Fractonotus verrucosus Gąsiorek & Morek & Stec & Blagden & Michalczyk 2019, n. comb.

Fractonotus verrucosus (Richters, 1900) n. comb. Macrobiotus ornatus var. verrucosus Richters, 1900: 41 (terra typica: Taunus, Germany). Macrobiotus scabrosus Murray, 1911: 10 (locus typicus: Clare Island, Ireland). Hypsibius verrucosus – Thulin 1911: 29 (Kiruna, Lapland, Sweden). — Marcus 1928: 180...

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Main Authors: Gąsiorek, Piotr, Morek, Witold, Stec, Daniel, Blagden, Brian, Michalczyk, Łukasz
Format: Text
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Published: Zenodo 2019
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3720105
https://zenodo.org/record/3720105
Description
Summary:Fractonotus verrucosus (Richters, 1900) n. comb. Macrobiotus ornatus var. verrucosus Richters, 1900: 41 (terra typica: Taunus, Germany). Macrobiotus scabrosus Murray, 1911: 10 (locus typicus: Clare Island, Ireland). Hypsibius verrucosus – Thulin 1911: 29 (Kiruna, Lapland, Sweden). — Marcus 1928: 180 (Vannsee, Berlin, Germany). — Cuénot 1932: 77 (the Vosges, France and Switzerland). — da Cunha 1947, 1948: 6, 2 (Serra d’Arga, Serra do Buçaco, Serra da Estrela, Serra da Lousã, Portugal). Calohypsibius verrucosus – Thulin 1928: 239 (Sweden). Calohypsibius scabrosus Thulin, 1928: 239 (Sweden). Hypsibius scabrosus Cuénot, 1932: 77 (the Vosges, France and Switzerland). — da Cunha 1947, 1948: 6, 2 (Serra d’Arga, Serra do Buçaco, Serra da Estrela, Serra da Lousã, Portugal). Hypsibius ( Calohypsibius ) verrucosus – Marcus 1936: 285 (Schwarzwald, Germany). — Franceschi 1951-1952: 12 (Val Camonica, Italy). — Mihelčič 1953: 247 (Tirol, Austria). — Fontoura 1981: 18 (Viseu, Arga, Amarante, Portugal). Hypsibius placophorus da Cunha, 1943: 1 (locus typicus: Cabril do Ceira, Portugal); 1947, 1948: 2, 2 (Serra d’Arga, Serra do Buçaco, Serra da Estrela, Serra da Lousã, Portugal) n. syn. LOCALITIES. — Scotland . Creag Meagaidh (56°57’10’’ N, 4°30’35’’ W; 291 m a.s.l.; collection date: 1.X.2014), lichens from moorland rocks; Scotland, Hebrides, Isle of Lewis, Loch nan Muilne (58°21’08’’ N, 6°35’14’’ W; 27 m a.s.l.; collection date: 29.VII.2015), moss and lichen mix from stones on the lakeshores; Invermoriston, Loch Ness (57°12’39’’ N, 4°35’59’’ W; 20 m a.s.l.; 25.X.2015; Brian Blagden leg.), moss and lichen mix from stones on the lakeshores. MATERIAL EXAMINED. — 23 individuals, UJ (19 specimens, including one simplex, on slides GB.005.03-12, GB.008.01-3, GB.028.01- 2 and 4 specimens on two SEM stubs); 2 individuals, MNHN (slides GB.005.01-2); 3 individuals, NHMD (slides GB.008.04- 5); 2 individuals, UAM (slides GB.028.03-4); 1 individual, CU (slide GB.028.02). ETYMOLOGY (NOT PROVIDED IN THE ORIGINAL DESCRIPTION). — The name most likely refers to the rugged cuticular surface of the species (from Latin verruca = wart). DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS. — Fractonotus verrucosus n. comb. can be distinguished from F. caelatus and F. gilvus n. comb. (Fig. 2 A, B) by the presence of plaques (absent in the latter species). It also differs from F. gilvus n. comb. by shorter, stouter claws (anterior and posterior primary branches 4.1-6.4 μm [N =10] and 4.3-7.4 μm long [N =18], respectively, in Fractonotus verrucosus n. comb. vs 7.0- 13.0 μm [N =21] and 10.5-16.5 μm long [N =21], respectively, in F. gilvus n. comb.; compare Fig. 11 A-D). INTEGRATIVE DESCRIPTION Animals (see Table 3 for measurements) Body stubby, typically slightly rose in live animals, transparent in mounted specimens. Dorsum strongly sculptured from the first instar, although with substantial ontogenetic quantitative and qualitative variability in this trait (Fig. 1 A- F). Juveniles with ten transverse bands of numerous tu- bercles that increase in size towards the caudal end of the body, but fully formed plaques never present, legs covered with fine tubercles (Fig. 1 A). All ten bands not always easily identifiable under PCM in juveniles. In young adults, plaques present in bands 6-10, with the most prominent plaques in bands 8-10 (Fig. 1 B). In older adults, smooth spaces between the transverse bands becoming narrow and sometimes merge into larger areas (Fig. 1 C-F). Plaques larger and more numerous than in young adults, and typically developping in bands 4-10, but the most evident plaques present in the caudal part of the body (Fig.1 C-F). Tubercles more or less round or oval (Figs 3 A, B; 5 A, B), gradually increasing in size from juveniles to adults, and becoming scabrous with age (compare Figs 1 A-F; 5 A, B). Plaques, on the other hand, typically smooth and only sometimes slightly rough (Fig. 5 C, D, arrowheads); under stereomicroscope strongly opalescent. Plaques arranged symmetrically in respect to the longitudinal body axis, although deviations A from symmetry are not rare (Fig. 1 C, D). In adults, seven pairs of central plaques and four lateral plaque pairs. Central plaques triangular in shape, with their apices directed laterally and outwards. In rows where only central plaques are present, plaques slimmer and longer than in rows with lateral plaques. Central plaques present in bands aligned with legs I-III as well as in bands between those legs. First three pairs of lateral plaques in line with legs I-III and the last pair of double lateral plaques situated between legs III and IV (Fig. 1 E). Plaque configuration VII:4-2-4-2-4-2-6. Cephalic elliptical organs present but not easy to identify, given the rich cuticular sculpturing (Fig. 7 A). Eyes absent in live animals. Buccal apparatus of the Fractonotus - type (Fig. 7 B, C, E), i.e. with a long ventral AISM, and the dorsal AISM subdivided into the proximal, weakly developed thickening, and the distal, small blunt hook (Fig. 9 A). Mouth opening surrounded by six large and soft peribuccal lobes (visible only under SEM, Fig. 6 A). Oral cavity armature, visible only under SEM, consisting of a single row of minute conical teeth located on the ring fold (Fig. 8 A). Two distinct porous areas on the lateral sides of the buccal crown are visible in SEM only (Fig. 8 B). Stylet furcae of the modified Hypsibius shape, i.e. with very broad and trapezoid bases, thick arms and rounded apices (Figs 7 B, 8 D, 10 A). Buccal tube with slight lateral thickenings posterior to the stylets supports (Figs 7 B, C, E; 8 C). Round bulbus with large pharyngeal apophyses (almost as large as the placoids), and two granular macroplacoids (Figs 7 B, C, E; 8 E, F). In PCM, macroplacoids without constrictions, however slight central constrictions in both macroplacoids detectable under SEM (Fig. 8 E, F). Claws of the modified Isohypsibius - type (Figs 11 A-C; 12 A, B). Specifically, claw bases triangular, especially pronounced in claws IV (Figs 11 C, 12 B). Claw branches V-shaped, elongated and strongly curved. Apparent accessory points on the primary branches (Figs 11 A-C; 12 A, B). Weakly developed pseudolunulae present, particularly visible under the internal and anterior claws (Fig. 11 A, C). Claw septa and cuticular bars on legs absent. Eggs Roundish and smooth, deposited in exuviae (up to two eggs per exuvia recorded). MOLECULAR MARKERS The sequences for all DNA markers were of a good quality. The sequenced fragments were of the following lengths: 1.727 bp (18 S rRNA; MG 800855), 819 bp (28 S rRNA; MG 800856), and 499 bp (ITS-2; MG 800857). All markers, including the specimen without cuticular plaques, were represented by single haplotypes. The p-distances between 18S haplotypes of all available isohypsibioid species and Fractonotus verrucosus n. comb. ranged from 2.0% ( I. prosostomus Thulin, 1928, EF 620404 from Denmark) to 7.1% ( Hexapodibius micronyx Pilato, 1969, HQ 604915 from Italy), with an average distance of 5.2%. As our 28S rRNA primers obtain a different gene fragment to the one sequenced by previous authors, comparisons of this gene were not possible. Matrices with p-distances are provided in the Supplementary Material 2. REMARKS The vast part of the Richters Collection has been lost, thus the type material (if ever existed) is not available for examination. Moreover, no specimens from Germany were examined in this study, therefore the neotype series is not established. Hence, until the redescription from the terra typica in Germany is available, we propose to consider the description of the Scottish specimens only as the current perception of the species. PHYLOGENETIC POSITION OF FRACTONOTUS AMONG OTHER ISOHYPSIBIIDAE Both Bayesian Inference and Maximum Likelihood methods unreservedly located Fractonotus within Isohypsibioidea (Fig. 13), thus corroborating the phenotypic analysis (see above). The genus Isohypsibius s.s. (i.e. I. prosostomus and its closest relatives) appears paraphyletic with respect to Fractonotus . However, in general, all isohypsibioid lineages clearly remain in polytomy, with only the occasional sound Bayesian posterior probabilities characterising clades with morphologically similar taxa. Therefore, the exact relationships between different isohypsibioid clades remain unsolved. : Published as part of Gąsiorek, Piotr, Morek, Witold, Stec, Daniel, Blagden, Brian & Michalczyk, Łukasz, 2019, Revisiting Calohypsibiidae and Microhypsibiidae: Fractonotus Pilato, 1998 and its phylogenetic position within Isohypsibiidae (Eutardigrada: Parachela), pp. 71-89 in Zoosystema 41 (6) on pages 77-82, DOI: 10.5252/zoosystema2019v41a6, http://zenodo.org/record/3718524 : {"references": ["RICHTERS F. 1900. - Beitrage zur Kenntnis der Fauna der Umgebung von Frankfurt a. M. Bericht der Senckenbergischen Naturforschenden gesellschaft in Frankfurt am Main 21 - 44.", "MURRAY J. 1911. - Clare Island Survey. 37: Arctiscoida. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 31 (37): 1 - 16.", "THULIN G. 1911. - Beitage zur Kenntnis der Tardigradenfauna Schwedens. Arkiv for Zoologi 7 (16): 1 - 60.", "MARCUS E. 1928. - Spinnentiere oder Arachnoidea. IV: Bartierchen (Tardigrada). 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