Aeolidia papillosa (Linnaeus, 1761)

Ekimova, Irina A., Grishina, Darya Yu. & Nikitenko, Ekaterina D., 2024, Nudibranch molluscs of Sakhalin Island, Northwestern Pacific: new records and descriptions of two new species, Ruthenica, Russian Malacological Journal 34 (2), pp. 69-91 : 86-87

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.35885/ruthenica.2024.34(2).3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F76E03BA-643F-417A-8FE8-65702E5861A7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11093326

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038587BF-A60B-DD2C-ABF7-F8DCE90D8F77

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Aeolidia papillosa (Linnaeus, 1761)
status

 

Aeolidia papillosa (Linnaeus, 1761) View in CoL

( Fig. 7H)

Material studied: MIMB48078 View Materials , 1 specimen, dissected, the Sea of Okhotsk , Aniva Bay , Moguchi River, Hirano ridge, 46°05.372’N, 142°13.612’E, 20 m in depth, 20.08.2013, coll. A. Plaksin, A. Semenov. GoogleMaps

Diagnosis: Body large, wide, 30 mm in length, yellowish to brown with intensive dark brown to black pigmentation on dorsal side of anterior body parts and head. Body, rhinophores and tips of cerata intensively covered by opaque yellow and black speckles. Rhinophores conical, smooth. Cerata cylindrical, slightly flattened near base, arranged in continuous, densely packed rows. Jaws oval plates with smooth masticatory border. Radular formula 19 × 0.1.0. Wide rachidian tooth pectinate with 28–35 sharply pointed denticles. No central cusp visible. Ampulla narrow, convoluted. Vas deferens moderately long, widened near penial sheath. Penis conical. Receptaculum seminis ovate, muscular.

Molecular data: A BLAST-n search of COI sequence resulted 99.85% identical to sequences of Aeolidia papillosa from the North-East Pacific (JX087536, KF643410) thus confirming the species identity of our samples.

Distribution: This species has a wide distribution in the boreal regions of the North Pacific and North Atlantic and also occurs in Arctic waters [the White and the Barents seas, see Kienberger et al., 2016]. Recent study highlighted that the presence of this species in Japan [ Baba, 1935] needs further confirmation [ Kienberger et al., 2016]. Since Baba’s specimens [1935] were also collected from Aniva Bay, our molecular results confirm the identity of this species in northwestern Pacific.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Nudibranchia

Family

Aeolidiidae

Genus

Aeolidia

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