Pseudobornella Baba 1932

Genus Pseudobornella Baba, 1932 Type species. P. orientalis Baba, 1932 (fig. 2) Diagnosis . Dorsolateral appendages without distinct (or with few very short) tertiary branches. One of the rhinophoral stalk appendagesfrom both sides is extremely long, usually exceeding body length. Oral veil with lon...

Full description

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
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4624023
https://zenodo.org/record/4624023
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4624023
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Mollusca
Gastropoda
Nudibranchia
Dendronotidae
Pseudobornella
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Mollusca
Gastropoda
Nudibranchia
Dendronotidae
Pseudobornella
Korshunova, Tatiana
Bakken, Torkild
GrØtan, Viktor V.
Johnson, Kjetil B.
Lundin, Kennet
Martynov, Alexander
Pseudobornella Baba 1932
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Mollusca
Gastropoda
Nudibranchia
Dendronotidae
Pseudobornella
description Genus Pseudobornella Baba, 1932 Type species. P. orientalis Baba, 1932 (fig. 2) Diagnosis . Dorsolateral appendages without distinct (or with few very short) tertiary branches. One of the rhinophoral stalk appendagesfrom both sides is extremely long, usually exceeding body length. Oral veil with long simple unbranched appendages. Radula with very small number of lateral teeth (presently knowntobe no morethantwo rows of lateral teeth). Central teeth with protruding cusp distinctly separate from lateral denticles. Prostate represents by narrow tube, without alveols and disk. Copulative organ partly flattened and with a widened subcircular apical part. Remarks . The genus Pseudobornella differs from both Dendronotus and Cabangus gen. nov. by a unique combination of external and internal characters.These characters includea very long appendage of the rhinophoral sheath, absence of distinct tertiary branches of the dorsolateral appendages, resultinginthegeneralappearance of dorsolateralappendagesof Pseudobornella as ctenidium-like. Instead, all species of the genus Dendronotus possess well-defined tertiary branchesonthedorsolateralappendages,andno species has suchaexceedingly longappendages of the rhinophoral sheaths. There is a deep-sea species, Dendronotus claugei (see above), for which unbranched dorsolateralappendagesare reported, but this species is only known from a single specimen and needs further studies. According to the present phylogeny D. claugei may represent a separate genus, but more data are needed to support this. Furthermore, so far no single species of the genus Dendronotus and Cabangus gen. nov. have smooth unbranched appendages in the oral veil, whereas numerous reported Pseudobornella specimens invariably show strong unbranched appendages of the oral veil. Ultimately, the radular pattern of the genus Pseudobornella differs from that in the adult stage of species of Dendronotus and Cabangus gen. nov. by a very small number of lateral teeth (so farreportedno morethan two). Adult specimens of the genera Dendronotus and Cabangus gen. nov. possess at least eight lateral teeth, and only very rarely in poorly known deep-sea lineages, the number of the lateral teeth rows can reach six in number. The tropical C. noahi was reported to have only four rows of lateral teeth, but only a single juvenile specimen is known (Pola & Stout, 2008). All investigated species of the genus Dendronotus showed thepresence of 1–3 rows oflateral teeth during the early stages of their ontogeny (e.g., Martynov et al., 2020a), while only in the genus Pseudobornella such feature became apparent in adults stage. Furthermore, the shape of the central teeth of Pseudobornella is also different from that in any adult Dendronotus and Cabangus gen. nov. species by the presence of a strongly protruding central cusp on the central teeth, which is distinctly separated from the lateral denticles. ASEMimageoftheradulaof P.orientalis from the Sea of Japan was presented in Martynov et al. (2015a: 60, fig. 5G). Radular characters coupled with the molecular data (including presenting for the first time data on COI gene for the type species Pseudobornella orientalis , figs 1, 2) show that the genus Pseudobornella represents an early offshoot of the family Dendronotidae. This evolution was fuelled by the paedomorphic reduction of the lateral teeth and juvenilization of the central teeth (for criteria of paedomorphosis (Korshunova et al., 2020a; Martynov et al., 2020b). Aprevious morphological cladistic study (Pola et al., 2009) placed the genus Pseudobornella outside the family Dendronotidae, thus highligthing the morphological peculiarities of this genus as inconsistent with those of other dendronotid genera. However, a solely molecular study suggested to synonymize Pseudobornella with Dendronotus (Pola & Gosliner, 2010). We confirm here the validity of the genus Pseudobornella Baba, 1932 using integrative evidences. Specimens of the type species Pseudobornella orientalis from the Sea of Japan (fig. 2) in the present study matched morphologically well with those in the original description of P. orientalis (Baba, 1932), including the characteristic small chocolate-brown spots and yellow lines on the dorsal side, and the shape of the radular teeth. Species composition. This presently monospecific genus only contains P.orientalis Baba, 1932. : 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 pages 133-134, DOI: 10.1163/18759866-BJA10014, http://zenodo.org/record/4623915 : {"references": ["Baba, K. (1932) Pseudobornella orientalis, nov. gen. et sp. from Japan. Annot. Zoolog. Japon., 13, 4, 369 - 376.", "Pola, M. & Stout, C. (2008) Description of the first two tropical Indo-Pacific species of Dendronotus (Gastropoda: Nudibranchia) with new data of the poorly known species Dendronotus gracilis Baba, 1949. Zootaxa, 1960, 45 - 66.", "Martynov, A., Fujiwara, Y., Tsuchida, S., Nakano, R., Sanamyan, N., Sanamyan, K., Fletcher, K. & Korshunova, T. (2020 a) Three new species of the genus Dendronotus from Japan and Russia (Mollusca, Nudibranchia). Zootaxa, 4747, 495 - 513.", "Martynov, A., Sanamyan, N. & Korshunova, T. (2015 a) New data on the opisthobranch molluscs (Gastropoda: Opisthobranchia) of waters of Commander Islands and Far-Eastern seas of Russia. Conservation of biodiversity of Kamchatka and coastal waters - Proceedings of the XV International Scientific Conference Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, pp. 55 - 69. Kamchat Press, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky.", "Korshunova, T., Fletcher, K., Picton, B., Lundin, K., Kashio, S., Sanamyan, N., Sanamyan, K., Padula, V., Schrodl, M. & Martynov A. (2020 a) The Emperor Cadlina, hidden diversity and gill cavity evolution: new insights for the taxonomy and phylogeny of dorid nudibranchs (Mollusca: Gastropoda). Zool. J. Linn. Soc., 189, 762 - 827.", "Martynov, A., Lundin, K., Picton, B., Fletcher, K., Malmberg, K. & Korshunova, T. (2020 b) Multiple paedomorphic lineages of softsubstrate burrowing invertebrates: parallels in the origin of Xenocratena and Xenoturbella. PLoS ONE, 15, e 0227173.", "Pola, M., Rudman, W. & Gosliner, T. (2009) Systematics and preliminary phylogeny of Bornellidae (Mollusca: Nudibranchia: Dendronotina) based on morphological characters with description of four new species. Zootaxa, 1975, 1 - 57.", "Pola, M., & Gosliner, T. M. (2010) The first molecular phylogeny of cladobranchian opisthobranchs (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Nudibranchia). Mol. Phyl. Evol., 56, 931 - 941."]}
format Text
author Korshunova, Tatiana
Bakken, Torkild
GrØtan, Viktor V.
Johnson, Kjetil B.
Lundin, Kennet
Martynov, Alexander
author_facet Korshunova, Tatiana
Bakken, Torkild
GrØtan, Viktor V.
Johnson, Kjetil B.
Lundin, Kennet
Martynov, Alexander
author_sort Korshunova, Tatiana
title Pseudobornella Baba 1932
title_short Pseudobornella Baba 1932
title_full Pseudobornella Baba 1932
title_fullStr Pseudobornella Baba 1932
title_full_unstemmed Pseudobornella Baba 1932
title_sort pseudobornella baba 1932
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4624023
https://zenodo.org/record/4624023
long_lat ENVELOPE(158.626,158.626,53.067,53.067)
ENVELOPE(13.400,13.400,65.585,65.585)
ENVELOPE(158.651,158.651,53.044,53.044)
ENVELOPE(9.917,9.917,62.836,62.836)
geographic Pacific
Petropavlovsk
Bakken
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
Grøtan
geographic_facet Pacific
Petropavlovsk
Bakken
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
Grøtan
genre Kamchatka
genre_facet Kamchatka
op_relation http://zenodo.org/record/4623915
http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF916F160249FF822334FFFDCA16110F
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
https://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18759866-bja10014
http://zenodo.org/record/4623915
http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF916F160249FF822334FFFDCA16110F
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4624024
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
op_rights Open Access
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
cc0-1.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_rightsnorm CC0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4624023
https://doi.org/10.1163/18759866-bja10014
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4624024
_version_ 1766051893163851776
spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4624023 2023-05-15T16:59:34+02:00 Pseudobornella Baba 1932 Korshunova, Tatiana Bakken, Torkild GrØtan, Viktor V. Johnson, Kjetil B. Lundin, Kennet Martynov, Alexander 2020 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4624023 https://zenodo.org/record/4624023 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/4623915 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF916F160249FF822334FFFDCA16110F https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18759866-bja10014 http://zenodo.org/record/4623915 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF916F160249FF822334FFFDCA16110F https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4624024 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Mollusca Gastropoda Nudibranchia Dendronotidae Pseudobornella Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4624023 https://doi.org/10.1163/18759866-bja10014 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4624024 2022-02-08T17:10:29Z Genus Pseudobornella Baba, 1932 Type species. P. orientalis Baba, 1932 (fig. 2) Diagnosis . Dorsolateral appendages without distinct (or with few very short) tertiary branches. One of the rhinophoral stalk appendagesfrom both sides is extremely long, usually exceeding body length. Oral veil with long simple unbranched appendages. Radula with very small number of lateral teeth (presently knowntobe no morethantwo rows of lateral teeth). Central teeth with protruding cusp distinctly separate from lateral denticles. Prostate represents by narrow tube, without alveols and disk. Copulative organ partly flattened and with a widened subcircular apical part. Remarks . The genus Pseudobornella differs from both Dendronotus and Cabangus gen. nov. by a unique combination of external and internal characters.These characters includea very long appendage of the rhinophoral sheath, absence of distinct tertiary branches of the dorsolateral appendages, resultinginthegeneralappearance of dorsolateralappendagesof Pseudobornella as ctenidium-like. Instead, all species of the genus Dendronotus possess well-defined tertiary branchesonthedorsolateralappendages,andno species has suchaexceedingly longappendages of the rhinophoral sheaths. There is a deep-sea species, Dendronotus claugei (see above), for which unbranched dorsolateralappendagesare reported, but this species is only known from a single specimen and needs further studies. According to the present phylogeny D. claugei may represent a separate genus, but more data are needed to support this. Furthermore, so far no single species of the genus Dendronotus and Cabangus gen. nov. have smooth unbranched appendages in the oral veil, whereas numerous reported Pseudobornella specimens invariably show strong unbranched appendages of the oral veil. Ultimately, the radular pattern of the genus Pseudobornella differs from that in the adult stage of species of Dendronotus and Cabangus gen. nov. by a very small number of lateral teeth (so farreportedno morethan two). Adult specimens of the genera Dendronotus and Cabangus gen. nov. possess at least eight lateral teeth, and only very rarely in poorly known deep-sea lineages, the number of the lateral teeth rows can reach six in number. The tropical C. noahi was reported to have only four rows of lateral teeth, but only a single juvenile specimen is known (Pola & Stout, 2008). All investigated species of the genus Dendronotus showed thepresence of 1–3 rows oflateral teeth during the early stages of their ontogeny (e.g., Martynov et al., 2020a), while only in the genus Pseudobornella such feature became apparent in adults stage. Furthermore, the shape of the central teeth of Pseudobornella is also different from that in any adult Dendronotus and Cabangus gen. nov. species by the presence of a strongly protruding central cusp on the central teeth, which is distinctly separated from the lateral denticles. ASEMimageoftheradulaof P.orientalis from the Sea of Japan was presented in Martynov et al. (2015a: 60, fig. 5G). Radular characters coupled with the molecular data (including presenting for the first time data on COI gene for the type species Pseudobornella orientalis , figs 1, 2) show that the genus Pseudobornella represents an early offshoot of the family Dendronotidae. This evolution was fuelled by the paedomorphic reduction of the lateral teeth and juvenilization of the central teeth (for criteria of paedomorphosis (Korshunova et al., 2020a; Martynov et al., 2020b). Aprevious morphological cladistic study (Pola et al., 2009) placed the genus Pseudobornella outside the family Dendronotidae, thus highligthing the morphological peculiarities of this genus as inconsistent with those of other dendronotid genera. However, a solely molecular study suggested to synonymize Pseudobornella with Dendronotus (Pola & Gosliner, 2010). We confirm here the validity of the genus Pseudobornella Baba, 1932 using integrative evidences. Specimens of the type species Pseudobornella orientalis from the Sea of Japan (fig. 2) in the present study matched morphologically well with those in the original description of P. orientalis (Baba, 1932), including the characteristic small chocolate-brown spots and yellow lines on the dorsal side, and the shape of the radular teeth. Species composition. This presently monospecific genus only contains P.orientalis Baba, 1932. : 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 pages 133-134, DOI: 10.1163/18759866-BJA10014, http://zenodo.org/record/4623915 : {"references": ["Baba, K. (1932) Pseudobornella orientalis, nov. gen. et sp. from Japan. Annot. Zoolog. Japon., 13, 4, 369 - 376.", "Pola, M. & Stout, C. (2008) Description of the first two tropical Indo-Pacific species of Dendronotus (Gastropoda: Nudibranchia) with new data of the poorly known species Dendronotus gracilis Baba, 1949. Zootaxa, 1960, 45 - 66.", "Martynov, A., Fujiwara, Y., Tsuchida, S., Nakano, R., Sanamyan, N., Sanamyan, K., Fletcher, K. & Korshunova, T. (2020 a) Three new species of the genus Dendronotus from Japan and Russia (Mollusca, Nudibranchia). Zootaxa, 4747, 495 - 513.", "Martynov, A., Sanamyan, N. & Korshunova, T. (2015 a) New data on the opisthobranch molluscs (Gastropoda: Opisthobranchia) of waters of Commander Islands and Far-Eastern seas of Russia. Conservation of biodiversity of Kamchatka and coastal waters - Proceedings of the XV International Scientific Conference Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, pp. 55 - 69. Kamchat Press, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky.", "Korshunova, T., Fletcher, K., Picton, B., Lundin, K., Kashio, S., Sanamyan, N., Sanamyan, K., Padula, V., Schrodl, M. & Martynov A. (2020 a) The Emperor Cadlina, hidden diversity and gill cavity evolution: new insights for the taxonomy and phylogeny of dorid nudibranchs (Mollusca: Gastropoda). Zool. J. Linn. Soc., 189, 762 - 827.", "Martynov, A., Lundin, K., Picton, B., Fletcher, K., Malmberg, K. & Korshunova, T. (2020 b) Multiple paedomorphic lineages of softsubstrate burrowing invertebrates: parallels in the origin of Xenocratena and Xenoturbella. PLoS ONE, 15, e 0227173.", "Pola, M., Rudman, W. & Gosliner, T. (2009) Systematics and preliminary phylogeny of Bornellidae (Mollusca: Nudibranchia: Dendronotina) based on morphological characters with description of four new species. Zootaxa, 1975, 1 - 57.", "Pola, M., & Gosliner, T. M. (2010) The first molecular phylogeny of cladobranchian opisthobranchs (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Nudibranchia). Mol. Phyl. Evol., 56, 931 - 941."]} Text Kamchatka DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Pacific Petropavlovsk ENVELOPE(158.626,158.626,53.067,53.067) Bakken ENVELOPE(13.400,13.400,65.585,65.585) Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky ENVELOPE(158.651,158.651,53.044,53.044) Grøtan ENVELOPE(9.917,9.917,62.836,62.836)