Neotobrilus ampiei ( Joubert & Heyns, 1979 ) Tsalolikhin, 1981
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https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4651.2.1 |
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lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3EAFEE69-6C8A-454B-A01A-D7E4A23BAD9F |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F587B5-A813-9D5C-4888-531BFD96F867 |
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Plazi |
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Neotobrilus ampiei ( Joubert & Heyns, 1979 ) Tsalolikhin, 1981 |
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Neotobrilus ampiei ( Joubert & Heyns, 1979) Tsalolikhin, 1981 View in CoL
Figures 14–21 View FIGURE 14 View FIGURE 15 View FIGURE 16 View FIGURE 17 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 View FIGURE 20 View FIGURE 21
Measurements: Table 5 View TABLE 5
Description: Female (n = 13): Habitus curved ventrally to various degrees, body 1868–2439 μm long. Cuticle 1–4 μm thick at mid-body, annulated. Somatic setae numerous, spread unevenly over entire body. First somatic se- tum located 24–41 μm from anterior end. Lip region 24–36 μm wide, cephalic setae 13–16 μm long. En face view of head indicates one circlet consisting of six labial papillae, six long cephalic setae and four short cephalic setae. Cephalic setae originate from the cuticle, while cephalic papillae originate subcuticular. All setae and papillae appear to be hollow tubes. Amphids stirrup shaped with slit-like apertures, located 17–19 μm from anterior end. Stoma 35–44 μm long, half the width of lip region, consisting of two parts: A distinct barrel-shaped buccal cavity separated by two separate pockets. Each pocket contains a tooth and are separated by a narrowing of the cavity. First tooth is 18–24 μm from anterior end with second tooth 13–16 μm posterior to first. Oesophagus cylindrical and muscular, 345–437 μm long. Nerve ring not observed. Cardia 22–36 μm long with three prominent cells situated at junction of cardia and oesophagus. Excretory pore not observed. Reproductive system didelpic-amphidelphic, anterior tract (195–392 μm long) almost always slightly shorter than posterior tract (228–430 μm). Vulva a transversal slit situ- ated at 37–46 % of body. Vaginal musculature strong, vagina less than half corresponding body width. Advulval setae twice as long as somatic setae (mean length of 16.4 μm), located dorsally at one body width anterior and posterior to vulva. Uterine eggs observed in most female specimens, measuring 51–68 μm X 35 –56 μm with shell. Eggshell uniquely sculptured with several prominent tubercules. Pars dilatata oviductus rounded, containing flaggelloid sperm cells. Ovaries reflexed, oocytes arranged in single row except at growth point. Tail 255–354 μm long ending in rounded tip with a 3–5 μm spinneret and a subterminal setum. Rectum 31–47 μm long.
Male (n = 5): Habitus curved ventrally, body 1990–2320 μm long. Morphology of stoma and oesophagus similar to that of female. Spicule 69–80 μm long, medial outgrowth from ventral limb towards dorsal limb. Gu- bernaculum 19–26 μm long. Reproductive system diorchic, sperm cells flaggelloid. Ductus ejaculatoris muscular, its length corresponds with length of supplementary row, never exceeding it. Tail 181–211 μm long. Two rows of subventral somatic setae along row of supplements, setae directed anteriorly and consisting of two parts. Supplementary row consisting of six pre-cloacal supplements, three larger and three closest to the cloaca, smaller. The supplements lose complexity nearing the cloaca. Supplement 1 to supplement 3 (starting anteriad) are complex in structure with several tubercules, whereas Supplement 4-Supplement 6 less covered in tubercules and Supplement 6 the most simplistic. Distance between Supplement 2 and Supplement 3 is the shortest. Micro papillae present between supplements Supplement 3 and Supplement 4 (10–11 micropapillae), Supplement 4 and Supplement 5 (4–5 micropapillae) and Supplement 5 and Supplement 6 (5–6 micropapillae). According to SEM micropapillae appear as thin transversal slits.
Discussion: The Neotobrilus specimens collected in Telperion Nature Reserve was identified following a key from Tsalolikhin & Shoshin (2009). Neotobrilus ampiei is distinguished from all other species in this genus by the uniquely sculptured eggshells in the females and by the closely positioned supplements 2 and 3 in males. The current female specimens exactly matches those of the original description by Joubert & Heyns (1979). However, the males differ slightly in: spicule length (61–72 μm vs 69–80 μm) and c-value (9.26–13.26 vs 8.4–9.9). Neotobrilus ampiei is considered endemic as the only reports are from the type locality in the Eastern Cape Province and a second population in the North West Province described by Joubert & Heyns (1979). This is only the second report of this species.
Locality and specimens examined: Specimens of N. ampiei were found at the Waterhole (MP00031) site ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 ) and are deposited in the National Collection of Nematodes (ARC—Plant Health and Protection, Biosystematics, Pretoria) on slide numbers 50591–50599.
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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