Pararhynchelmis, Fend, Steven V. & Lenat, David R., 2010
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.196882 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6206485 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EEF043-2A3B-6B65-A1D3-FE89FDB8A788 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Pararhynchelmis |
status |
gen. nov. |
Pararhynchelmis View in CoL n. gen.
Included species: Pararhynchelmis murdocki n. sp.
Diagnosis. Small worms with rounded prostomium. Lateral blood vessels in middle and posterior segments unbranched. Preclitellar nephridia on 6/7. Pharynx without a distinct dorsal pad. Male pores in X, behind and slightly medial to chaetae; spermathecal pores inconspicuous, paired in VIII and IX, behind and slightly medial to chaetae; female pores on chaetal line, intersegmental on 11/12. Testes in IX and X, ovaries in XI. Spermathecae simple, roughly cylindrical; without ampulla or diverticula, connected to the gut entally. Atria petiolate, with thin duct, and club-shaped ampulla covered with multicellular prostate glands. Very short, retractable penes. Semiprosoporous; each atrium with two thin vasa deferentia; both anterior and posterior male funnels functional; posterior vasa deferentia do not form a loop in the postatrial segment or penetrate septum 10/11.
Etymology. From Latin para, “beside”, indicating its possible close relationship to Rhynchelmis .
Remarks. The single known Pararhynchelmis species, described herein, has male pores in X and spermathecal pores paired in both VIII and IX, distinguishing it from all other lumbriculids except for two Palearctic Rhynchelmis species ( Rhynchelmis tetratheca Michaelsen and Rhynchelmis granuensis Hrabĕ ). Four described genera ( Rhynchelmis, Pseudorhynchelmis Hrabĕ , Secubelmis Fend & Gustafson 2001 , and Tatriella Hrabĕ ), plus two undescribed southeastern Nearctic species (S. Fend & D. Lenat, unpublished) have the first spermathecae located two segments anterior to the atria. Of these, only Rhynchelmis includes species in which the spermathecae connect to the gut ( Martin & Kaygorodova 2008). Almost all described Rhynchelmis species have a long, filiform proboscis. The few species or subspecies without a proboscis ( Rhynchelmis brachycephala brachycephala Michaelsen , Rhynchelmis komareki brevirostra Hrabĕ , and an undescribed Nearctic species [S. Fend, unpublished]) closely resemble proboscis-bearing species: they are all large worms, usually found in profundal lake habitats. The petiolate atria of Pararhynchelmis do not resemble those of any described Rhynchelmis species, and the very short, duct-like spermathecae are unique within the family. Other distinguishing characters are evaluated below, in the Discussion.
Pararhynchelmis has a narrower geographic range than any of the Rhynchelmis subgenera or species groups. The single known species has been collected only within a single spring system in the southern Appalachian Mountains, USA.
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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