Pseudechiniscus (Meridioniscus) dreyeri, Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk, 2021
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.6620/ZS.2021.60-70 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1E7887A1-0C3E-D338-829B-EDA2FEEBFEFC |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Pseudechiniscus (Meridioniscus) dreyeri |
status |
sp. nov. |
Genus: Pseudechiniscus Thulin, 1911 View in CoL Subgenus: Meridioniscus Gąsiorek et al., 2021 Pseudechiniscus (Meridioniscus) dreyeri sp. nov. ( Figs. 24–25 View Fig , Tables 11–12)
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:B38091F7-3B79-438B-A42A-A4E53C25C34B
Ta r d i g r a d a R e g i s t e r: w w w.t a r d i g r a d a.n e t / register/0112.htm
Description: Females (i.e., from the third instar onwards; measurements and statistics in table 11): Body small and cylindrical ( Fig. 24A View Fig ), light orange with tiny crystalline eyes; body colour and eyes dissolve in Hoyer’s medium. Clavae elongated (dactyloid); cirrophores of peribuccal cirri merged with flagellum, cirrophores A distinct ( Fig. 24A–B View Fig ).
Dorsal plate sculpturing of the Pseudechiniscus type, with rudimentary, faint striae present occasionally in central plate portions ( Fig. 24B View Fig ). Endocuticular pillars of similar diameters throughout the dorsum. Pentapartite cephalic plate adjacent to the scapular plate; lacking cervical plate ( Fig. 24A View Fig ). Scapular plate divided by two weakly marked sutures: central longitudinal suture and transversal suture, thus delineating four plate portions: two large anterior ones and two posterior, more narrow and with poorly visible lateralmost subportions ( Fig. 24B View Fig ). Median plates m1, m3 unipartite and large, a pair of lateral intersegmental plates flanking m1 and two pairs of such plates flanking m2; m2 bipartite, with narrow triangular posterior part. Paired segmental plates I–II and paired pseudosegmental plate IV’ present ( Fig. 24B View Fig ). Caudal plate with two slightly curved incisions ( Fig. 24A View Fig ).
Ventral sculpturing with well-developed and evident reticulum composed of endocuticular pillars solely ( Figs. 24C View Fig – 25). Single dense aggregation of pillars forming an aliform shape in the subcephalic region. Sexpartite gonopore placed between legs III– IV, and a trilobed anus between legs IV. Pedal plates formed as belts of pillars in central limb portions ( Fig. 24A View Fig ). Pulvini faint. Papillae or spines on legs I absent. Papilla IV small and tubby ( Fig. 24A View Fig ). Claws minute and isonych; internal claws with delicate primary spurs positioned at ca. 20% of the branch height and closely adjacent to it ( Fig. 24A View Fig , insert).
Males: Not found.
Juveniles (i.e., the second instar; measurements and statistics in table 12): Qualitatively identical to females, beside of the lack of gonopore. No morphometric gap with respect to adult females.
Larvae (i.e., the first instar): Cuticle sculpturing developed as in older instars. Gonopore and anus absent. Body length 94–100 μm, scapular plate length 14.4–14.7 μm; cephalic appendages lengths: cirri interni 3.8–6.0 μm, cephalic papillae 2.8–3.0 μm, cirri externi 4.7–6.4 μm, (primary) clavae 3.0–3.1 μm, cirrus A 15.3–15.9 μm. Papilla IV length 1.4–1.6 μm. Claw branches 4.6–5.0 μm, spurs 1.4–1.8 μm.
Eggs: Up to two orange eggs per exuvia were found.
Molecular markers and phylogenetic position: Single haplotypes were found in all markers: 18S rRNA (OK048615), 28S rRNA (OK048633), ITS- 1 (OK048646) and COI (OK047278). In the updated phylogeny from Gąsiorek et al. (2021c), the closest relative of P. (M.) dreyeri sp. nov. within the Meridioniscus clade is P. (M.) cf. saltensis from the Neotropics ( Fig. 30 View Fig ).
Type material: Holotype (adult female on the slide TW.008.12), 32 paratypes: 18 adult females, 12 juveniles, and two larvae on the slides TW.005.11, 13, 15–16, TW.008.10–13. Four specimens were preserved for molecular analyses. Holotype deposited in the Biodiversity Research Center of the Academia Sinica ( ASIZ01000039 ), the one paratype (NHMD-915766) deposited in the Natural History Museum of Denmark, and remaining material stored at the Jagiellonian University .
Type locality: 24°23'51"N, 121°14'04"E, 3 700 m asl: Taiwan, Snow Mountain (Xueshan), North Peak. Mosses from rocks exposed to sun.
Etymology: Patronym honouring Niklas Dreyer, a carcinologist and the collector of the Taiwanese moss samples used in this study. Noun in the genitive singular.
Differential diagnosis: There are few Meridioniscus species with a smooth posterior margin of the pseudosegmental plate IV’ (or with minute projections) and lacking lateral hemispherical projections. Pseudechiniscus (M.) dreyeri sp. nov. differs from:
P. (M.) angelusalas Roszkowska et al., 2020 View in CoL , described from Madagascar, by relative lengths of some of the cephalic appendages (cirrus internus 22.0–33.0, cirrus A 96.8–126.8 in P. (M.) dreyeri View in CoL sp. nov. vs cirrus internus 34.4–36.6, cirrus A 129.2–152.2 in P. (M.) angelusalas View in CoL ).
P. (M.) dastychi Roszkowska et al., 2020 View in CoL , known from the maritime Antarctic, by adult female body size (body length 121–152 μm and scapular plate length 18.9–23.7 μm in P. (M.) dreyeri View in CoL sp. nov. vs 167–202 μm and sc 27.5–33.0 μm in P. (M.) dastychi View in CoL ), lengths of cephalic appendages (cirrus internus 4.7–7.0 μm, cirrus externus 6.8–11.9 μm, cirrus A 21.0–27.0 μm [14–20% of the body length] in P. (M.) dreyeri View in CoL sp. nov. vs cirrus internus 10.4–12.7 μm, cirrus externus 15.9–19.1 μm, cirrus A 40.0–45.0 μm [22–26% of the body length] in P. (M.) dastychi View in CoL ), and claw heights (5.0–8.1 μm in P. (M.) dreyeri View in CoL sp. nov. vs 8.7–12.2 μm in P. (M.) dastychi View in CoL ).
P. (M.) indistinctus Roszkowska et al., 2020 View in CoL , known from the Scandinavian Peninsula, by the morphology of dorsal pillars (homogeneous in size in P. (M.) dreyeri View in CoL sp. nov. vs heterogeneous in size in P. (M.) indistinctus View in CoL ) and relatively shorter peribuccal cirri (cirrus internus 22.0–33.0, cirrus externus 31.9–52.2 in P. (M.) dreyeri View in CoL sp. nov. vs cirrus internus 34.1–38.5, cirrus externus 54.3–59.3 in P. (M.) indistinctus View in CoL ).
P. (M.) mascarenensis Kiosya et al., 2021 View in CoL , known from Mauritius, by having smaller adult females (121– 152 μm in P. (M.) dreyeri View in CoL sp. nov. vs 151–177 μm in P. (M.) mascarenensis View in CoL ) and a relatively longer cirrus A (14–20% of the body length in P. (M.) dreyeri View in CoL sp. nov. vs 9–13% in P. (M.) mascarenensis View in CoL ).
P. (M.) santomensis Fontoura et al., 2010 View in CoL , a São Tomé endemic, by a relatively longer cirrus A (14–20% of the body length in P. (M.) dreyeri View in CoL sp. nov. vs 9–14% in P. (M.) santomensis View in CoL ) and dorsal plate sculpturing (striae rarely identifiable in P. (M.) dreyeri View in CoL sp. nov. vs striae delicate and thin, but clear in all plates in P. (M.) santomensis View in CoL ).
Moreover, P. (M.) dreyeri View in CoL sp. nov. is distinguishable from all abovementioned species by the ventral sculpturing pattern.
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Genus |
Pseudechiniscus (Meridioniscus) dreyeri
Gąsiorek, Piotr, Vončina, Katarzyna, Kristensen, Reinhardt Møbjerg & Michalczyk, Łukasz 2021 |
P. (M.) dreyeri
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
P. (M.) dreyeri
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
P. (M.) dreyeri
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
P. (M.) dreyeri
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
P. (M.) dreyeri
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
P. (M.) dreyeri
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
P. (M.) mascarenensis
Kiosya 2021 |
P. (M.) dreyeri
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
P. (M.) dreyeri
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
P. (M.) dreyeri
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
P. (M.) dreyeri
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
H. crassus
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
P. (M.) dreyeri
Gąsiorek & Vončina & Kristensen & Michalczyk 2021 |
P. (M.) angelusalas
Roszkowska 2020 |
P. (M.) dastychi
Roszkowska 2020 |
P. (M.) indistinctus
Roszkowska 2020 |
P. (M.) santomensis
Fontoura 2010 |