Gnesiotrocha de Beauchamp, 1965

Davies, Natalie, Lafleur, Alexandre, Hochberg, Rick, Walsh, Elizabeth J. & Wallace, Robert L., 2024, Key to sessile gnesiotrochan rotifers: Families, monospecific species in Flosculariidae, species of Atrochidae, Conochilidae, and Limnias, Zootaxa 5397 (4), pp. 497-520 : 499

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5397.4.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3EE9F78B-0133-4466-872C-F14CEF87E928

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10472020

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2712827A-416C-FFAE-FF7D-D64EFCCCB6F6

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gnesiotrocha de Beauchamp, 1965
status

 

Superorder Gnesiotrocha de Beauchamp, 1965

Within the diversity exhibited by rotifers, superorder Gnesiotrocha are distinct from superorder Pseudotrocha (order Ploima ) in that all gnesiotrochans (1) possess a foot that lack toes, (2) their anterior end is either a funnel-shaped structure or possesses ciliated lobes, and (3) their trophi are either malleoramate or uncinate ( Edmondson 1959; Koste 1978; Ruttner-Kolisko 1974; Wallace & Snell 2010; Wallace et al. 2006). Ploimids may lack a foot, and, if present, may possess toes; their anterior end and trophi do not resemble that of the sessile taxa. Uncinate trophi possess few teeth: usually one or more large, pincer-like teeth and a few smaller teeth ( Fig. 2A View FIGURE 2 ); malleoramate trophi possess crescent-shaped manubria and unci with numerous club-shaped teeth ( Fig. 2B View FIGURE 2 ). Teeth close to the fulcrum are usually larger than those more distant. Trophi in the Flosculariaceae characteristically exhibit a grinding or pounding-like action, which is not seen in the Collothecacea .

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