Euprymna parva ( Sasaki, 1913 ) Sanchez & Jolly & Reid & Sugimoto & Azama & Marlétaz & Simakov & Rokhsar, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1038/s42003-019-0661-6 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3728598 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E00C24-FFE9-CE1A-257E-0D66FBE1FBAA |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Euprymna parva ( Sasaki, 1913 ) |
status |
comb. nov. |
Euprymna parva ( Sasaki, 1913) , comb. nov.
( Figure 1c View Fig left, Table 1 View Table 1 , Supplementary Figs. 1 View Fig , 2c, d View Fig , Supplementary Table 2).
Sepiola parva Sasaki, 1913: 252 , Fig. 4 View Fig . — Sasaki, 1929: 136–137 Pl. XV, Figs. 4 View Fig and 5 View Fig , text Fig. 80; Takayama and Okutani, 1992: 203–214, fig, 2, Figs. 4–6 View Fig View Fig View Fig . — Okutani, 1995: 45, fig. 43. Reid and Norman, 1998: 717. — Reid and Jereb, 2005: 165–166, fig. 239.
Inioteuthis parva Sasaki, 1914: 595 , pl. 11 Figs. 9 View Fig and 10.
Type locality: Japan, Tokyo Bay .
Material examined. 3 ♂ (8.5–10.7 mm ML) , 3 ♀ (7.0–8.0 mm ML), East China Sea , Okinawa, Diamond Beach in Seragaki, 26.51N, 127.88E, <2 m, 15 June 2016, coll. J. Jolly, G. Sanchez, A. Masunaga & K. Asada ( AM C.574777, Hap 3, and GenBank accession number: LC417215 View Materials ) GoogleMaps .
Remarks. The correct generic placement of this taxon has been equivocal since it was first described. It was first placed in Sepiola , transferred to Inioteuthis Sasaki, 1914 , then later retained in the genus Sepiola . Sasaki does not explain why parva was placed in Sepiola in his 1929 treatise, nor why it was referred to Inioteuthis in his 1914 work. Clearly, however, the features noted by Sasaki,
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“the nipple-like protruberance” near the base of the hectocotylus and the “peculiar and unstalked cylindrical suckers” (Sasaki48: 137) are characteristic of Euprymna . Mature males have two rows of suckers on their arms, in contrast to the four rows typically (but not always) found among Euprymna . This has, no doubt, resulted in its misplacement in the genus Sepiola , that has continued largely without question until now. However, two rows of arm suckers are also found in E. pardalota and E. phenax . The inclusion of the E. pardalota COI sequence in our analyses ( Fig. 2 View Fig ) confirms its position, and that of “ Sepiola ” parva in the monophyletic genus Euprymna . Optic lobe transcriptome data ( Fig. 3 View Fig ) clearly places S. parva in the monophyletic Euprymna clade, and the pairwise synonymous substitution rate (Ks) between clades (Supplementary Fig. 1 View Fig ) highlights the disjunction between Euprymna and Sepiola , providing strong support for their distinct generic status. The genetic distance data fully supports the placement of S. parva in the genus Euprymna and this evidence now permits a more robust definition of the genus based on morphological characters.
The hectocotylus (dorsal left arm) of Euprymna is unique among the Sepiolinae . In all genera but Euprymna , the hectocotylus is clearly tripartite, with a morphologically distinct basal part, copulatory apparatus, and distal part49,50. In contrast, in Euprymna , the hectocotylized arm has a bipartite form, with a proximal portion and a distal modified part. In Euprymna there is no distinct copulatory apparatus, instead the pedicels of the ventral suckers in the third to fourth proximal rows are modified to form 1–2 papillae in most species, sometimes bearing a vestigial sucker, whereas in all other genera the sucker pedicels forming the copulatory apparatus are more conspicuously modified (mostly horn- or hook-like). More importantly, the distal-most portion of the Euprymna hectocotylus bears deeply modified sucker-stalk elements: the stalks are columnar, i.e., thickened and lengthened, and appressed to each other to form palisades, and the sucker proper is reduced to a small opening surrounded by a chitinous rim, often covered by a fleshy cap and embedded in the columnar pedicel. On the contrary, in all other genera, the hectocotylus distal suckers are normal (in some cases some of them may be enlarged and/or their stalks slightly c Male arm crown, dorsal view, holotype 14.9 mm ML (NSMT Mo 85885), scale bar 5 mm. d Female right side (of animal) arm crown, oral view, paratype, 15.3 mm ML (NSMT Mo 85893), scale bar 2 mm. c, d Numbers 1 – 4 indicate Arms 1 – 4. e SEM Arm 4 sucker rim, paratype female, 19.5 mm ML (NSMT Mo 85889), scale bar 20 µm. f SEM enlargement of sucker rim shown in (d), scale bar 10 µm.
lengthened) (Bello, submitted). The very simple copulatory apparatus of Euprymna is considered a plesiomorphic character state 51 in the Sepiolinae , placing this genus in a basal position within the subfamily36,52.
ML |
Musee de Lectoure |
AM |
Australian Museum |
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.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
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SubFamily |
Sepiolinae |
Genus |
Euprymna parva ( Sasaki, 1913 )
Sanchez, Gustavo, Jolly, Jeffrey, Reid, Amanda, Sugimoto, Chikatoshi, Azama, Chika, Marlétaz, Ferdinand, Simakov, Oleg & Rokhsar, Daniel S. 2019 |
Inioteuthis parva
Sasaki 1914: 595 |
Sepiola parva
Sasaki 1913: 252 |