Sabatieria Rouville 1903

Sabatieria Rouville 1903 Diagnosis (from Jensen (1979 a)) Cuticle (usually) punctated, lateral differentiation of larger regular or irregular punctations often present; head sensillae in three distinct crowns, with third crown of setae longer than those of second crown; anterior buccal cavity cup-sh...

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Main Author: Leduc, Daniel
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6151445
https://zenodo.org/record/6151445
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6151445
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
Comesomatidae
Sabatieria
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Nematoda
Adenophorea
Desmodorida
Comesomatidae
Sabatieria
Leduc, Daniel
Sabatieria Rouville 1903
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Nematoda
Adenophorea
Desmodorida
Comesomatidae
Sabatieria
description Sabatieria Rouville 1903 Diagnosis (from Jensen (1979 a)) Cuticle (usually) punctated, lateral differentiation of larger regular or irregular punctations often present; head sensillae in three distinct crowns, with third crown of setae longer than those of second crown; anterior buccal cavity cup-shaped, posterior buccal cavity narrow, not cuticularised; spicules usually short and arcuate; gubernaculum with dorso-caudal or caudal apophyses. Type species. Sabatieria cettensis Rouville 1903 Remarks. Sabatieria is a relatively large genus with over 50 species currently considered valid (Fadeeva &Belogurov 1984; Tchesunov 2000; Botelho et al . 2009). In his review of the genus, Platt (1985) divided Sabatieria into five groups, viz., the praedatrix , pulchra , celtica , ornata , and armata groups. The eight species described herein belong to the praedatrix, pulchra, and celtica groups. Species of the praedatrix group are characterised by simple tubular or pore-like pre-cloacal supplements and straight gubernacular apophyses, whilst species of the pulchra group are characterised by pre-cloacal supplements usually conspicuous and relatively few (5–9) in number, with anterior-most supplements situated more closely together than posterior supplements, characteristic gubernaculum median pieces, short paired cervical setae, and often relatively small size. Species of the celtica group are characterised by curved gubernacular apophyses, conspicuous supplements, fovea amphidialis (usually) with three turns, and relatively large and stout body. The celtica and ornata groups are very similar but species of the ornata group can be differentiated by the presence of a posterior group of more closely situated precloacal supplements. The armata group is characterised by long cephalic (> 1.7 head diameter) and subcephalic setae, and slender bodies ( a ratio usually greater than 65). Some controversy remains surrounding the status of S. mortenseni Ditlevsen, 1921 ( pulchra group). This species, originally described from Auckland Islands specimens, is characterised by lack of cuticle punctations. This unusual feature was confirmed following observation with an immersion lens of sixteen males (Ditlevsen 1921). Pastor de Ward (1984), however, described S. mortenseni specimens from Argentina with conspicuous cuticle punctations and Vincx (1986) later synonymised S. mortenseni with S. punctata. More recently, Chen & Vincx (2000) described S. mortenseni specimens from Chile lacking cuticle punctations and argued that the specimens described by Pastor de Ward (1984) do not belong to S. mortenseni due to the presence of cuticle punctations in the Argentinian specimens. Sabatieria annulata Leduc and Gwyther 2008, which lacks cuticle punctations, was recently described from southern New Zealand and is virtually identical to the original description by Ditlevsen (1921), except for shorter body length (1175–1512 vs 1900 m) and lower c values (11–12 vs 16). Sabatieria annulata is therefore considered to be synonymous with S. mortenseni , whilst S. mortenseni is considered distinct from S. punctata due to the presence of cuticle punctations in the latter. Sabatieria mortenseni was also recorded from the REGAB cold seep in the Gulf of Guinea by Van Gaever et al . (2009), but no morphological data ( e.g ., cuticle ornamentation) were provided. Sabatieria kolaensis Ssaweljev, 1912 was considered invalid by Platt (1985), but was re-established by Tchesunov (2000) based on a detailed description of specimens from the White Sea. Sabatieria wieseri Wieser, 1954 was first established as species inquirendae by Platt (1985), and was not included in his list of valid species. While Platt’s review of Sabatieria was in press, Pastor de Ward (1984) described specimens which she ascribed to S. heterura Cobb, 1898, which Platt (1985) considered invalid due to the poor original description. In a note added in proof, Platt (1985) ascribed the specimens described by Pastor de Ward (1984) to S. wieseri (Wieser, 1954), which led him to consider the species as valid. Sabatieria wieseri and S. kolaensis were therefore included below in the list of valid species. : Published as part of Leduc, Daniel, 2013, Seven new species and one new species record of Sabatieria (Nematoda: Comesomatidae) from the continental slope of New Zealand, pp. 1-35 in Zootaxa 3693 (1) on page 3, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3693.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/284269
format Text
author Leduc, Daniel
author_facet Leduc, Daniel
author_sort Leduc, Daniel
title Sabatieria Rouville 1903
title_short Sabatieria Rouville 1903
title_full Sabatieria Rouville 1903
title_fullStr Sabatieria Rouville 1903
title_full_unstemmed Sabatieria Rouville 1903
title_sort sabatieria rouville 1903
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2013
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6151445
https://zenodo.org/record/6151445
geographic Argentina
New Zealand
White Sea
geographic_facet Argentina
New Zealand
White Sea
genre Auckland Islands
White Sea
genre_facet Auckland Islands
White Sea
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6151445 2023-05-15T15:33:43+02:00 Sabatieria Rouville 1903 Leduc, Daniel 2013 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6151445 https://zenodo.org/record/6151445 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/284269 http://publication.plazi.org/id/E221FFA2FF9CF472FF837B4C896EFF81 http://zoobank.org/33A5FD00-282F-42D9-8A78-3FA9F33F86FB https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3693.1.1 http://zenodo.org/record/284269 http://publication.plazi.org/id/E221FFA2FF9CF472FF837B4C896EFF81 http://zoobank.org/33A5FD00-282F-42D9-8A78-3FA9F33F86FB https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6151446 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 Nematoda Adenophorea Desmodorida Comesomatidae Sabatieria article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2013 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6151445 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3693.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6151446 2022-04-01T11:10:15Z Sabatieria Rouville 1903 Diagnosis (from Jensen (1979 a)) Cuticle (usually) punctated, lateral differentiation of larger regular or irregular punctations often present; head sensillae in three distinct crowns, with third crown of setae longer than those of second crown; anterior buccal cavity cup-shaped, posterior buccal cavity narrow, not cuticularised; spicules usually short and arcuate; gubernaculum with dorso-caudal or caudal apophyses. Type species. Sabatieria cettensis Rouville 1903 Remarks. Sabatieria is a relatively large genus with over 50 species currently considered valid (Fadeeva &Belogurov 1984; Tchesunov 2000; Botelho et al . 2009). In his review of the genus, Platt (1985) divided Sabatieria into five groups, viz., the praedatrix , pulchra , celtica , ornata , and armata groups. The eight species described herein belong to the praedatrix, pulchra, and celtica groups. Species of the praedatrix group are characterised by simple tubular or pore-like pre-cloacal supplements and straight gubernacular apophyses, whilst species of the pulchra group are characterised by pre-cloacal supplements usually conspicuous and relatively few (5–9) in number, with anterior-most supplements situated more closely together than posterior supplements, characteristic gubernaculum median pieces, short paired cervical setae, and often relatively small size. Species of the celtica group are characterised by curved gubernacular apophyses, conspicuous supplements, fovea amphidialis (usually) with three turns, and relatively large and stout body. The celtica and ornata groups are very similar but species of the ornata group can be differentiated by the presence of a posterior group of more closely situated precloacal supplements. The armata group is characterised by long cephalic (> 1.7 head diameter) and subcephalic setae, and slender bodies ( a ratio usually greater than 65). Some controversy remains surrounding the status of S. mortenseni Ditlevsen, 1921 ( pulchra group). This species, originally described from Auckland Islands specimens, is characterised by lack of cuticle punctations. This unusual feature was confirmed following observation with an immersion lens of sixteen males (Ditlevsen 1921). Pastor de Ward (1984), however, described S. mortenseni specimens from Argentina with conspicuous cuticle punctations and Vincx (1986) later synonymised S. mortenseni with S. punctata. More recently, Chen & Vincx (2000) described S. mortenseni specimens from Chile lacking cuticle punctations and argued that the specimens described by Pastor de Ward (1984) do not belong to S. mortenseni due to the presence of cuticle punctations in the Argentinian specimens. Sabatieria annulata Leduc and Gwyther 2008, which lacks cuticle punctations, was recently described from southern New Zealand and is virtually identical to the original description by Ditlevsen (1921), except for shorter body length (1175–1512 vs 1900 m) and lower c values (11–12 vs 16). Sabatieria annulata is therefore considered to be synonymous with S. mortenseni , whilst S. mortenseni is considered distinct from S. punctata due to the presence of cuticle punctations in the latter. Sabatieria mortenseni was also recorded from the REGAB cold seep in the Gulf of Guinea by Van Gaever et al . (2009), but no morphological data ( e.g ., cuticle ornamentation) were provided. Sabatieria kolaensis Ssaweljev, 1912 was considered invalid by Platt (1985), but was re-established by Tchesunov (2000) based on a detailed description of specimens from the White Sea. Sabatieria wieseri Wieser, 1954 was first established as species inquirendae by Platt (1985), and was not included in his list of valid species. While Platt’s review of Sabatieria was in press, Pastor de Ward (1984) described specimens which she ascribed to S. heterura Cobb, 1898, which Platt (1985) considered invalid due to the poor original description. In a note added in proof, Platt (1985) ascribed the specimens described by Pastor de Ward (1984) to S. wieseri (Wieser, 1954), which led him to consider the species as valid. Sabatieria wieseri and S. kolaensis were therefore included below in the list of valid species. : Published as part of Leduc, Daniel, 2013, Seven new species and one new species record of Sabatieria (Nematoda: Comesomatidae) from the continental slope of New Zealand, pp. 1-35 in Zootaxa 3693 (1) on page 3, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3693.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/284269 Text Auckland Islands White Sea DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Argentina New Zealand White Sea