Melayonchis Dayrat & Goulding, 2017
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.26107/RBZ-2019-0043 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0F0AB24A-A37E-4DE0-B367-E2F5476FBB0E |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/664587E0-1448-FFC8-5537-8890FA5A5A7A |
treatment provided by |
Diego |
scientific name |
Melayonchis Dayrat & Goulding |
status |
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Melayonchis Dayrat & Goulding View in CoL in Dayrat et al., 2017
Type species. Melayonchis eloisae Dayrat View in CoL in Dayrat et al., 2017, by original designation.
Etymology. Combination of Melayu, the Malay word for Malays, and Onchis, one of the old names used for onchidiid slugs (Dayrat et al., 2017: 1860).
Gender. Masculine, gender of onchis ( ICZN, 1999; Article 30.1.1), a word derived from the masculine Greek word ὁ ὂγκος (onchos), which means ʻmassʼ or ʻtumour.ʼ
Diagnosis. Body not flattened. No dorsal gills. Dorsal eyes present on notum. Retractable, central papilla present or absent. Foot wide. Eye tentacles short and narrow. Eyes at tip of ocular tentacles. Elongated, transversal protuberance on each oral lobe. Male opening below and on left of right ocular tentacle (in dorsal view). Pneumostome median. Female opening close to anus. Intestinal loops of types II and III. Rectal gland present. Lateral radular teeth with a strong protuberance on their inner lateral margin. Accessory penial gland and hollow spine present or absent. When present, accessory penial gland with no muscular sac. Penis short (<1 mm), soft papilla with no hooks.
Distinctive features. Externally, Melayonchis slugs could be easily confused with Marmaronchis Dayrat & Goulding in Dayrat et al., 2018, or Wallaconchis Goulding & Dayrat in Goulding et al., 2018b, even though the colour pattern of some Melayonchis species is very distinctive and unmistakable. Internally, however, the short (<1 mm), the soft papilla with no hooks is unique to Melayonchis slugs. In addition, the lateral radular teeth of Melayonchis are characterised by a strong protuberance on their inner lateral margin. A similar protuberance is also present in radular teeth of Platevindex and Marmaronchis slugs. However, the protuberance of Melayonchis radular teeth is much stronger than in Platevindex and Marmaronchis .
Distribution ( Fig. 6 View Fig ). Melayonchis is known from the Andaman Islands, both sides of the Strait of Malacca (western Peninsular Malaysia and eastern Sumatra), the South China Sea (southern Vietnam, Brunei Darussalam), and the Northern Territory, Australia. The Strait of Malacca is the core of the geographic distribution of Melayonchis : the Matang mangrove, near Kuala Sepatang, western Peninsular Malaysia, hosts all but one species.
Remarks. Differences among Melayonchis species are summarised in Table 3. Both the diagnosis and the distinctive features above are slightly updated from our previous description (Dayrat et al., 2017: 1860) to incorporate new findings: the retractable central papilla is absent in some species (described as present in the 2017 diagnosis) and, when present, is only slightly larger than the other dorsal papillae; there are no intestinal loops “intermediary between types II and III” and intestinal loops are clearly of type II or of type III ( Fig. 2 View Fig ); finally, in 2017, the protuberance on the inner lateral margin of the lateral radular teeth was mentioned as a distinctive feature unique to Melayonchis , but, after dissecting many other onchidiid slugs since then ( Dayrat et al., 2018, 2019a, b; Goulding et al., 2018a, b, c), we know now that a smaller but similar protuberance is found in Platevindex and Marmaronchis , but that the short (<1 mm), soft penial papilla is truly unique to Melayonchis .
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