Bradophila Levinsen 1878

Genus Bradophila Levinsen, 1878 Diagnosis . Adult female body highly transformed consisting of ectosoma connected to endosoma by broad stalk passing through host’s body wall. Endosoma embedded in host, elongate, filiform. Ectosoma globular to slightly dorsoventrally flattened; lacking any external t...

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Main Authors: Boxshall, Geoff A., O'Reilly, Myles, Sikorski, Andrey, Summerfield, Rebecca
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5927010
https://zenodo.org/record/5927010
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5927010
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
Arthropoda
Hexanauplia
Cyclopoida
Bradophilidae
Bradophila
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Hexanauplia
Cyclopoida
Bradophilidae
Bradophila
Boxshall, Geoff A.
O'Reilly, Myles
Sikorski, Andrey
Summerfield, Rebecca
Bradophila Levinsen 1878
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Hexanauplia
Cyclopoida
Bradophilidae
Bradophila
description Genus Bradophila Levinsen, 1878 Diagnosis . Adult female body highly transformed consisting of ectosoma connected to endosoma by broad stalk passing through host’s body wall. Endosoma embedded in host, elongate, filiform. Ectosoma globular to slightly dorsoventrally flattened; lacking any external trace of segmentation. Genital apertures paired, carried on sclerotized areas of cuticle located posterolaterally on margin of ectosoma; median copulatory pore located between genital apertures on ventral surface of ectosoma. Lacking vestiges of appendages and caudal rami; without anus. Egg sacs paired, large, multiseriate. Adult male consisting of broad, subquadrate cephalothorax and slender postcephalic trunk. Caudal rami modified as pair of hooks. Antennule indistinctly 3-segmented; third segment offset posterolaterally; first segment with blunt, modified setal element; second segment with 2 setal elements; distal segment with 2 apical elements. Antenna uniramous and subchelate, comprising elongate proximal segment, plus distal endopodal segment bearing terminal claw plus accessory claw. Mandible absent. Maxillule small, lobate, bearing 2 apical setae. Maxilla lobate, ornamented with denticles distally. Maxilliped subchelate; proximal segment robust, ornamented with 2 spinulose processes on myxal surface; distal subchela comprising free endopodal segment plus curved claw. Type species : Bradophila pygmaea Levinsen, 1878, by monotypy. Remarks. Since its original description 140 years ago, the type species, B. pygmaea , has been reported from only a single host species, Brada villosa (Rathke, 1843), a member of the polychaete family Flabelligeridae de Saint Joseph, 1894. The original description was based on museum material with no locality data (Levinsen 1878) but its known distribution is restricted to high latitude waters of the North Atlantic including both Norwegian and Russian coastal waters and into the White Sea (Marchenkov 1999; Huys 2016). Marchenkov (2002) gave supplementary morphological data on the female of B. pygmaea : its globular, slightly flattened ectosoma ranged from 0.5 to 0.7 mm in diameter; the egg sacs were up to 1.2 mm long and varied in width from 0.4 to 0.7 mm; in live specimens the colour of the ectosoma was translucent or milky white. Marchenkov (2002) stressed that the posterolaterally-located, paired genital apertures of the female were relatively inconspicuous. He also described the endosoma as elongate with its entire surface covered with small tubercles and this was confirmed by Huys (2016). However, as noted by Huys (2016), the size of the ectosoma of the female given by Levinsen (1878) was 330–500 µm, which is considerably smaller than that reported by Marchenkov (2002). The male of B. pygmaea was attached in the vicinity of the stalk of the female by means of its modified caudal rami, antennae and maxillipeds (Marchenkov 2002). Marchenkov gave the male body length as 0.35 to 0.45 mm, with a maximum width at the cephalosome of 0.15 to 0.20 mm. Huys (2016) examined material of B. pygmaea and described the male as 530 µm in length with a maximum width of 93 µm. The structure and setation of the male limbs were described by Marchenkov (2002), and again more recently by Huys (2016) who corrected several misinterpretations made by Marchenkov (2002). : Published as part of Boxshall, Geoff A., O'Reilly, Myles, Sikorski, Andrey & Summerfield, Rebecca, 2019, Mesoparasitic copepods (Copepoda: Cyclopoida) associated with polychaete worms in European seas, pp. 1-69 in Zootaxa 4579 (1) on page 6, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4579.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/2637477 : {"references": ["Levinsen, G. M. R. (1878) Om nogle parasitiske Krebsdyr, der snylte hos Annelider. Fidenskalbelige Meddelelser fra dansk Naturhistorisk Forening I KJObenhavn, 1877 - 78, 351 - 380, pl. 6.", "Marchenkov, A. V. (1999) Symbiotic and parasitic Crustacea off benthic marine invertebrates from the Arctic Seas of Russia. Unpublished PhD thesis, Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Saint Petersburg, 193 pp.", "Huys, R. (2016) Enigmas from the past: M'Intosh's (1885) annelidicolous copepods from the voyage of H. M. S. Challenger. Zootaxa, 4174 (1), 355 - 385. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4174.1.22", "Marchenkov, A. V. (2002) Bradophilidae fam. nov. - the new family of mesoparasitic copepod collected from the polychaete Brada villosa from the White Sea. Parazitologiya, 36 (6), 514 - 516."]}
format Text
author Boxshall, Geoff A.
O'Reilly, Myles
Sikorski, Andrey
Summerfield, Rebecca
author_facet Boxshall, Geoff A.
O'Reilly, Myles
Sikorski, Andrey
Summerfield, Rebecca
author_sort Boxshall, Geoff A.
title Bradophila Levinsen 1878
title_short Bradophila Levinsen 1878
title_full Bradophila Levinsen 1878
title_fullStr Bradophila Levinsen 1878
title_full_unstemmed Bradophila Levinsen 1878
title_sort bradophila levinsen 1878
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2019
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5927010
https://zenodo.org/record/5927010
geographic Arctic
White Sea
geographic_facet Arctic
White Sea
genre Arctic
North Atlantic
White Sea
Copepods
genre_facet Arctic
North Atlantic
White Sea
Copepods
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5927010 2023-05-15T15:20:14+02:00 Bradophila Levinsen 1878 Boxshall, Geoff A. O'Reilly, Myles Sikorski, Andrey Summerfield, Rebecca 2019 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5927010 https://zenodo.org/record/5927010 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/2637477 http://publication.plazi.org/id/6B4B7655FFEBD61CCB60BB21046CF307 http://zoobank.org/A4015309-D9B3-4BB7-ABCB-B88A1F8CE5FC https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4579.1.1 http://zenodo.org/record/2637477 http://publication.plazi.org/id/6B4B7655FFEBD61CCB60BB21046CF307 http://zoobank.org/A4015309-D9B3-4BB7-ABCB-B88A1F8CE5FC https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5927009 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 Arthropoda Hexanauplia Cyclopoida Bradophilidae Bradophila article-journal ScholarlyArticle Text Taxonomic treatment 2019 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5927010 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4579.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5927009 2022-03-10T16:26:40Z Genus Bradophila Levinsen, 1878 Diagnosis . Adult female body highly transformed consisting of ectosoma connected to endosoma by broad stalk passing through host’s body wall. Endosoma embedded in host, elongate, filiform. Ectosoma globular to slightly dorsoventrally flattened; lacking any external trace of segmentation. Genital apertures paired, carried on sclerotized areas of cuticle located posterolaterally on margin of ectosoma; median copulatory pore located between genital apertures on ventral surface of ectosoma. Lacking vestiges of appendages and caudal rami; without anus. Egg sacs paired, large, multiseriate. Adult male consisting of broad, subquadrate cephalothorax and slender postcephalic trunk. Caudal rami modified as pair of hooks. Antennule indistinctly 3-segmented; third segment offset posterolaterally; first segment with blunt, modified setal element; second segment with 2 setal elements; distal segment with 2 apical elements. Antenna uniramous and subchelate, comprising elongate proximal segment, plus distal endopodal segment bearing terminal claw plus accessory claw. Mandible absent. Maxillule small, lobate, bearing 2 apical setae. Maxilla lobate, ornamented with denticles distally. Maxilliped subchelate; proximal segment robust, ornamented with 2 spinulose processes on myxal surface; distal subchela comprising free endopodal segment plus curved claw. Type species : Bradophila pygmaea Levinsen, 1878, by monotypy. Remarks. Since its original description 140 years ago, the type species, B. pygmaea , has been reported from only a single host species, Brada villosa (Rathke, 1843), a member of the polychaete family Flabelligeridae de Saint Joseph, 1894. The original description was based on museum material with no locality data (Levinsen 1878) but its known distribution is restricted to high latitude waters of the North Atlantic including both Norwegian and Russian coastal waters and into the White Sea (Marchenkov 1999; Huys 2016). Marchenkov (2002) gave supplementary morphological data on the female of B. pygmaea : its globular, slightly flattened ectosoma ranged from 0.5 to 0.7 mm in diameter; the egg sacs were up to 1.2 mm long and varied in width from 0.4 to 0.7 mm; in live specimens the colour of the ectosoma was translucent or milky white. Marchenkov (2002) stressed that the posterolaterally-located, paired genital apertures of the female were relatively inconspicuous. He also described the endosoma as elongate with its entire surface covered with small tubercles and this was confirmed by Huys (2016). However, as noted by Huys (2016), the size of the ectosoma of the female given by Levinsen (1878) was 330–500 µm, which is considerably smaller than that reported by Marchenkov (2002). The male of B. pygmaea was attached in the vicinity of the stalk of the female by means of its modified caudal rami, antennae and maxillipeds (Marchenkov 2002). Marchenkov gave the male body length as 0.35 to 0.45 mm, with a maximum width at the cephalosome of 0.15 to 0.20 mm. Huys (2016) examined material of B. pygmaea and described the male as 530 µm in length with a maximum width of 93 µm. The structure and setation of the male limbs were described by Marchenkov (2002), and again more recently by Huys (2016) who corrected several misinterpretations made by Marchenkov (2002). : Published as part of Boxshall, Geoff A., O'Reilly, Myles, Sikorski, Andrey & Summerfield, Rebecca, 2019, Mesoparasitic copepods (Copepoda: Cyclopoida) associated with polychaete worms in European seas, pp. 1-69 in Zootaxa 4579 (1) on page 6, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4579.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/2637477 : {"references": ["Levinsen, G. M. R. (1878) Om nogle parasitiske Krebsdyr, der snylte hos Annelider. Fidenskalbelige Meddelelser fra dansk Naturhistorisk Forening I KJObenhavn, 1877 - 78, 351 - 380, pl. 6.", "Marchenkov, A. V. (1999) Symbiotic and parasitic Crustacea off benthic marine invertebrates from the Arctic Seas of Russia. Unpublished PhD thesis, Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Saint Petersburg, 193 pp.", "Huys, R. (2016) Enigmas from the past: M'Intosh's (1885) annelidicolous copepods from the voyage of H. M. S. Challenger. Zootaxa, 4174 (1), 355 - 385. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4174.1.22", "Marchenkov, A. V. (2002) Bradophilidae fam. nov. - the new family of mesoparasitic copepod collected from the polychaete Brada villosa from the White Sea. Parazitologiya, 36 (6), 514 - 516."]} Text Arctic North Atlantic White Sea Copepods DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic White Sea