Vigtorniella Kiseleva, 1996
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2017.1395919 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E91002-8723-1346-FE63-FD1AFC84FB40 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Vigtorniella Kiseleva, 1996 |
status |
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Genus Vigtorniella Kiseleva, 1996 View in CoL
( Figure 21a, b View Figure 21 ; Tables 1, 2)
Type species: Vigtorniella zaikai ( Kiseleva, 1992)
Material examined
One specimen Vigtorniella zaikai: SIO-BIC A 5639, Black Sea
Distribution
Vigtorniella is a monotypic taxon represented by the species Vigtorniella zaikai which at present appears endemic to the Black Sea. Other species previously placed in Vigtorniella ( Vigtorniella flokati Dahlgren, Glover, Baco and Smith, 2004 and Vigtorniella ardabalia
Wiklund, Glover, Johannessen and Dahlgren, 2009) were recently moved to Boudemos ( Watson et al. 2016) .
Habitat
Vigtorniella zaikai larvae are found in plankton horizons at 250– 150 m with bottom depths to ~ 1300 m. Benthic adults are found at the narrow transition layer between upper oxygenated waters and lower anoxic waters at the boundary of the hydrogen sulphide zone in ~ 150 m in the Black Sea. Vigtorniella zaikai larvae were raised in the laboratory and the adults observed to feed in the flocculent layer of microbial mats that formed atop anoxic muds ( Zaikai et al. 1999). Adults are also reported from Black Sea methane seep areas (extended references in Watson et al. 2016).
General morphology
Vigtorniella zaikai possesses a very small body: planktonic larvae measure ~430 µm length ( Figure 21a View Figure 21 ) with mature individuals <2 mm length and 14 segments. Sensory structures include very small, ovoid, partly fused palps; prostomial and body segment ciliation; eyes are absent ( Table 2). In common with other free-living calamyzins, Vigtorniella lacks a median antenna and possesses differentiated lateral antennae and palps, long spinous, slender notochaetae and slender compound falcigerous neurochaetae ( Aguado et al. 2013; Watson et al. 2016).
Pharynx and jaws
Vigtorniella zaikai has a short, muscular pharynx with broad internal septa, caeca, a very small proboscis with terminal papillae, and a pair of very small jaws ( Figure 21a, b View Figure 21 ; Watson et al. 2016, figure 3d, e). Larval jaws are situated close together and each one is composed of a flat anterior part with a tanned brown, serrate tip, an asymmetrical flare mid-way, and a hollow groove visible in the curve at the point where the anterior platelet jaw connects with the posterior, elongated jaw ( Figure 21b View Figure 21 ). In adults, only the anterior platelet jaw is visible ( Watson et al. 2016, figure 3E, 4B).
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