Draconema ophicephalum Claparede 1863

Draconema ophicephalum (Claparède, 1863) Figs 1–3, Table 2 (morphometrics) Material. Ten males and ten females. Locality. White Sea (Northern Russia), Karelian Coast of the Kandalaksha Bay, vicinity of the White Sea Biological Station, Velikaja Salma Strait between the Veliky Island and Kindo Penins...

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Main Authors: Fedyaeva, Maria A., Neretina, Tatjana V., Konovalova, Olga P., Tchesunov, Alexei V.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5628339
https://zenodo.org/record/5628339
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5628339
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
Nematoda
Adenophorea
Desmodorida
Draconematidae
Draconema
Draconema ophicephalum
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Nematoda
Adenophorea
Desmodorida
Draconematidae
Draconema
Draconema ophicephalum
Fedyaeva, Maria A.
Neretina, Tatjana V.
Konovalova, Olga P.
Tchesunov, Alexei V.
Draconema ophicephalum Claparede 1863
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Nematoda
Adenophorea
Desmodorida
Draconematidae
Draconema
Draconema ophicephalum
description Draconema ophicephalum (Claparède, 1863) Figs 1–3, Table 2 (morphometrics) Material. Ten males and ten females. Locality. White Sea (Northern Russia), Karelian Coast of the Kandalaksha Bay, vicinity of the White Sea Biological Station, Velikaja Salma Strait between the Veliky Island and Kindo Peninsula (66 ° 33 'N, 33 °06'E), depth 2–5 m, brown and red algae. 18–27 August 2013. Description. Body swollen in the middle of pharyngeal region and strongly narrowed just posteriorly at the level of cardia and anterior-most intestine. Male bodies slightly slimmer than that of females. Most specimens bent dorsally in anterior half of the body. Female body noticeably widened in region of the reproductive organs. Body cuticle distinctly annulated along the entire body, thicker in the pharyngeal region and thinner posterior to the cardia. Anterior-most head cuticle smooth, forming rostrum. Length of the rostrum 15–39 µ m in males and 17–33 µ m in females. Anterior 12–14 cuticular annules of the pharyngeal region enlarged (three annules in 10 µ m) and marked with tiny irregular vacuoles along the midline of each annule while remaining posterior annules of the body are 2–3 times more narrow (8–9 annules in 10 µ m) and look homogeneous. Small mouth opening covered with six rugose lips. Labial region encircled with a tight and narrow hexagonal furrow and then with a wider radially rugose (crumpled) zone (Fig. 3 D). Six short (4–5 µ m) inner labial setae situated in the furrow. Six outer labial setae 5–6 µ m long located at the outer margin of the rugose zone. Four cephalic setae 16–18 µ m long located at level of anterior edge or middle part of amphideal fovea. Numerous somatic (subcephalic) setae on the rostrum mask cephalic setae, hence the cephalic setae may be difficult to distinguish. Amphideal fovea situated at the base of the rostrum in latero-dorsal position. Amphideal fovea large, loop-shaped, dorsal arm slightly longer than ventral, with no difference in shape between males and females. Width of the amphideal fovea 1.6–3.2 µ m in males and 1.6–2.6 µ m in females. There are about 290–300 various non-modified and modified somatic setae along the body. Cephalic adhesive tubes (CATs) long and wide setae bent anteriorly, with bulb-shaped bases and slightly modified tips, situated dorsally on the rostrum. Twelve CATs located in six longitudinally arranged pairs, two dorsal pairs, two subdorsal and two laterodorsal pairs, posterior tube longer than anterior one in each pair (Fig. 3 B). Non-modified thin and flexible somatic setae arranged in eight irregular rows along the body. Longest setae located on pharyngeal region (up to 55 Μ m in males, up to 51 Μ m in females); length of most somatic setae on remainder of body nearly equal in length (32–45 Μ m in males, 30–45 Μ m in females). Six pairs of setae on annulated part of the tail and 3–4 pairs on non-annulated terminal cone of the tail. Posterior adhesive tubes (PATs) present as wide and stiff slightly bent, with bulb-shaped bases and cup-shaped tips. The PATs arranged in two subventral and two latero-ventral rows on the posterior body, anterior to anus. Length of PATs decreases slightly towards posterior end of rows. There are four non-modified hair-like somatic setae inserted in subventral PAT rows; comparable to PATs in length but thinner. Two anterior-most somatic setae in these rows slightly shorter than adjacent PATs; two posterior-most somatic setae slightly longer than adjacent PATs. Buccal cavity small and unarmed. Some orange pigment granules present around the stoma. Pharynx dumbbell-shaped, swollen anteriorly and posteriorly, with a narrowing (isthmus) between the swellings in the middle part of the pharynx. One anterior testis located ventrally to the intestine. Spicules slender, elongate, slightly arcuate, distally pointed and proximally with a capitulum. Gubernaculum a small bar. Four pairs of anal setae: two pairs (short and long) anterior to anus and two pairs (short, conical and long) posterior. Ovaries antidromously reflexed and located ventrally to the intestine. Tail elongate conical, non-annulated terminal part (terminal cone) 28–30 % of the total tail length in males and 37–42 % in females. Caudal glands extended a little to precaudal region. Diagnosis. Draconema . Body length 998–1676 µ m in males and 1097–1700 µ m in females; a 16.7–28.6 in males and 13.3–16.8 in females. Anterior 12–14 cuticular annules of the pharyngeal region enlarged and marked with tiny irregular vesicles, while posterior annules of the body two to three times narrower and homogeneous. Longest somatic setae (up to 57 µ m) located on pharyngeal region. Amphideal fovea loop-shaped, dorsal arm slightly longer than ventral arm. Twelve cephalic adhesive tubes located in six longitudinally arranged pairs. The posterior adhesive tubes arranged in two lateroventral (12–19 in males and 12–22 in females) and two subventral (14–19 in males and 16–21 in females) rows on the posterior body before anus. Spicules 70–93 µ m, gubernaculum 37–62 µ m long. Discussion. All Draconema species have overall similarity and differ from one another in fine details, particularly in number of sublateral adhesion tubes. The White Sea species is close to the re-description of D. ophicephalum by Allen & Noffsinger (1978), except for a slight difference in the length of the last subventral adhesive tubes in females (27–31 µm vs 21–26 µm). We propose that D. ophicephalum should be re-described because it has been collected in a new region (White Sea) remote from the type locality (Mediterranean). Since the synonymization of Allen & Noffsinger (1978) and Decraemer et al . (1997), the known geographic range of D. ophicephalum is wide, including the Mediterranean, Black Sea, English Channel, North Sea, Baltic Sea, Greenland, and Barents Sea. Here, the range is extended to the north-east with the finding of the species in the White Sea. : Published as part of Fedyaeva, Maria A., Neretina, Tatjana V., Konovalova, Olga P. & Tchesunov, Alexei V., 2016, Two known and one new species of Draconematidae and Epsilonematidae (Nematoda, Desmodorida) from the White Sea, North Russia, pp. 383-411 in Zootaxa 4121 (4) on pages 387-392, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4121.4.2, http://zenodo.org/record/265069 : {"references": ["Claparede, A. R. E. (1863) Beobachtungen uber Anatomie und Entwicklungsgeschichte wirbellosen Tiere, an der Kuste der Normandie angestellt. Leipzig (W. Engelmann), 120 pp.", "Allen, M. W. & Noffsinger, E. M. (1978) A revision of the marine nematodes of the superfamily Draconematoidea Filipjev, 1918 (Nematoda: Draconematina). University of California, Publicatious in Zoology, 109, 133 pp. Allgen, C. (1932) Weitere Beitrage zur Kenntnis der marinen Nematodenfauna der Campbellinsel. Nyt Magazin for Naturvidenskaberne, 70, 97 - 198.", "Decraemer, W., Gourbault, N. & Backeljau, T. (1997) Marine nematodes of the family Draconematidae (Nemata): a synthesis with phylogenetic relationships. Hydrobiologia, 357, 185 - 202. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1023 / A: 1003155424665"]}
format Text
author Fedyaeva, Maria A.
Neretina, Tatjana V.
Konovalova, Olga P.
Tchesunov, Alexei V.
author_facet Fedyaeva, Maria A.
Neretina, Tatjana V.
Konovalova, Olga P.
Tchesunov, Alexei V.
author_sort Fedyaeva, Maria A.
title Draconema ophicephalum Claparede 1863
title_short Draconema ophicephalum Claparede 1863
title_full Draconema ophicephalum Claparede 1863
title_fullStr Draconema ophicephalum Claparede 1863
title_full_unstemmed Draconema ophicephalum Claparede 1863
title_sort draconema ophicephalum claparede 1863
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5628339
https://zenodo.org/record/5628339
long_lat ENVELOPE(32.417,32.417,67.133,67.133)
ENVELOPE(32.133,32.133,65.817,65.817)
ENVELOPE(153.300,153.300,59.900,59.900)
geographic Barents Sea
White Sea
Greenland
Kandalaksha
Salma
Konovalova
geographic_facet Barents Sea
White Sea
Greenland
Kandalaksha
Salma
Konovalova
genre Barents Sea
Greenland
karelia*
karelian
White Sea
genre_facet Barents Sea
Greenland
karelia*
karelian
White Sea
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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5628339
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5628339 2023-05-15T15:39:14+02:00 Draconema ophicephalum Claparede 1863 Fedyaeva, Maria A. Neretina, Tatjana V. Konovalova, Olga P. Tchesunov, Alexei V. 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5628339 https://zenodo.org/record/5628339 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/265069 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC80634FF8FFFCEFFA7F91EFF935C31 http://zoobank.org/D6F1D690-31AC-47AD-A81C-25FC823599DB https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4121.4.2 http://zenodo.org/record/265069 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC80634FF8FFFCEFFA7F91EFF935C31 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265071 http://zoobank.org/D6F1D690-31AC-47AD-A81C-25FC823599DB https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5628340 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Nematoda Adenophorea Desmodorida Draconematidae Draconema Draconema ophicephalum Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5628339 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4121.4.2 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.265071 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5628340 2022-02-08T12:40:44Z Draconema ophicephalum (Claparède, 1863) Figs 1–3, Table 2 (morphometrics) Material. Ten males and ten females. Locality. White Sea (Northern Russia), Karelian Coast of the Kandalaksha Bay, vicinity of the White Sea Biological Station, Velikaja Salma Strait between the Veliky Island and Kindo Peninsula (66 ° 33 'N, 33 °06'E), depth 2–5 m, brown and red algae. 18–27 August 2013. Description. Body swollen in the middle of pharyngeal region and strongly narrowed just posteriorly at the level of cardia and anterior-most intestine. Male bodies slightly slimmer than that of females. Most specimens bent dorsally in anterior half of the body. Female body noticeably widened in region of the reproductive organs. Body cuticle distinctly annulated along the entire body, thicker in the pharyngeal region and thinner posterior to the cardia. Anterior-most head cuticle smooth, forming rostrum. Length of the rostrum 15–39 µ m in males and 17–33 µ m in females. Anterior 12–14 cuticular annules of the pharyngeal region enlarged (three annules in 10 µ m) and marked with tiny irregular vacuoles along the midline of each annule while remaining posterior annules of the body are 2–3 times more narrow (8–9 annules in 10 µ m) and look homogeneous. Small mouth opening covered with six rugose lips. Labial region encircled with a tight and narrow hexagonal furrow and then with a wider radially rugose (crumpled) zone (Fig. 3 D). Six short (4–5 µ m) inner labial setae situated in the furrow. Six outer labial setae 5–6 µ m long located at the outer margin of the rugose zone. Four cephalic setae 16–18 µ m long located at level of anterior edge or middle part of amphideal fovea. Numerous somatic (subcephalic) setae on the rostrum mask cephalic setae, hence the cephalic setae may be difficult to distinguish. Amphideal fovea situated at the base of the rostrum in latero-dorsal position. Amphideal fovea large, loop-shaped, dorsal arm slightly longer than ventral, with no difference in shape between males and females. Width of the amphideal fovea 1.6–3.2 µ m in males and 1.6–2.6 µ m in females. There are about 290–300 various non-modified and modified somatic setae along the body. Cephalic adhesive tubes (CATs) long and wide setae bent anteriorly, with bulb-shaped bases and slightly modified tips, situated dorsally on the rostrum. Twelve CATs located in six longitudinally arranged pairs, two dorsal pairs, two subdorsal and two laterodorsal pairs, posterior tube longer than anterior one in each pair (Fig. 3 B). Non-modified thin and flexible somatic setae arranged in eight irregular rows along the body. Longest setae located on pharyngeal region (up to 55 Μ m in males, up to 51 Μ m in females); length of most somatic setae on remainder of body nearly equal in length (32–45 Μ m in males, 30–45 Μ m in females). Six pairs of setae on annulated part of the tail and 3–4 pairs on non-annulated terminal cone of the tail. Posterior adhesive tubes (PATs) present as wide and stiff slightly bent, with bulb-shaped bases and cup-shaped tips. The PATs arranged in two subventral and two latero-ventral rows on the posterior body, anterior to anus. Length of PATs decreases slightly towards posterior end of rows. There are four non-modified hair-like somatic setae inserted in subventral PAT rows; comparable to PATs in length but thinner. Two anterior-most somatic setae in these rows slightly shorter than adjacent PATs; two posterior-most somatic setae slightly longer than adjacent PATs. Buccal cavity small and unarmed. Some orange pigment granules present around the stoma. Pharynx dumbbell-shaped, swollen anteriorly and posteriorly, with a narrowing (isthmus) between the swellings in the middle part of the pharynx. One anterior testis located ventrally to the intestine. Spicules slender, elongate, slightly arcuate, distally pointed and proximally with a capitulum. Gubernaculum a small bar. Four pairs of anal setae: two pairs (short and long) anterior to anus and two pairs (short, conical and long) posterior. Ovaries antidromously reflexed and located ventrally to the intestine. Tail elongate conical, non-annulated terminal part (terminal cone) 28–30 % of the total tail length in males and 37–42 % in females. Caudal glands extended a little to precaudal region. Diagnosis. Draconema . Body length 998–1676 µ m in males and 1097–1700 µ m in females; a 16.7–28.6 in males and 13.3–16.8 in females. Anterior 12–14 cuticular annules of the pharyngeal region enlarged and marked with tiny irregular vesicles, while posterior annules of the body two to three times narrower and homogeneous. Longest somatic setae (up to 57 µ m) located on pharyngeal region. Amphideal fovea loop-shaped, dorsal arm slightly longer than ventral arm. Twelve cephalic adhesive tubes located in six longitudinally arranged pairs. The posterior adhesive tubes arranged in two lateroventral (12–19 in males and 12–22 in females) and two subventral (14–19 in males and 16–21 in females) rows on the posterior body before anus. Spicules 70–93 µ m, gubernaculum 37–62 µ m long. Discussion. All Draconema species have overall similarity and differ from one another in fine details, particularly in number of sublateral adhesion tubes. The White Sea species is close to the re-description of D. ophicephalum by Allen & Noffsinger (1978), except for a slight difference in the length of the last subventral adhesive tubes in females (27–31 µm vs 21–26 µm). We propose that D. ophicephalum should be re-described because it has been collected in a new region (White Sea) remote from the type locality (Mediterranean). Since the synonymization of Allen & Noffsinger (1978) and Decraemer et al . (1997), the known geographic range of D. ophicephalum is wide, including the Mediterranean, Black Sea, English Channel, North Sea, Baltic Sea, Greenland, and Barents Sea. Here, the range is extended to the north-east with the finding of the species in the White Sea. : Published as part of Fedyaeva, Maria A., Neretina, Tatjana V., Konovalova, Olga P. & Tchesunov, Alexei V., 2016, Two known and one new species of Draconematidae and Epsilonematidae (Nematoda, Desmodorida) from the White Sea, North Russia, pp. 383-411 in Zootaxa 4121 (4) on pages 387-392, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4121.4.2, http://zenodo.org/record/265069 : {"references": ["Claparede, A. R. E. (1863) Beobachtungen uber Anatomie und Entwicklungsgeschichte wirbellosen Tiere, an der Kuste der Normandie angestellt. Leipzig (W. Engelmann), 120 pp.", "Allen, M. W. & Noffsinger, E. M. (1978) A revision of the marine nematodes of the superfamily Draconematoidea Filipjev, 1918 (Nematoda: Draconematina). University of California, Publicatious in Zoology, 109, 133 pp. Allgen, C. (1932) Weitere Beitrage zur Kenntnis der marinen Nematodenfauna der Campbellinsel. Nyt Magazin for Naturvidenskaberne, 70, 97 - 198.", "Decraemer, W., Gourbault, N. & Backeljau, T. (1997) Marine nematodes of the family Draconematidae (Nemata): a synthesis with phylogenetic relationships. Hydrobiologia, 357, 185 - 202. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1023 / A: 1003155424665"]} Text Barents Sea Greenland karelia* karelian White Sea DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Barents Sea White Sea Greenland Kandalaksha ENVELOPE(32.417,32.417,67.133,67.133) Salma ENVELOPE(32.133,32.133,65.817,65.817) Konovalova ENVELOPE(153.300,153.300,59.900,59.900)