Syringolaimus smolae, Coelho Lima, Lins, Da Silva & Esteves, 2009
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4306.4.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D0481032-B34B-4114-85DA-7B8CD20371F6 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6029470 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0381315A-783D-FFA9-FF3F-9A9687E69205 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Syringolaimus smolae |
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Syringolaimus smolae Lima, Lins, Da Silva & Esteves, 2009
( Figures 4–6 View FIGURE 4 View FIGURE 5 View FIGURE 6 , Table 3)
Material. Ten males and four females from both stations 325 (st. 325/4 Muc 8, 325/7 Muc8) and 346 (st. 346/1 Muc 3, 346/2 Muc 3).
Description. Body slim and graceful. Cuticle smooth and moderately thick, fine cross striations visible only on ventral side of cylindrical part of the tail. Anterior cuticle between apex and amphidial fovea forming a circular thickening. There are three equal cheilostomatal teeth just out from the mouth opening. All the teeth are double (split from base) and thus consist of two claw-like parts. The claws of each tooth are slightly unequal; in most specimens, dorsal tooth composed of larger left and smaller right claws, smaller and bigger claws in ventrosublateral pairs more variable in position. Length of teeth is 2.3–3.5 µm in males and 2.3–3.6 µm in females. Sensilla around the mouth opening not visible. Amphidial aperture a large transverse slit posterior to the cheilostomal teeth. Amphidial fovea as a pocket with a wisp of ciliary processes within. In males, width of the amphidial aperture is 4.2 µm or 29–45% of the corresponding body diameter, distance from the cephalic apex to the aperture is 13–18.4 µm; same figures in a female with discernible aperture are 4.2 µm, 35% and 16.6 µm, respectively. There are scarce and hardly visible tiny papillae along the body. Metanemes not visible. Pharyngostom a rather long tube, with sclerotized lumen but flexible. Pharynx slender and muscular throughout its length, with thick internal cuticular lining. Pharyngostom surrounded with narrow, non-muscular tissue. Posterior part of the pharynx enlarged in an oval bulb; its internal cuticular lining not modified but distinctly set off from the lining of the major part of the pharynx. Cardia external, shaped as a truncate cone. Anteriormost intestinal cells with homogeneous content different from other intestinal cells that make them similar to progaster of Monhysteridae . Intestine with internal glycocalyx layer partly detached. Tail consists of anterior conical and posterior cylindrical parts not sharply differentiated from one another. Tail curved dorsally in all male and female specimens. Tail end rounded, no indication of spinneret; however, one or more caudal gland cell bodies discernible in some specimens ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 A).
Female reproductive system didelphic, amphidelphic; anterior ovary to the left, posterior ovary to the left of the intestine.
Males monorchic, outstretched testis situated to the right or to the left and ventral of the intestine. Spermatozoa tadpole-like or drop-shaped, situated with knob-like nuclear part turned towards anterior end and tail-like part towards posterior end of the body, 13–16 µm long, transparent, with dense nucleus in the thick end. Vas deferens with granular walls, its anterior part narrowed, posterior part enlarged. Spicules weak and arcuate, broad, with truncate anterior end and knobbed posterior end. Gubernaculum small (8–12 µm), in a shape of a slightly curved bar. A small midventral supplementary organ is visible as a small mound with an internal canal situated just anterior (3.4–9.2 µm) to the cloacal opening. In some males, structures similar to sublateral precloacal and a postcloacal papillae are visible.
Diagnosis. Body length 900–1190 µm, a=30–62. Tubular pharyngostom 39–60 µm long. Terminal pharyngeal bulb 28–40 µm long and 16–31 µm wide. Spicules 17–30 µm, weak and flexible. Precloacal supplementary papillum present. Tail cylindro-conical, with posterior cylindrical portion (47–80% of entire tail) always curved dorsally in both sexes; no terminal tube or spinneret.
Discussion. The species fits well the description of S. smolae Lima et al., 2009 in dimensions and shape of the tail but differs by: absence of visible secretory-excretory pore at the level of the nerve ring, absence of a terminal spinneret on the tail tip, rather broad and weak spicules versus ”setiform“ spicules mentioned for S. smolae .
Character Males (n=10) Females (n=4) Despite verbal statements about presence of the spinneret and setiform spicules in the text of the original diagnosis, the figures correspond well to respective organs of our specimens.
Gut content. Intestine may be empty or contain a sausage of medium-coarse-granular material with sparse light-refractive particles as well as spherical homogeneous and slightly heterogeneous drops.
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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