Leptoplana tremellaris (Muller, 1774) Orsted 1843

Leptoplana tremellaris (Müller, 1774) Örsted 1843 (Fig. 2 b, Fig. 3 a–i) We report this species for the first time from the Mediterranean sea, so we give its description below. Habitat. 5 specimens were found under stones. Locality. Errimel beach (36° 52' 25.87"N; 10° 39' 57.06"...

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Main Authors: Gammoudi, Mehrez, Garbouj, Myriam, Egger, Bernhard, Tekaya, Saïda
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6010627
https://zenodo.org/record/6010627
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6010627
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
Platyhelminthes
Rhabditophora
Polycladida
Leptoplanidae
Leptoplana
Leptoplana tremellaris
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Platyhelminthes
Rhabditophora
Polycladida
Leptoplanidae
Leptoplana
Leptoplana tremellaris
Gammoudi, Mehrez
Garbouj, Myriam
Egger, Bernhard
Tekaya, Saïda
Leptoplana tremellaris (Muller, 1774) Orsted 1843
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Platyhelminthes
Rhabditophora
Polycladida
Leptoplanidae
Leptoplana
Leptoplana tremellaris
description Leptoplana tremellaris (Müller, 1774) Örsted 1843 (Fig. 2 b, Fig. 3 a–i) We report this species for the first time from the Mediterranean sea, so we give its description below. Habitat. 5 specimens were found under stones. Locality. Errimel beach (36° 52' 25.87"N; 10° 39' 57.06" E). Other localities in the world. The North Sea (Müller 1773; Bock 1913); Scotland (Fleming 1823); Belgium (van Beneden 1860); Saint Malo, France (Keferstein 1868); the Irish Sea (Gamble 1893a); the Isles of Scilly (Faubel & Warwick 2005); Atlantic Spanish coasts (Marquina et al. 2014b). Description. The body is oval in shape. It measures 15 mm in length by 4 mm in width, the anterior end being broader than the posterior. Dorsal surface is beige (Fig. 2 b). Digestive ramifications could be easily seen. Tentacles are lacking. Two clusters of cerebral and tentacular eyes are present (Fig. 3 a,b). Ventral surface shows a ruffled pharynx located at the second third of body, two vasa deferentia filled with sperm and two uteri filled with eggs (Fig. 3 b,e). A genital pit is located between male and female gonopore and closer to the latter (Fig. 3 c). The epidermis is provided with several rhabdites (Fig. 3 d). The pharynx is provided with 12 pairs of lateral folds. The mouth is situated at the hind end of the third fifth of the body and in the third fourth of the pharyngeal cavity. Immediately behind the posterior end of the pharyngeal chamber lies the male copulatory apparatus. The male genital pore opens to a narrow extended male atrium and is provided with a diverticulum oriented dorsally (Fig. 3 f). The ejaculatory duct leads to a narrow tubular prostatic vesicle. The latter vesicle is of interpolated type and was observed to contain some eosinophilous secretions (Fig. 3 f,g,h). Its internal glandular lining is smooth and is connected to a seminal vesicle, usually filled with sperm (Fig. 3 g,h). Before entering the seminal vesicle, the tubular prostatic vesicle gives birth to a diverticle lying below the seminal vesicle (Fig. 3 g,h). A muscular tissue is separating the two organs. The female genital pore, situated behind the male one, leads to a short external vagina directed dorsally followed by a large median vagina oriented fronto-dorsally (Fig. 3 i). Before reaching the dorsal body wall, the vagina curves posteriorly to form an internal horizontal portion corresponding to the internal vagina. Anteriorly, this part does not exceed the level of projection of the female genital pore. Remark. The genus Leptoplana Ehrenberg was thoroughly revised by Gammoudi et al. (2012b). The authors deduced and supported the idea that the unique representative of the genus Leptoplana in Mediterranean area is Leptoplana mediterranea (Bock 1913). This was confirmed by Marquina et al. (2014a). Leptoplana mediterranea shows clear similarity with Leptoplana tremellaris . Externally both species are almost impossible to separate (Gammoudi et al. 2012b). The study of sections of specimens from Tunisia and sections of Leptoplana tremellaris from Scilly Islands (English channel) made by Faubel (1983) and also sections of specimens of L. mediterranea from Tunisia, allowed us to find some features distinguishing L. mediterranea from L. tremellaris . In L. mediterranea we found 1) The presence of a genital pit nearer to the male pore and not to the female one. 2) The seminal vesicle is of oval shape. 3) The ventral diverticulum of the prostatic vesicle presents a common dividing wall with the seminal vesicle. 4) The hatched juvenile is provided with twelve eyes. In contrast, in L. tremellaris of Faubel (1983) and new material from Tunisia we found: 1) The genital pit is closer to the female pore than to the male one (Fig. 3 c). 2) The seminal vesicle is pear shaped (Fig. 3 g, h). 3) Muscle and mesenchyme are surrounding the prostatic vesicle (Fig. 3 g, h). 4) The hatched juvenile is provided with two pairs of eyes (Fig. 2 n,o). Based in these data, we considered the similarity of our new specimens with those of Faubel and also the difference between our specimens and specimens of Leptoplana mediterranea to be substantial enough to determine Leptoplana tremellaris from Tunisian waters and thus to report this species for the first time from the Mediterranean sea, since L. tremellaris was considered to be missing in the Mediterranean by Gammoudi et al. (2012b). : Published as part of Gammoudi, Mehrez, Garbouj, Myriam, Egger, Bernhard & Tekaya, Saïda, 2017, Updated inventory and distribution of free-living flatworms from Tunisian waters, pp. 120-138 in Zootaxa 4263 (1) on pages 124-125, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4263.1.5, http://zenodo.org/record/572567 : {"references": ["Bock, S. (1913) Studien ueber Polycladen. Zoologiska bidrag fran Uppsala, 2, 29 - 344.", "Fleming, J. (1823) Gleanings of Natural History, gathered on the coast of Scotland during a voyage in 1821. Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, 8, 297 - 303.", "Van Beneden, E. (1860) Recherches sur la Faune Littorale de Belgique. Turbellaries. Memoires de l'Academie Royale des Sciences, Lettres et Beaux Arts de Belgique, 32, 3 - 63.", "Keferstein, W. (1868) Beitraege zur Anatomie und Entwicklungsgeschichte einiger Seeplanarien von St. Malo. Abhandlungen der Koniglichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Gottingen, 14, 1 - 38.", "Gamble, F. W. (1893 a) The Turbellaria of Plymouth Sound and the neighbourhood. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 3, 30 - 47.", "Faubel, A. & Warwick, R. M. (2005) The marine flora and fauna of the Isles of Scilly: free-living Plathelminthes (' Turbellaria'). Journal of Natural History, 39, 1 - 45.", "Marquina, D., Fernandez-Alvarez, F. A. & Norena, C. (2014 b) Five new records and one new species of Polycladida (Platyhelminthes) for the Cantabrian coast (North Atlantic) of the Iberian Peninsula. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 95, 311 - 322.", "Gammoudi, M., Egger, B., Tekaya, S. & Norena, C. (2012 b) The genus Leptoplana (Leptoplanidae, Polycladida) in the Mediterranean basin. Redescription of the species Leptoplana mediterranea (Bock, 1913) comb. nov. Zootaxa, 3178, 45 - 56.", "Marquina, D., Rodriguez, O. J., Fernandez-Despiau, E. & Norena, C. (2014 a) State of knowledge of the Acotylea (Polycladida, Platyhelminthes) from the Mediterranean coasts of Spain: new records and new species. Zootaxa, 3780 (1), 108 - 134. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 3780.1.4", "Faubel, A. (1983) The Polycladida, Turbellaria. Proposal and establishment of a new system. Part I. The Acotylea. Mitteilungen des hamburgischen zoologischen Museums und Instituts, 80, 17 - 121."]}
format Text
author Gammoudi, Mehrez
Garbouj, Myriam
Egger, Bernhard
Tekaya, Saïda
author_facet Gammoudi, Mehrez
Garbouj, Myriam
Egger, Bernhard
Tekaya, Saïda
author_sort Gammoudi, Mehrez
title Leptoplana tremellaris (Muller, 1774) Orsted 1843
title_short Leptoplana tremellaris (Muller, 1774) Orsted 1843
title_full Leptoplana tremellaris (Muller, 1774) Orsted 1843
title_fullStr Leptoplana tremellaris (Muller, 1774) Orsted 1843
title_full_unstemmed Leptoplana tremellaris (Muller, 1774) Orsted 1843
title_sort leptoplana tremellaris (muller, 1774) orsted 1843
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6010627
https://zenodo.org/record/6010627
long_lat ENVELOPE(-64.483,-64.483,-65.633,-65.633)
ENVELOPE(-62.233,-62.233,-63.250,-63.250)
ENVELOPE(-56.720,-56.720,-63.529,-63.529)
ENVELOPE(7.500,7.500,62.689,62.689)
ENVELOPE(25.177,25.177,67.587,67.587)
ENVELOPE(-62.700,-62.700,-64.767,-64.767)
ENVELOPE(-62.700,-62.700,-64.767,-64.767)
ENVELOPE(-19.000,-19.000,74.617,74.617)
geographic Alvarez
Fernandez
Rodriguez
Malo
Vasa
Beneden
Van Beneden
Keferstein
geographic_facet Alvarez
Fernandez
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Malo
Vasa
Beneden
Van Beneden
Keferstein
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6010627 2023-05-15T17:37:37+02:00 Leptoplana tremellaris (Muller, 1774) Orsted 1843 Gammoudi, Mehrez Garbouj, Myriam Egger, Bernhard Tekaya, Saïda 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6010627 https://zenodo.org/record/6010627 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/572567 http://publication.plazi.org/id/D6358110FF95DC13FFA1547C125C5C78 http://zoobank.org/CD7C8838-F904-4678-BDF1-A48DF4FC3D9F https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4263.1.5 http://zenodo.org/record/572567 http://publication.plazi.org/id/D6358110FF95DC13FFA1547C125C5C78 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.572569 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.572570 http://zoobank.org/CD7C8838-F904-4678-BDF1-A48DF4FC3D9F https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6010626 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 Platyhelminthes Rhabditophora Polycladida Leptoplanidae Leptoplana Leptoplana tremellaris article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6010627 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4263.1.5 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.572569 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.572570 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6010626 2022-04-01T09:13:26Z Leptoplana tremellaris (Müller, 1774) Örsted 1843 (Fig. 2 b, Fig. 3 a–i) We report this species for the first time from the Mediterranean sea, so we give its description below. Habitat. 5 specimens were found under stones. Locality. Errimel beach (36° 52' 25.87"N; 10° 39' 57.06" E). Other localities in the world. The North Sea (Müller 1773; Bock 1913); Scotland (Fleming 1823); Belgium (van Beneden 1860); Saint Malo, France (Keferstein 1868); the Irish Sea (Gamble 1893a); the Isles of Scilly (Faubel & Warwick 2005); Atlantic Spanish coasts (Marquina et al. 2014b). Description. The body is oval in shape. It measures 15 mm in length by 4 mm in width, the anterior end being broader than the posterior. Dorsal surface is beige (Fig. 2 b). Digestive ramifications could be easily seen. Tentacles are lacking. Two clusters of cerebral and tentacular eyes are present (Fig. 3 a,b). Ventral surface shows a ruffled pharynx located at the second third of body, two vasa deferentia filled with sperm and two uteri filled with eggs (Fig. 3 b,e). A genital pit is located between male and female gonopore and closer to the latter (Fig. 3 c). The epidermis is provided with several rhabdites (Fig. 3 d). The pharynx is provided with 12 pairs of lateral folds. The mouth is situated at the hind end of the third fifth of the body and in the third fourth of the pharyngeal cavity. Immediately behind the posterior end of the pharyngeal chamber lies the male copulatory apparatus. The male genital pore opens to a narrow extended male atrium and is provided with a diverticulum oriented dorsally (Fig. 3 f). The ejaculatory duct leads to a narrow tubular prostatic vesicle. The latter vesicle is of interpolated type and was observed to contain some eosinophilous secretions (Fig. 3 f,g,h). Its internal glandular lining is smooth and is connected to a seminal vesicle, usually filled with sperm (Fig. 3 g,h). Before entering the seminal vesicle, the tubular prostatic vesicle gives birth to a diverticle lying below the seminal vesicle (Fig. 3 g,h). A muscular tissue is separating the two organs. The female genital pore, situated behind the male one, leads to a short external vagina directed dorsally followed by a large median vagina oriented fronto-dorsally (Fig. 3 i). Before reaching the dorsal body wall, the vagina curves posteriorly to form an internal horizontal portion corresponding to the internal vagina. Anteriorly, this part does not exceed the level of projection of the female genital pore. Remark. The genus Leptoplana Ehrenberg was thoroughly revised by Gammoudi et al. (2012b). The authors deduced and supported the idea that the unique representative of the genus Leptoplana in Mediterranean area is Leptoplana mediterranea (Bock 1913). This was confirmed by Marquina et al. (2014a). Leptoplana mediterranea shows clear similarity with Leptoplana tremellaris . Externally both species are almost impossible to separate (Gammoudi et al. 2012b). The study of sections of specimens from Tunisia and sections of Leptoplana tremellaris from Scilly Islands (English channel) made by Faubel (1983) and also sections of specimens of L. mediterranea from Tunisia, allowed us to find some features distinguishing L. mediterranea from L. tremellaris . In L. mediterranea we found 1) The presence of a genital pit nearer to the male pore and not to the female one. 2) The seminal vesicle is of oval shape. 3) The ventral diverticulum of the prostatic vesicle presents a common dividing wall with the seminal vesicle. 4) The hatched juvenile is provided with twelve eyes. In contrast, in L. tremellaris of Faubel (1983) and new material from Tunisia we found: 1) The genital pit is closer to the female pore than to the male one (Fig. 3 c). 2) The seminal vesicle is pear shaped (Fig. 3 g, h). 3) Muscle and mesenchyme are surrounding the prostatic vesicle (Fig. 3 g, h). 4) The hatched juvenile is provided with two pairs of eyes (Fig. 2 n,o). Based in these data, we considered the similarity of our new specimens with those of Faubel and also the difference between our specimens and specimens of Leptoplana mediterranea to be substantial enough to determine Leptoplana tremellaris from Tunisian waters and thus to report this species for the first time from the Mediterranean sea, since L. tremellaris was considered to be missing in the Mediterranean by Gammoudi et al. (2012b). : Published as part of Gammoudi, Mehrez, Garbouj, Myriam, Egger, Bernhard & Tekaya, Saïda, 2017, Updated inventory and distribution of free-living flatworms from Tunisian waters, pp. 120-138 in Zootaxa 4263 (1) on pages 124-125, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4263.1.5, http://zenodo.org/record/572567 : {"references": ["Bock, S. (1913) Studien ueber Polycladen. Zoologiska bidrag fran Uppsala, 2, 29 - 344.", "Fleming, J. (1823) Gleanings of Natural History, gathered on the coast of Scotland during a voyage in 1821. Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, 8, 297 - 303.", "Van Beneden, E. (1860) Recherches sur la Faune Littorale de Belgique. Turbellaries. Memoires de l'Academie Royale des Sciences, Lettres et Beaux Arts de Belgique, 32, 3 - 63.", "Keferstein, W. (1868) Beitraege zur Anatomie und Entwicklungsgeschichte einiger Seeplanarien von St. Malo. Abhandlungen der Koniglichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Gottingen, 14, 1 - 38.", "Gamble, F. W. (1893 a) The Turbellaria of Plymouth Sound and the neighbourhood. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 3, 30 - 47.", "Faubel, A. & Warwick, R. M. (2005) The marine flora and fauna of the Isles of Scilly: free-living Plathelminthes (' Turbellaria'). Journal of Natural History, 39, 1 - 45.", "Marquina, D., Fernandez-Alvarez, F. A. & Norena, C. (2014 b) Five new records and one new species of Polycladida (Platyhelminthes) for the Cantabrian coast (North Atlantic) of the Iberian Peninsula. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 95, 311 - 322.", "Gammoudi, M., Egger, B., Tekaya, S. & Norena, C. (2012 b) The genus Leptoplana (Leptoplanidae, Polycladida) in the Mediterranean basin. Redescription of the species Leptoplana mediterranea (Bock, 1913) comb. nov. Zootaxa, 3178, 45 - 56.", "Marquina, D., Rodriguez, O. J., Fernandez-Despiau, E. & Norena, C. (2014 a) State of knowledge of the Acotylea (Polycladida, Platyhelminthes) from the Mediterranean coasts of Spain: new records and new species. Zootaxa, 3780 (1), 108 - 134. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 3780.1.4", "Faubel, A. (1983) The Polycladida, Turbellaria. Proposal and establishment of a new system. Part I. The Acotylea. Mitteilungen des hamburgischen zoologischen Museums und Instituts, 80, 17 - 121."]} Text North Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Alvarez ENVELOPE(-64.483,-64.483,-65.633,-65.633) Fernandez ENVELOPE(-62.233,-62.233,-63.250,-63.250) Rodriguez ENVELOPE(-56.720,-56.720,-63.529,-63.529) Malo ENVELOPE(7.500,7.500,62.689,62.689) Vasa ENVELOPE(25.177,25.177,67.587,67.587) Beneden ENVELOPE(-62.700,-62.700,-64.767,-64.767) Van Beneden ENVELOPE(-62.700,-62.700,-64.767,-64.767) Keferstein ENVELOPE(-19.000,-19.000,74.617,74.617)