Echiniscus rufoviridis

Kaczmarek, Łukasz, Michalczyk, Łukasz & Mcinnes, Sandra J., 2015, Annotated zoogeography of non-marine Tardigrada. Part II: South America, Zootaxa 3923 (1), pp. 1-107 : 20

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3923.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2305A96C-0A03-4524-93AA-90359893A4DD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5687900

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038FA02E-FF8F-7A2F-4A85-BCAE5654F4DB

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Echiniscus rufoviridis
status

 

43. Echiniscus rufoviridis View in CoL du Bois-Reymond Marcus, 1944 [T]

E. (E) rufoviridis sp. n. (du Bois-Reymond Marcus 1944)

Terra typica: Brazil (South America)

Argentina:

• 32°29′S, 61°35′W; 100 m asl: Santa Fe Province, Las Rosas, mosses and lichens on trees. Peluffo et al. (2002)

• 34°56′S, 57°57′W; 0 m asl: Buenos Aires Province, La Plata, mosses and lichens on trees. Peluffo et al. (2002)

• 35°40′S, 63°44′W; 150 m asl: La Pampa Province, General Pico, mosses and lichens on trees. Peluffo et al. (2002)

• 35°58′S, 62°42′W; 100 m asl: Buenos Aires Province, Trenque Lauquen, mosses and lichens on trees. Peluffo et al. (2002)

• 36°37′S, 64°17′W; 200 m asl: La Pampa Province, Santa Rosa de Toay, mosses and lichens on trees. Peluffo et al. (2002)

• 36°39′S, 64°17′W; 200 m asl: La Pampa Province, Santa Rosa [Santa Rosa de Toay], mosses and lichens on trees ( Robinia pseudoacacia , few species of Fraxinus or Prosopis caldenia ). Peluffo et al. (2007)

Brazil:

• 22°44′S, 45°35′W; 1,650 m asl: Type Locality: São Paulo State, Campos do Jordão, mosses or aquatic plants. du Bois- Reymond Marcus (1944)

• 23°33′S, 46°38′W; 750 m asl: Type Locality: São Paulo State, São Paulo, different streets, mosses on trees. du Bois- Reymond Marcus (1944)

Record numbers: Argentina: 6, Brazil: 2; total: 8.

Remarks: E. rufoviridis belongs to the viridis group and could easily be misidentified with other group members (Pilato et al. 2007). Moreover, three other species of the viridis group ( E. quitensis and E. viridis and E. viridissimus ) are also known from South America, so we suggest that specimens from this group should be examined very carefully (see also comments to E. viridis below). The species is currently known only from two South American countries.

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF