Dendronotus kamchaticus Ekimova, Korshunova, Shepetov, Neretina, Sanamyan & Martynov 2015

Dendronotus kamchaticus Ekimova, Korshunova, Shepetov, Neretina, Sanamyan & Martynov, 2015 Fig. 7 Dendronotus kamchaticus Ekimova, Korshunova, Shepetov, Neretina, Sanamyan & Martynov, 2015: 869–872, Figs 6E, 8D, 16A, B, 17, 18A; Korshunovaet al., 2016a: 32–36, Figs 4C, D, 5. Extended diagnos...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Korshunova, Tatiana, Bakken, Torkild, GrØtan, Viktor V., Johnson, Kjetil B., Lundin, Kennet, Martynov, Alexander
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2020
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4623989
https://zenodo.org/record/4623989
Description
Summary:Dendronotus kamchaticus Ekimova, Korshunova, Shepetov, Neretina, Sanamyan & Martynov, 2015 Fig. 7 Dendronotus kamchaticus Ekimova, Korshunova, Shepetov, Neretina, Sanamyan & Martynov, 2015: 869–872, Figs 6E, 8D, 16A, B, 17, 18A; Korshunovaet al., 2016a: 32–36, Figs 4C, D, 5. Extended diagnosis . Body narrow. Five to six pairs of branched dorsolateral appendages. Four to six oral veil appendages. Five to six appendages (apparently similar in size or posterior longer) of rhinophoral stalks. Lateral papilla of rhinophoral sheaths present. Rhinophoreswith 5–11 lamellae. Lip papillae 4–15. Basal colour semitransparent to brownish with irregularly scattered small brownish dots. Dorsalprocessesof jaws inclined posteriorly at approximately 70° to the longitudinal axis of the jaw body and 0.37 of its length. Masticatory processes possibly beardenticlesandridge-likestructures.Radula with upto 44 rows of teeth. Central tooth with almost completely reduced denticles and furrows at adult stages, subadults may bear small denticles. Up to eleven lateral teeth with up to nine denticles. Ampulla moderately voluminous with several (at least two or three) folded loops. Bursa copulatrix large, rounded. Seminal receptaculum small, placed distally at a moderately short distance from the vaginal opening. Prostate discoid with circa 7–25 alveolar glands. The vas deferens is moderate in length, penis relatively long, slightly curved. Body length up to 30 mm. Distribution . NW Pacific from Kamchatka to Japan Sea, Russia, and NE Pacific in Salish Sea, Canadaand USA. Bathymetry . 7–17 mdepth. Remarks . Though this species previously was confused with D. frondosus, D. albus and D. venustus , D. kamchaticus is well delineated from those species according to the morphological features (semitransparent grayish with white-tipped dorsolateral appendages and digestive gland often penetrating all branches of all dorsolateral appendages to body brownish colouration without dorsal subparallel stripes), radular patterns (usually almost smooth central teeth in adults) and molecular phylogenetic data (figs1,2).Intheoriginaldescriptionbranchesof the dorsolateralappendages were incorrectly described as bulbous and short (see Ekimova et al., 2015: Fig. 8D), despite the presence of this species in the same paper (Ekimova et al., 2015: Fig. 16A, B) represented by photos of live paratypes with more elongated, not exactly bulbous, though still shortened branches. Further, in a specimen of D. kamchaticus from the Sea of Japan the branches were described as elongated and also very different from the original description and Fig. 8D in Ekimova (2015). This significant discrepancy compared with the original description was explained: “because different ontogenetic stages were used in the description and this study, as well as cerata morphology may be altered in preserved specimens” (Ekimova et al., 2016: 38). However, this discrepancy was not due to the different ontogenetic stages. In the original description of D. kamchaticus , the typespecimenswererepresentedbyanalmost adult holotype (12 mm preserved length) with a mature reproductive system whereas seven paratypes were subadults (2–10 mm of preserved length). Most importantly, the drawinginEkimova(2015: Fig.8D)depictedthe largest holotype, with an adult reproductive system and the artificially bulbous branches were only seen in the preserved specimen, without any considerable ontogenetic modifications. The largest specimen so far known of D. kamchatcius (adult, 30 mm) from the NE Pacific, also has considerably elongated branches (Korshunova et al., 2016a). This fully confirms that the branches were described and figured incorrectly in the original description. : Published as part of Korshunova, Tatiana, Bakken, Torkild, GrØtan, Viktor V., Johnson, Kjetil B., Lundin, Kennet & Martynov, Alexander, 2021, A synoptic review of the family Dendronotidae (Mollusca: Nudibranchia): a multilevel organismal diversity approach, pp. 93-153 in Contributions To Zoology 90 (1) on page 123, DOI: 10.1163/18759866-BJA10014, http://zenodo.org/record/4623915 : {"references": ["Martynov, A., Ishida, Y., Irimura, S., Tajiri, R., O'Hara, T. & Fujita, T. (2015 b) When ontogeny matters: a new Japanese species of brittle star illustrates the importance of considering both adult and juvenile characters in taxonomic practice. PLOS ONE, 10, e 0139463.", "Korshunova, T., Sanamyan, N., Zimina, O., Fletcher, K. & Martynov, A. (2016 a) Two new species and a remarkable record of the genus Dendronotus from the North Pacific and Arctic oceans (Nudibranchia). ZooKeys, 630, 19 - 42.", "Ekimova, I., Korshunova, T., Schepetov, D., Neretina, T., Sanamyan, N. & Martynov, A. (2015) Integrative systematics of northern and Arctic nudibranchs of the genus Dendronotus (Mollusca, Gastropoda), with descriptions of three new species. Zool. J. Linn. Soc., 173, 841 - 886.", "Ekimova, I., Schepetov, D., Chichvarkhina, O. & Chichvarkhin, A. (2016) Nudibranch molluscs of the genus Dendronotus Alder et Hancock, 1845 (Heterobranchia: Dendronotina) from Northwestern Sea of Japan with description of a new species. Invertebr. Zool., 13, 15 - 42."]}