Paradoris hypocrita, Yonow, 2020
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1006.59732 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5823BFE6-56FE-419E-BA57-5A95D2A3DC5D |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6CA445F8-9162-4F8F-86D8-9A7580F879D4 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:6CA445F8-9162-4F8F-86D8-9A7580F879D4 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Paradoris hypocrita |
status |
sp. nov. |
Paradoris hypocrita sp. nov. Plates 15-18 View Plates 15–18 ; Figures 9 View Figure 9 , 10 View Figure 10 , 11 View Figure 11 , 12 View Figure 12
Paradoris liturata : - Debelius and Kuiter 2007: 242, right photo only (Red Sea; non P. liturata Bergh).
Aldisa sp. 2 Yonow 2008: 156 (Red Sea).
Material.
Holotype. SMF 360586 . Hurghada, Egypt, Sept/Oct 1995, one specimen 10 × 5 mm pres., leg. A. Valdés and E. Mollo (HU-08).
Paratypes. SMF 360587 . Whale Bay, Sha'arm el Sheikh, Egypt, May 1980, 10-15 m depth, one specimen 8 × 6 mm pres. curled, leg. and photographs B.E. Picton (BEP/RS3) ; SMF 360588 . near Hurghada, Egypt, 22 Feb 2011, one specimen 15 × 9 mm pres. curled, leg. S. Kahlbrock (SEM of jaws and radula) ; SMF 360589 . Near Hurghada, Egypt, 2012, two specimens 15 × 10 mm (A; penis extruded) and 12 × 10 mm (B; SEM of jaws and radula) pres. curled, leg. S. Kahlbrock .
Photographic material.
Egypt - El Quseir, 2007, photograph of one individual, H. Blatterer; near Hurghada, 14 Jul 2010, photographs of one individual, S. Kahlbrock; near Hurghada, 09 Sept 2010, photographs of one individual, S. Kahlbrock; Abu Dabbab, Marsa Alam, 28 Jul 2014, 24 m depth, photographs of one individual 30 mm, Hsini Lin (LIN_0805); Abu Dabbab, Marsa Alam, 15 Apr 2015, 23 m depth, photographs of one individual 20 mm, Hsini Lin (LIN_3209); Abu Dabbab, Marsa Alam, 2 Aug 2018, 24 m depth, photographs of one individual 30 mm, Hsini Lin (LIN-P8020094); Moray Garden, Dahab, 2019, photograph of one individual, H. Blatterer. Israel - Eilat, 2014, 31 July 2015, 13 May 2020, photographs of three individuals, R. Amar.
Diagnosis.
Body elongate-oval with a distinct dorsal hump, wide mantle skirt. Dorsum pink, granular, with paler to white nodules, and black lines. Black pattern as four or five paired polygons; first pair around rhinophores with one or two lines extending to frontal margin. Dorsal polygons have short lines extending over skirt to margins. One polygon in front of the gills and one around the gills. Rhinophores black with translucent white stalk; rims of pockets raised, translucent pink, very thin, with an irregular margin. Six gills tri-pinnate, translucent white; pocket large with raised pink rim.
Description.
The shape of the species is elongate oval, usually with an angular frontal margin. There is a central dorsal hump and a broad mantle skirt. The black markings are smooth, loosely paired in a series of four or five polygons, with a larger central one just in front of the gills. Each rhinophore and the gills are located within a polygon (Plates 15-18 View Plates 15–18 ). The rhinophores are long, translucent white at the base and the lamellate clavus is black with a distinct squared tip that is angled. In three photographs of two living individuals, there are 17 lamellae in each of the four rhinophores that can be counted. The gill pocket is large when the gills are extended, with an upstanding pink rim; its margin appears irregular. The six tripinnate gills are translucent white and the edges appear denser white (Plates 16 View Plates 15–18 , 17 View Plates 15–18 ). The pink areas are granular and covered in white tubercles that are also granular. An enlarged detail from one photograph shows that the granules vary in both size and density (Fig. 9A View Figure 9 , from Plate 18 View Plates 15–18 ).
The five preserved specimens (in alcohol or in formaldehyde) are all pale pink with approximately paired, rounded, polygonal, black markings (Fig. 9C View Figure 9 ). The black rhinophores are retracted but just visible in most of the material. The white gills were only extended in two preserved specimens, the holotype SMF 360586 and SMF 360587, and the large gill cavity with its thin rim is clearly visible (Fig. 9B View Figure 9 ).
All preserved specimens are curled ventrally to a greater or lesser extent except the holotype SMF 360586. The black lines remain on the dorsum and are visible through the hyponotum in the holotype SMF 360586 (Fig. 9D View Figure 9 ). The foot is narrower than the dorsum, more than 1/2 to 2/3 the width of the dorsum in the less curled specimens (SMF 360586, SMF 360589). The penis is extruded in specimen A of SMF 360589 (Fig. 9E View Figure 9 ). The foot is rounded anteriorly and tapered posteriorly. The anterior margin is bilabiate and both edges appear to be clearly notched in specimen B of SMF 360589 (Fig. 9F View Figure 9 ) but this is an artefact of preservation. The oral tentacles are indistinct in all preserved specimens, certainly not as obvious as those of P. liturata or, in fact, most dorids. None of the photographs are helpful in showing them, although the bilabiate margins are just visible in Fig. 9E View Figure 9 .
The jaws are formed of three plates (Fig. 10A View Figure 10 ). The rodlets are slightly curved, each with a tapered rounded tip; the more worn rodlets have a rounder tip, and some are broken off (Fig. 10B View Figure 10 ). The radula is asymmetrical and there are more teeth per row on the left side than the right side. The general shape of the radula is distinctive for the two Phyllidiella mimics, P. liturata and P. hypocrita : long and narrow, rounded at the old end, and with two long tails of sharp teeth at the new end (Fig. 11 View Figure 11 ). The radular formula of Paradoris hypocrita sp. nov. (n = 2) is 53-55 × 14-16 (left).0.8-11 (right).There is no rachidian, but a narrow space is present down the middle of the radula in its place (Fig. 12B, C View Figure 12 ). The hooks of the lateral teeth are grooved, which is very difficult to see (Fig. 12A View Figure 12 , arrowed).
Remarks.
This species appears to be relatively common in the northernmost part of the Red Sea, based on the available photographs ( Rudman 2007a, except the photograph from Borneo). It differs consistently in external morphology from Paradoris liturata , which is currently recorded only from Indonesia and PNG ( Dayrat 2006), Malaysia ( Masayoshi 2002), and the Philippines ( Okiedivenut 2007). Note that the Red Sea species is easily distinguished from the west Pacific species on iNaturalist (2007-2020) and that there are no records in the Indian Ocean. Discodorid species are known to vary in notum colour and pattern and rhinophore lamellae counts, but the following differences between P. hypocrita and P. liturata can be observed.
Externally, the black pattern of P. hypocrita sp. nov. forms a series of paired, loose polygons on the dorsum, sometimes incomplete, but in P. liturata the two or three black lines are longitudinal, either complete or broken (but note the black ground colour in a photograph (no specimen available) in Dayrat (2006: fig. 17) H from Papua New Guinea). The dorsum is (always) pink in P. hypocrita (described as grey in P. liturata ( Dayrat 2006) but note the pink tinge in Dayrat (2006: fig. 17) and on Sea Slug Forum). There are 17 lamellae counted from photographs (specimens are contracted) in P. hypocrita , while Paradoris liturata has 13, 15, or 16 lamellae on the rhinophores. However, one head shot of P. hypocrita bears 13 or 14 lamellae on one side and 16 or 17 on the other, indicating similar variations in both species. There are 6-8 gills in P. liturata but only six in P. hypocrita , coloured various shades of grey in the first species and white in the latter.
The three jaw plates and form of the radulae and teeth are very similar if not identical in both species, albeit based on few specimens, but the numbers vary with fewer teeth per row in P. hypocrita sp. nov. The radular formula of P. liturata is 45-79 × 18-21 (left). 0.12-14 (right) (n = 4) while in P. hypocrita the formula is 53-55 × 14-16 (left). 0.8-11 (right) (n = 2). Tooth shape in discodorids is similar and at this level of magnification no particular differences are visible. It may be that Dayrat (2006) is correct and this species forms part of a very variable P. liturata species. However, the high endemism of nudibranchs in the Red Sea currently being revealed (see Discussion) combined with the consistent polygonal dorsal pattern and fewer teeth per row in the radula of the Red Sea specimens examined are considered sufficient to warrant separation. It is also noteworthy that there are no published records of P. liturata from the Indian Ocean: the westernmost Pacific record is from Indonesia ( Dayrat 2006), further supporting the distinctiveness of the Red sea species.
Paradoris liturata has not been recorded in the Indian Ocean but there are at least two species of Paradoris resembling phyllidiids which remain unidentified in the western Indian Ocean. One is pink with three to many longitudinal, usually broken, lines, granular tubercles of different sizes, and grey gills ( Bidgrain 2020a; Anderson 1988-2020); this may prove to be P. liturata and if so, would the first records of this western Pacific species in the Indian Ocean. The second species is white with five longitudinal wavy black lines and evenly sized tubercles and is probably a new species (Bidgrain 2020b). The Red Sea species clearly differs from both of these in the pattern of the black lines; additionally there are no records of either undescribed species in the Red Sea.
Etymology.
This epithet is based on the Latin noun Paradoris hypocrita (mime, mimic) and refers to its superficial resemblance to another family, the Phyllidiidae .
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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Genus |
Paradoris hypocrita
Yonow, Nathalie 2020 |
Paradoris liturata
Yonow 2020 |
P. liturata
Yonow 2020 |
Aldisa
Yonow 2020 |