Stenostomum leucops (Dugès, 1828) O. Schmidt, 1848
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2005.00157.x |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5113612 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8C6887DA-3073-C472-FC25-A05FD5D6AE6B |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Stenostomum leucops (Dugès, 1828) O. Schmidt, 1848 |
status |
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Stenostomum leucops (Dugès, 1828) O. Schmidt, 1848 View in CoL
( Fig. 2D View Figure 2 )
Fasciola composita Schrank, 1776
Stylacium isabellinum Corda, 1838
Microstomum leucops Ørsted, 1844
Stenostomum torneense Schmidt, 1852 View in CoL
S. tenuicaudatum Nuttycombe & Waters, 1938 View in CoL
S. sthenum Borkott, 1970 View in CoL
S. platycaudatum Borkott, 1970
Description: Length variable. Two-zooid chain 1– 1.75 mm. Cylindrical body. Rounded or pointed anterior end. Posterior end of the body with intestinelacking region forming a tail. Ciliated epithelium with small rhabdites. Epidermic cilia with rigid sensitive cilia at anterior and occasionally at the posterior end. Colour in life yellowish white.
Anterior brain lobes deeply dentate. A pair of type 1 light-refracting bodies associated with the posterior brain lobes.
Oral pore shape variable, rounded, triangular or elongated. Simple muscular pharynx. Two types of pharyngeal glands: type a, abundant at the distal end, opening onto the posterior region of the pharynx; and type b, arranged in bunches lateral to the pharynx, opening onto the anterior end. Excretophores present. Nephridiopore subterminal, in the intestine-lacking region.
Distribution: Cosmopolitan. In South America, margins of the Surinam River, near Paramaribo, Surinam ( Van der Land, 1970); Paraná River, Argentina ( Noreña-Janssen, 1995).
Discussion: Nuttycombe & Waters (1938) consider the validity of this species questionable. This criterion has been followed by Marcus (1945b). These authors consider that the descriptions of this species are so broad and ambiguous as to make its recognition difficult. By contrast, Borkott (1970) in an exhaustive study of Stenostomum leucops subdivides this species into three new species: S. sthenum , S. platycaudatum and S. plebejum . The results of this research did not confirm the existence of these species in South America ( Noreña-Janssen, 1995). Young & Kolasa (1974b) identified specimens from Africa as S. leucops leucops , on the basis of Luther’s (1960) description, ascribing the differences described by Borkott (1970) to those originated in the cultures or not visible in animals captured in natural environments.
In the 1990s, Reuter ( Reuter, 1988, 1991, 1994; Reuter & Palmberg, 1990; Reuter & Eriksson, 1991; Reuter & Kuusisto, 1992; Reuter, Joffe & Palmberg, 1993; Reuter et al., 1995) as well as Wikgren & Thorndyke (1990), Lindroos & Reuter (1991), Palmberg & Reuter (1992) and Grahn et al. (1995) carried out ultrastructural studies of stenostomids, mainly S. leucops . S. sthenum was not mentioned in any of them.
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Order |
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Family |
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Genus |
Stenostomum leucops (Dugès, 1828) O. Schmidt, 1848
Noreña, Carolina, Damborenea, Cristina & Brusa, Francisco 2005 |
S. sthenum
Borkott 1970 |
S. platycaudatum
Borkott 1970 |
S. plebejum
Borkott 1970 |
S. tenuicaudatum
Nuttycombe & Waters 1938 |
S. neoborecense
Girard 1893 |
Stenostomum torneense
Schmidt 1852 |
Microstomum leucops Ørsted, 1844
Orsted 1844 |
Stylacium isabellinum
Corda 1838 |
Derostoma leucops Dugès, 1828
Duges 1828 |
Fasciola composita
Schrank 1776 |