Minibiotus taiti Claxton 1998, n.sp.

Minibiotus taiti n.sp. Figs. 3, 18b; Table 2 Type material. HOLOTYPE inAM (AM KS41430): Australia, New South Wales: Ryde, 33°48'S 151°04'E, 500 m a.s.l., 16 June 1993, S.K. Claxton, foliose lichen and leaf litter on asphalt. PARATYPES (7 specimens, 3 eggs in AM [AM KS41431-41440]; 31 speci...

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Main Author: Claxton, Sandra K.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 1998
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4657329
https://zenodo.org/record/4657329
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4657329
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
Tardigrada
Eutardigrada
Parachela
Macrobiotidae
Minibiotus
Minibiotus taiti
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Tardigrada
Eutardigrada
Parachela
Macrobiotidae
Minibiotus
Minibiotus taiti
Claxton, Sandra K.
Minibiotus taiti Claxton 1998, n.sp.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Tardigrada
Eutardigrada
Parachela
Macrobiotidae
Minibiotus
Minibiotus taiti
description Minibiotus taiti n.sp. Figs. 3, 18b; Table 2 Type material. HOLOTYPE inAM (AM KS41430): Australia, New South Wales: Ryde, 33°48'S 151°04'E, 500 m a.s.l., 16 June 1993, S.K. Claxton, foliose lichen and leaf litter on asphalt. PARATYPES (7 specimens, 3 eggs in AM [AM KS41431-41440]; 31 specimens, 2 eggs in SKC): same data as holotype but collected on 3 May 1985 and 1 February 1992. Additional material examined. New South Wales: Appin, 34°12'S 150047'E, 29 August 1985, PD. Claxton, weft moss on rock in open sclerophyl forest, 10 specimens, 3 eggs. Sandy Hollow, 32°22'S 150034'E, 20 March 1993, S.K. Claxton, weft moss on rock in open sclerophyl forest, 22 specimens, 5 eggs. Queensland: Eumundi, 26°28'S 152°27'E, 20 December 1986, D.S. Homing, fruticose lichen on old bridge timber, wind exposed, 6 specimens, 3 eggs. Great Keppel Island, 23°10'S 150058'E, 14 July 1993, P.D. Claxton, foliose lichen on rock, wind exposed, 3 specimens, 1 egg. Australian material in SKC. NEW ZEALAND: Snares Islands, Ho Ho Creek, 23 October 1972, D.S. Homing, 2 specimens (SA301). Mollymawk Bay, 30 January 1971, D.S.H., 2 specimens (SA26). Seal Point, 2 March 1972, D.S.H., 2 specimens (SA216). Broughton Island, 18 February 1971, D.S.H., 4 specimens (SA60). (NZM). CHINA: Quingdao, October 1994, N. Marley, moss, 6 specimens in NM. USA: Texas, Taylor County, 27 December 1989, C.W. Beasley, leaf litter on soil, 2 specimens in MUT. Diagnosis. Smooth cuticle with no pores and granulation on all legs; 3 round macroplacoids and a distinct microplacoid; long slender claws with short, low accessory claws and smooth lunules. Description. Body length 160-320 /lffi, colourless. Eye spots, when present, in posterior position. Cuticle smooth, patch of granulation on the outside of first three pairs of legs near claws, also on back and sides of fourth pair of legs. Buccal tube narrow (8% of buccal tube length). Stylet supports inserted at 60.3% of the buccal tube length, ventral support very short (40.3% ofbuccal tube length). Pharyngeal bulb round (25 /lffi diameter) containing large, granular apophyses, three macroplacoids and a microplacoid. Macroplacoid row short (32.1% ofbuccal tube length); first macroplacoid round but slightly elongated anteriorly where it lies under the apophysis (which is about the same size), second macroplacoid small, granular; third macroplacoid granular but with a slight caudal bulb which curves towards midline. Microplacoid distinct, lying close to third macroplacoid. Claws long and slender (fourth pair of claws is 33.2% of length of buccal tube) with refractive zone at base and with short secondary branch. Accessory claws short and lie close to main branch. Lunules smooth on all claws. Eggs colourless, round, diameter without processes 54 /lm, with processes 64 /lm. About 48 processes around circumference, about 160 in a hemisphere. Processes like thin nails, 3.2-5.4 /lID high, base diameter 1-1.5 /lID, top diameter 2-3 /lID. Top of each process appears to have a ring of very small circles around a central pore. A membrane surrounds each process but it is not clear if this is continuous over all the processes or if it reaches the shell surface between the processes. Etymology. The species is named after Dr N.N. Tait of Macquarie University. Remarks. This species differs from M. intermedius described above, by having granulation around the claws, a wider buccal tube, stylet supports inserted lower down the buccal tube and by the slightly different structure of the processes of the egg. It differs from Macrobiotus acontistus De Barros, 1942 by having a microplacoid, a narrower buccal tube, macroplacoids of similar size, the second never larger than the first and by having granulation around the claws. Habitat. The type material was found in foliose lichens and Eucalyptus nuts on asphalt in the parking lot at Macquarie University. At other sites in NSW and in Queensland the species was found in mosses and lichens in locations subject to drying and high temperatures. /lm, with processes 64 /lm. About 48 processes around circumference, about 160 in a hemisphere. Processes like thin nails, 3.2-5.4 /lID high, base diameter 1-1.5 /lID, top diameter 2-3 /lID. Top of each process appears to have a ring of very small circles around a central pore. A membrane surrounds each process but it is not clear if this is continuous over all the processes or if it reaches the shell surface between the processes. Etymology. The species is named after Dr N.N. Tait of Macquarie University. Remarks. This species differs from M. intermedius described above, by having granulation around the claws, a wider buccal tube, stylet supports inserted lower down the buccal tube and by the slightly different structure of the processes of the egg. It differs from Macrobiotus acontistus De Barros, 1942 by having a microplacoid, a narrower buccal tube, macroplacoids of similar size, the second never larger than the first and by having granulation around the claws. Habitat. The type material was found in foliose lichens and Eucalyptus nuts on asphalt in the parking lot at Macquarie University. At other sites in NSW and in Queensland the species was found in mosses and lichens in locations subject to drying and high temperatures. : Published as part of Claxton, Sandra K., 1998, A revision of the genus Minibiotus (Tardigrada: Macrobiotidae) with descriptions of eleven new species from Australia, pp. 125-160 in Records of the Australian Museum 50 (2) on pages 131-133, DOI: 10.3853/j.0067-1975.50.1998.1276, http://zenodo.org/record/4652937 : {"references": ["De Barros, R., 1942. Tardigrados do estado de Sao Paulo, Brasil n. Genero \" Macrobiotus \". Revista Brasileira de Biologia 2 (4): 373 - 386."]}
format Text
author Claxton, Sandra K.
author_facet Claxton, Sandra K.
author_sort Claxton, Sandra K.
title Minibiotus taiti Claxton 1998, n.sp.
title_short Minibiotus taiti Claxton 1998, n.sp.
title_full Minibiotus taiti Claxton 1998, n.sp.
title_fullStr Minibiotus taiti Claxton 1998, n.sp.
title_full_unstemmed Minibiotus taiti Claxton 1998, n.sp.
title_sort minibiotus taiti claxton 1998, n.sp.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 1998
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4657329
https://zenodo.org/record/4657329
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.167,-62.167,-64.717,-64.717)
ENVELOPE(-58.000,-58.000,-64.350,-64.350)
ENVELOPE(-57.315,-57.315,50.633,50.633)
ENVELOPE(3.319,3.319,-54.451,-54.451)
geographic New Zealand
Queensland
Barros
Tait
Keppel Island
Seal Point
geographic_facet New Zealand
Queensland
Barros
Tait
Keppel Island
Seal Point
genre Snares Islands
genre_facet Snares Islands
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4657329 2023-05-15T18:20:03+02:00 Minibiotus taiti Claxton 1998, n.sp. Claxton, Sandra K. 1998 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4657329 https://zenodo.org/record/4657329 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/4652937 http://publication.plazi.org/id/A540FFFC0D54362015561D74A578887E http://zoobank.org/4C7B3B68-1D65-4506-8B7F-08C2CF4C55AC https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.0067-1975.50.1998.1276 http://zenodo.org/record/4652937 http://publication.plazi.org/id/A540FFFC0D54362015561D74A578887E http://zoobank.org/4C7B3B68-1D65-4506-8B7F-08C2CF4C55AC https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4657330 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 Tardigrada Eutardigrada Parachela Macrobiotidae Minibiotus Minibiotus taiti Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 1998 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4657329 https://doi.org/10.3853/j.0067-1975.50.1998.1276 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4657330 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Minibiotus taiti n.sp. Figs. 3, 18b; Table 2 Type material. HOLOTYPE inAM (AM KS41430): Australia, New South Wales: Ryde, 33°48'S 151°04'E, 500 m a.s.l., 16 June 1993, S.K. Claxton, foliose lichen and leaf litter on asphalt. PARATYPES (7 specimens, 3 eggs in AM [AM KS41431-41440]; 31 specimens, 2 eggs in SKC): same data as holotype but collected on 3 May 1985 and 1 February 1992. Additional material examined. New South Wales: Appin, 34°12'S 150047'E, 29 August 1985, PD. Claxton, weft moss on rock in open sclerophyl forest, 10 specimens, 3 eggs. Sandy Hollow, 32°22'S 150034'E, 20 March 1993, S.K. Claxton, weft moss on rock in open sclerophyl forest, 22 specimens, 5 eggs. Queensland: Eumundi, 26°28'S 152°27'E, 20 December 1986, D.S. Homing, fruticose lichen on old bridge timber, wind exposed, 6 specimens, 3 eggs. Great Keppel Island, 23°10'S 150058'E, 14 July 1993, P.D. Claxton, foliose lichen on rock, wind exposed, 3 specimens, 1 egg. Australian material in SKC. NEW ZEALAND: Snares Islands, Ho Ho Creek, 23 October 1972, D.S. Homing, 2 specimens (SA301). Mollymawk Bay, 30 January 1971, D.S.H., 2 specimens (SA26). Seal Point, 2 March 1972, D.S.H., 2 specimens (SA216). Broughton Island, 18 February 1971, D.S.H., 4 specimens (SA60). (NZM). CHINA: Quingdao, October 1994, N. Marley, moss, 6 specimens in NM. USA: Texas, Taylor County, 27 December 1989, C.W. Beasley, leaf litter on soil, 2 specimens in MUT. Diagnosis. Smooth cuticle with no pores and granulation on all legs; 3 round macroplacoids and a distinct microplacoid; long slender claws with short, low accessory claws and smooth lunules. Description. Body length 160-320 /lffi, colourless. Eye spots, when present, in posterior position. Cuticle smooth, patch of granulation on the outside of first three pairs of legs near claws, also on back and sides of fourth pair of legs. Buccal tube narrow (8% of buccal tube length). Stylet supports inserted at 60.3% of the buccal tube length, ventral support very short (40.3% ofbuccal tube length). Pharyngeal bulb round (25 /lffi diameter) containing large, granular apophyses, three macroplacoids and a microplacoid. Macroplacoid row short (32.1% ofbuccal tube length); first macroplacoid round but slightly elongated anteriorly where it lies under the apophysis (which is about the same size), second macroplacoid small, granular; third macroplacoid granular but with a slight caudal bulb which curves towards midline. Microplacoid distinct, lying close to third macroplacoid. Claws long and slender (fourth pair of claws is 33.2% of length of buccal tube) with refractive zone at base and with short secondary branch. Accessory claws short and lie close to main branch. Lunules smooth on all claws. Eggs colourless, round, diameter without processes 54 /lm, with processes 64 /lm. About 48 processes around circumference, about 160 in a hemisphere. Processes like thin nails, 3.2-5.4 /lID high, base diameter 1-1.5 /lID, top diameter 2-3 /lID. Top of each process appears to have a ring of very small circles around a central pore. A membrane surrounds each process but it is not clear if this is continuous over all the processes or if it reaches the shell surface between the processes. Etymology. The species is named after Dr N.N. Tait of Macquarie University. Remarks. This species differs from M. intermedius described above, by having granulation around the claws, a wider buccal tube, stylet supports inserted lower down the buccal tube and by the slightly different structure of the processes of the egg. It differs from Macrobiotus acontistus De Barros, 1942 by having a microplacoid, a narrower buccal tube, macroplacoids of similar size, the second never larger than the first and by having granulation around the claws. Habitat. The type material was found in foliose lichens and Eucalyptus nuts on asphalt in the parking lot at Macquarie University. At other sites in NSW and in Queensland the species was found in mosses and lichens in locations subject to drying and high temperatures. /lm, with processes 64 /lm. About 48 processes around circumference, about 160 in a hemisphere. Processes like thin nails, 3.2-5.4 /lID high, base diameter 1-1.5 /lID, top diameter 2-3 /lID. Top of each process appears to have a ring of very small circles around a central pore. A membrane surrounds each process but it is not clear if this is continuous over all the processes or if it reaches the shell surface between the processes. Etymology. The species is named after Dr N.N. Tait of Macquarie University. Remarks. This species differs from M. intermedius described above, by having granulation around the claws, a wider buccal tube, stylet supports inserted lower down the buccal tube and by the slightly different structure of the processes of the egg. It differs from Macrobiotus acontistus De Barros, 1942 by having a microplacoid, a narrower buccal tube, macroplacoids of similar size, the second never larger than the first and by having granulation around the claws. Habitat. The type material was found in foliose lichens and Eucalyptus nuts on asphalt in the parking lot at Macquarie University. At other sites in NSW and in Queensland the species was found in mosses and lichens in locations subject to drying and high temperatures. : Published as part of Claxton, Sandra K., 1998, A revision of the genus Minibiotus (Tardigrada: Macrobiotidae) with descriptions of eleven new species from Australia, pp. 125-160 in Records of the Australian Museum 50 (2) on pages 131-133, DOI: 10.3853/j.0067-1975.50.1998.1276, http://zenodo.org/record/4652937 : {"references": ["De Barros, R., 1942. Tardigrados do estado de Sao Paulo, Brasil n. Genero \" Macrobiotus \". Revista Brasileira de Biologia 2 (4): 373 - 386."]} Text Snares Islands DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) New Zealand Queensland Barros ENVELOPE(-62.167,-62.167,-64.717,-64.717) Tait ENVELOPE(-58.000,-58.000,-64.350,-64.350) Keppel Island ENVELOPE(-57.315,-57.315,50.633,50.633) Seal Point ENVELOPE(3.319,3.319,-54.451,-54.451)