Bennelongia frumenta, Martens & Schön, 2012
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2012.8 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A8804F82-A49A-481E-BB04-2CB4D004EB01 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3858828 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E90235-277C-FF9B-8A03-E81DFB84FA6F |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Bennelongia frumenta |
status |
sp. nov. |
Bennelongia frumenta View in CoL sp. nov.
( Figs 10-11 View Fig View Fig )
Etymology
Bennelongia frumenta sp. nov. is typical of the south-western side of the Western Australian wheatbelt. Wheat = frumenta in Latin.
Diagnosis
Valves triangular in lateral view, weakly pitted, width more than half the length in dorsal / ventral view and with rostrum well-developed. LV with beak weakly developed. RV with lapel triangular, ventrally pointed; selvage near lapel with a cavity, visible with SEM, but especially with transparent light. Hemipenis with ls slightly extending beyond ms, ls distally rounded and with bluntly pointed apex; ms ventrally and dorsally without lobe-like expansion. Rpp with trapezoidal distal segment; with nearly straight distal margin and very narrow base. Lpp with distal segment sickle-shaped, elongated, almost as long as first segment.
Measurements (all measurements in µm)
Male: RV: L = 1310; H = 907. LV: L = 1430; H = 933. Cp: L = 1320-1330; H = 841; W = 810-826. Female: RV: L = 1320-1390; H = 851-905. LB: L = 1460-1500; H = 962. Cp: L = 1400-1520; H = 878; W = 901-907.
Type locality
Kodjinup Melaleuca Swamp, 6 km N of Lake Muir in the Cranbrook shire (WA), collected by Adrian Pinder and Jane McRae on 2 Oct. 1998, approximate coordinates; 34 º 23’ 45”S 116 º 39’ 1”E (OSTR11A, SPS105).
Type material
Holotype
Female ( WAM.C49380 ), with soft parts dissected in a sealed slide and valves stored dry in a micropalaeontological slide.
Allotype
Male ( WAM.C49381), with soft parts dissected in a sealed slide, valves kept in EtOH (decalcified).
Paratypes
LV+ RV of a female (OC.3312); one female carapace ( WAM.C49383); three male carapaces ( WAM. C49382A-C); soft parts of one male ( WAM.C49384 – valves lost).
Several in toto specimens in EtOH (voucher specimens WAM.C49385).
Other material investigated
Wetland south east of Kodjinup Swamp, collected by Andrew Storey and SH on 21 Oct. 1997, approximate coordinates: 34º 23’ 00”S 116º 40’ 00”E. Specimens from this locality: a dissected male ( WAM.C49386); LV+ RV of a female ( WAM.C49387).
Job’s Sump, collected by Jane McRae and Mick Smith on 10 Oct. 1997, approximate coordinates: 32º 21’ 15”S 117º 39’ 27”E ( SPS 060).
West Kulunilup Swamp, collected by Andrew Storey and SH on 22 Oct. 1997, approximate coordinates: 34º 20’ 00”S 116º 47’ 00”E. Specimens from this locality: several voucher specimens in EtOH ( OSTR 13E), slide #38, a dissected male (OC.3313) and a female CP ( WAM.C49388).
Unnamed claypan, Pingrup, collected by Adrian Pinder on 13 Sep. 2007, approximate coordinates: 33º 26’ 49”S 118º 30’ 41”E. Specimens from this locality: several voucher specimens in EtOH ( OSTR 13G, ABP 051); LV+ RV of a female (OC.3314).
Lake Wheatfield, collected by David Cale on 26 Oct. 2005, approximate coordinates: 33º 48’ 46”S 121º 55’ 38”E ( SPM 005B).
Differential diagnosis
Bennelongia frumenta sp. nov. belongs to the B. cygnus lineage because of its triangular shape, the simple type of hemipenis and the pointed lapel. It can be distinguished from the other species in this lineage, B. cygnus sp. nov. (see above), by the presence of a cavity in the selvage near the lapel, the absence of a dorsal lobe on the ms of the hemipenes, the elongated second segment of the Lpp and the narrow base of the second segment of the Rpp.
Additional description
Valves triangular ( Figure 10 View Fig A-D), with greatest height situated in the middle; LV overlapping RV on all sides ( Figure 10K View Fig ), dorsally only in the first half of the carapace, ventral margin almost straight; width of carapace in dorsal and ventral views ( Figure 10 View Fig E-H) more than half the length, greatest width situated in the middle, anterior rostrum strong; carapace weakly pitted and set with few, very short setae.
Male valves slightly smaller and more highly arched than female valves, otherwise very similar in appearance.
LV ( Figure 10A, C View Fig ) with posterior calcified inner lamella narrow, inner list running along valve margin and creating a narrow sulcus; this sulcus continuing towards the anterior side and widening up in between both anterior inner lists; antero-ventral beak weakly developed.
RV ( Figure 10B, D View Fig ) of similar shape as LV, smaller and slightly less high; posterior and ventral margin set with tubercles, anterior calcified inner lamella with short inner list, the latter forming a ‘cavity’ in and on the selvage near the lapel; lapel relatively long, rather ventrally situated and ventrally pointed ( Figure 10I, J View Fig ); inner margin of posterior calcified inner lamella with long inner list (reaching almost up to dorsal margin) and with selvage submarginal.
Most appendages as typical of the genus and without special features.
Rpp ( Figure 11B View Fig ) with basal segment elongated, c. 1.5 x the central width; subapically with two unequal sensory organs; second segment trapezoidal, with blunt dorsal and pointed ventral edge, distal margin nearly straight, base of segment very narrow.
Lpp ( Figure 11C, D View Fig ) with first segment more slender, more than twice as long as wide, subapically with an elongated outgrowth, subapically with a short sensory organ; distal segment sickle-shaped and elongated, longer than dorsal margin of first segment.
Walking leg ( Figure 11E View Fig ) stout and hirsute.
Hemipenes ( Figure 11A View Fig ) symmetrical; LS with rounded dorsal margin and bluntly pointed distal edge; MS with oblique but straight distal margin, ventrally with a broadly rounded lobe, ventrally without additional lobe.
Ecology and distribution
The species has thus far been found in a variety of seasonal and, less commonly, permanent wetlands and streams in the south-western Wheatbelt of Western Australia and in higher rainfall areas. The species has been recorded in water with conductivity 1550-9260 µS cm-1 and pH 6.0-9.6.
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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