Tritogeniidae, Plisko, 2013

Plisko, Jadwiga Danuta, 2013, A new family Tritogeniidae for the genera Tritogenia and Michalakus, earlier accredited to the composite Microchaetidae (Annelida: Oligochaeta), African Invertebrates 54 (1), pp. 69-69 : 79-80

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5733/afin.054.0107

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0D3EAD2F-0D77-41C1-AFA5-90A3122630F9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7670424

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/384F4B94-E546-429A-957B-B6297EE753AA

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:384F4B94-E546-429A-957B-B6297EE753AA

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tritogeniidae
status

fam. nov.

Family Tritogeniidae View in CoL fam. n.

Type genus: Tritogenia Kinberg, 1867 View in CoL .

Diagnosis: Body compact, shorter than 160 mm. Number of segments around 80, rarely over 100. Holandric (male funnels in segments 10 and 11), enclosed or free, posterior pair usually smaller than anterior. Two seminal vesicles attributed to segments 10 and 11, the posterior vesicle often smaller than the anterior vesicle. Excretory system meroic; two or more small nephridia per segment (except in some anterior segments, sometimes also absent from a few posterior segments). Oesophageal gizzards: one in 6–7 ( Tritogenia ), or two in 6–7 and 9 ( Michalakus ), the second much smaller and soft. Dorsal blood vessel double in segments 4–10, 11, 12, including when crossing septa; simple posteriad of segment 12. Four or five septa: 4/5–8/9 variably thickened, with septa 6/7 always attached to gizzard at various parts along its length. Setae difficult to see, being minute; on preclitellar segments noticeable only as a few pairs of cd, sometimes ab on various segments; on 9 and a few following, ab setae usually associated with papillae, occasionally extending on a few segments beyond clitellum; on post-clitellar segments eight per segment in four rows located ventrolaterally, although sometimes only ab may be noticeable, with cd difficult to trace; convergence of ab may occur on a few preclitellar segments, divergence postclitellarly.

Description: Unpigmented; live specimens ( Fig. 3 View Fig ) whitish or pinkish grey, body plump and compact; when preserved slightly extended, usually 25–100 mm, rarely reaching 150 mm; 3–15 mm wide at segment 10, much wider at tubercula pubertatis. Average number of segments 60–100, seldom exceeding 120. Annulation of pre-clitellar segments present: 1–3 usually simple, 4–9, 10 ringleted, with 2–4 ringlets annulated or not, with an external segmental subdivision characteristic for species. Female pores in 14. Male pores occur variably in clitellar area, although difficult to detect externally.

Clitellum is saddle-shaped.Tubercula pubertatis variable in shape. Spermathecae small, variably shaped, ampullae elongated, paired or multiple, with pores pretestical, testical, or post-testical; in one to six intersegmental furrows: 9/10–15/16, 16/17. Calciferous glands stalked or not, in segments 9, 10, 9–10. Genital glands variably shaped, either present or not.

Notes:Although no specific histological study on the musculature of Tritogeniidae species was conducted, it was noted that the external muscle bundles observed under microscopic magnification (usually 150–250×) differ in structure from those in Microchaetidae (s.str.). Future histological examination may shed more light on muscle differences, perhaps also providing an indication of evolutionary lineages for these two families.

Composition: There are two genera in this new family. The genus Tritogenia Kinberg, 1867 comprises the following 35 species: T. alveata Plisko, 1997 ; T. annetteae Plisko, 1997 ; T. ataxia Plisko, 1997 ; T. curiosa Plisko, 1997 ; T. curta Plisko & Zicsi, 1991 ( Fig. 4 View Figs 4–7 ); T. debbieae Plisko, 2003 ; T. diversa Plisko, 1997 ; T. douglasi Plisko, 1997 ; T. grisea (Michaelsen, 1902) ; T. herbana Plisko, 1997 ; T. hiltonia Plisko, 2003 ( Fig. 5 View Figs 4–7 ); T. howickiana (Michaelsen, 1913) ; T. insolita Plisko, 1997 ( Fig. 6 View Figs 4–7 ); T. karkloofia Plisko & Zicsi, 1991 ; T. koilia Plisko, 1997 ( Fig. 7 View Figs 4–7 ); T. kruegeri Plisko & Zicsi, 1991 ; T. liversagei Plisko, 1997 ; T. lunata Plisko, 1997 ; T. melmothana (Michaelsen, 1928) ; T. miniseta Plisko, 1997 ; T. monosticha Plisko, 1997 ; T. morosa Cognetti de Martiis, 1906 ; T. mucosa Plisko, 1997 ; T. ngelensis Plisko, 1997 ; T. ngomensis Plisko, 1992 ; T. palusicola Plisko, 1997 ; T. phinda Plisko, 2005 ; T. qudeni Plisko, 2003 ; T. shawi Plisko & Zicsi, 1991 ( Fig. 8 View Figs 8–10 ); T. silvicola Plisko, 1997 ; T. soleata Plisko, 1997 ; T. sulcata Kinberg, 1867 ( Fig. 1 View Fig ); T. tetrata Plisko, 2003 ( Fig. 9 View Figs 8–10 ); T. turneri Plisko, 1997 ; T. zuluensis (Beddard, 1907) ( Fig. 10 View Figs 8–10 ).

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