Tetranchyroderma xenodactylum, Hummon, William D., 2011
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.94.794 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/46EB70E2-1B2A-A2C0-24E1-B9516D93A0F8 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Tetranchyroderma xenodactylum |
status |
sp. n. |
Tetranchyroderma xenodactylum ZBK sp. n. Figure 16
Tetranchyroderma EgyE Hummon (2009) [E Med & Red Seas Database]
Diagnosis:
Adult being described Lt 246 µm; PhJIn at U35. Body short, robust; head end rounded, without pestle organs, tentacles or lobes; neck a slight narrowing at the PhJIn; trunk broadening in the mid-gut, before narrowing gently then quickly to the caudal base; cirrata dorsolateral, 3 per side; caudal pedicles medium, naked, with a narrow concave margin separating the pedicles, incising medially to U92. Glands 9 per side scattered in lateral columns at U24-U85. A strange sub-cylindrical finger-like structure occurs laterally at U34. Epidermis covered with curved pentancres three times as long as wide, slightly smaller fore and aft; ancres occur in 46 rows of 14-15 ancres each, on dorsal and lateral surfaces, extending onto the middle of the oral hood and onto the caudal base. TbA 4 per side, 1 medially and 3 laterally, all projecting forward or obliquely outward, tubes inserting directly on the postoral body surface at U09-U10; TbVL 11 per side, 1 along the fore half of the pharynx at U14, 7 along the intestine at U39-U75, and 3 at and behind the anus at U88-U92; TbV 3 per side in a transverse row at U80; TbL per se/TbD absent; TbP 3 per side on the caudal pedicles, forming the fused 'two fingers and a thumb’ typical of the family, supplemented by the last of the dorsal cirrata, with 2 additional tubes in the space between the peduncles. Locomotor ciliature: a single field covers the ventral surface from TbA to the anus and behind. Mouth subterminal, as broad as the fore end of the body; buccal cavity lightly cuticularized; pharynx medium throughout, with inconspicuous basal pores; intestine narrows fore to aft, anus ventral at U88. Hermaphroditic; testis on left side as seen from below; vas deferens appears to open in front of the anus; developing ovum occurs above the hindgut; caudal organ spherical; frontal organ oblong, hyaline, partly embedded in the rear of the ovum.
Description:
Adult being described Lt 246 µm (others 197-322); LPh 87 µm (others 79-128) to PhJIn at U35 (others to PhJIn at U40) (Fig. 16). Body short, robust, ventrally flattened, dorsally vaulted; head end rounded, without pestle organs, tentacles or lobes; neck a slight narrowing at the PhJIn, broadening along the mid-gut, before narrowing gently along the hind-gut and then quickly behind the anus to the caudal base; cirrata 4 per side (L 7-11 µm), dorsolateral at U22, U50, U72 and U96; caudal pedicles medium (L 13 µm), naked (without lobes), with a broad concave margin separating the two pedicles, incising medially to U92. Widths at mouth /mid-pharynx /PhJIn /mid-gut /caudal base, and locations along the length of the body are as follows: 41 /44 /39 /47 /22 µm at U06 /U19 /U34 /U66 /U93, respectively. A strange sub-cylindrical finger-like structure (L 7 µm) occurs at U34, being hollow but occluded at its outer end. Glands 9 per side (4 µm diameter to 6 × 9 µm) scattered in lateral columns at U24-U85.
Cuticular armature: Epidermis armored with slightly curved pentancres (L 6, W 2.5 µm), much taller than wide, all 5 tines of the same length, ancres of much the same size over most of the body, but slightly smaller fore and aft; ancres cover dorsal and lateral surfaces in some 46 rows of 14-15 ancres each, extending onto the middle of the oral hood and onto the caudal base.
Adhesive tubes: TbA 4 per side, 1 medially (L 4 µm) projecting forward and 3 laterally (L 6-8 µm), projecting obliquely to the side, all inserting directly on the postoral body surface at U09-U10. TbVL 11 per side, 1 (L 4 µm) along the fore half of the pharynx at U14, just behind the TbA, 7 (L 7-12 µm) along the intestine at U39-U75, and 3 (L 7-12 µm) at and behind the anus at U88-U92; TbV 3 per side (L 7, 11, 7 µm) in a transverse row at U80; TbL per se and TbD are absent; TbP 3 per side on the caudal pedicles, forming the fused 'two fingers and a thumb’ typical of the many members of the family, (L terminal tubes 4-5 µm, L tube on the inner margin 9 µm), supplemented by the last of the dorsal cirrata, with 2 additional tubes (L 7-8 µm) in the space between the peduncles.
Ciliation: Short sensory cilia surround the oral opening (L 4 µm), with a number of also on the oral hood: 6 (L 14-17 µm) projecting directly or obliquely forward and 13-15 (L 7-14 µm) trailing to the rear; other cilia (L 10-18 µm) occur regularly along the lateral and dorsolateral body surfaces, numbering 12-13 each. Ventral locomotor ciliature forms a single field of transverse rows from TbA to behind the anus, lying between the TbVL columns; individual cilia are 5-6 µm in length.
Digestive tract: Mouth subterminal, as broad as the fore end of the body (34 µm width); oral hood extends from U00 to U07; buccal cavity lightly cuticularized; pharynx of medium breadth throughout, with inconspicuous basal pores; intestine narrows gradually front to rear; anus is ventral at U88.
Reproductive tract: Hermaphroditic, testis on right side as seen from above (left side as seen from below); vas deferens appears to open in front of the anus; developing ovum (up to 29 × 16 µm), appearing somewhat shrivled, occurs above the hindgut; caudal organ spherical (7 µm diameter); frontal organ oblong (20 × 14 µm) and hyaline, without active sperm, partly embedded in the rear of the ovum.
Ecology:
Sparse in frequency of occurrence (fewer than 10% of samples), scarce to numerous in abundance (3% to 20% of a sample, sometimes a sub-dominant [sdom]); littoral in fine, well sorted sand at low water spring in a shallow tombolo, 0-5 cm depth; sublittoral in fine to medium-fine, well to medium-well sorted sand at 1-5 m water depth.
Geographical distribution:
RED SEA:EGYPT {Marsa Bareika W, ^Nabq [sdom] (28°05'N, 34°35'E) [2-videos], Sharm el-Sheikh, Wadi 'Araba [video]}.
Remarks:
There are three sequences of Tetranchyroderma xenodactylum sp. n., all from the upper Red Sea in Egypt. These three are available as MPEG 2 (and MPEG 1) from Hummon (2009): #1517 a mature adult of Lt=332 µm (LPh=128 µm) from the Wadi 'Araba, on west side of the Gulf of Suez, Egypt; #1514 a mature Lectotype adult of Lt=246 µm (LPh=91 µm), collected in July 1994 from Nabq, S. Sinai, Egypt; and #1515 a mature adult of Lt=197 µm (LPh=79 µm) also from Nabq.
Etymology:
Xenodactylum (Greek: xenos + daktylos, meaning 'strange finger’) is named after the strange finger-like appendage that protrudes laterally in all specimens from the rear of the pharyngeal region.
Taxonomic affinities:
Tetranchyroderma xenodactylum sp. n. is the only small species in the genus without pestle organs, tentacles or lobes, a PhJIn at U40-U35 and slightly curved pentancres, with tines of similar size, which also has TbA 4 per side, 1 medial and 3 lateral, TbVL 11 per side, 1 along the fore half of the pharynx at U14, 7 along the intestine at U39-U75, and 3 at and behind the anus at U88-U92; TbV 3 per side in a transverse row at U80; TbP 3 per side on the caudal pedicles, with the fused 'two fingers and a thumb’ typical of much of the family, supplemented by the last dorsal cirratum, with 2 additional tubes between the peduncles, TbL per se and TbD being absent. There is no other species in the genus, regardless of their ancres, that bears such a sub-cylindrical finger-like structure as is found at the base of the pharynx in Tetranchyroderma xenodactylum sp. n.
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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