tessens, 2008

Willems, Wim R., Reygel, Patrick, Steenkiste, Niels Van, Tessens, Bart & Artois, Tom J., 2017, Kalyptorhynchia (Platyhelminthes: Rhabdocoela) from KwaZulu-Natal (South Africa), with the description of six new species, Zootaxa 4242 (3), pp. 441-466 : 455

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4242.3.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C67937C9-844F-461E-AABB-121B9C3CE5FA

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5689676

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FB87EB-522C-E34A-57BE-A9DFFE6DDEAA

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Paulodora drepanophora Artois & Tessens, 2008
status

 

Paulodora drepanophora Artois & Tessens, 2008 View in CoL

( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 B–C)

New localities. iSimangaliso Wetland Park , Eastern Shores, Mission Rocks (28°16’50.4’’S, 32°29’06.5’’E), sand and shrubby red algae from rock pool in the mid-eulittoral of a highly-exposed tidal area with sandstone terrace covered with invertebrates (barnacles, mussels, limpets, corals, tunicates), December 5, 2009 GoogleMaps ; same locality (28°16’41.5"S, 32°29’10.6"E), red algae from a swirl hole close to the footpath from the parking lot, December 12, 2009 GoogleMaps .

Known distribution. Kenya, Mombasa, McKenzie Point & Tiwi ( Jouk & De Vocht 1989; Artois & Tessens 2008) . Somalia, north of Mogadiscio , Hawadli and Warshek ( Schockaert 1982).

Material. Two whole mounts from South Africa (HU, nos VII.3.49–VII.3.50). All material from the original description, including the holotype.

Additional remarks. Habitus and general organisation do not differ from that of other species of Paulodora Marcus, 1948 , a monophyletic taxon to which it undoubtedly belongs (see Tessens et al. 2014). The umbrellashaped, sclerotic "nozzles" on each of the oviducts typical of all species of Paulodora (see Artois & Schockaert 1998) are clearly visible on live specimens as well as on whole mounts ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 C). The prostate stylet type I of the South African specimens is 64–67 µm long (n = 2), which is only marginally longer than the known range (42–62 µm; Artois & Tessens 2008). In contrast with the specimens from the original description, the distal part of the stylet is not folded downwards. Therefore, the sickle-shape is less obvious. This folding is probably an artefact caused by the degree of squeezing of the specimen and also occurs in species with similar stylet morphology, such as Paulodora felis ( Marcus, 1948) Artois & Schockaert, 1998 and P. asymmetrica Artois & Schockaert, 2001 (see Artois & Schockaert 2001).

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