Marenzelleria neglecta Sikorski & Bick 2004

Marenzelleria neglecta Sikorski & Bick, 2004 (Figs 1 & 2) Marenzelleria neglecta Sikorski & Bick, 2004: 264–268, figs 2B, 3C, 5A–I, 6. Syomin et al. 2017: 977−979, figs 2−5. Blank & Bastrop 2009: 316-318, fig. 1 (phylogeny). Marenzelleria viridis : Maciolek 1984 ( Part .): 51–55, fig...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Radashevsky, Vasily I., Pankova, Victoria V., Malyar, Vasily V., Cerca, José, Struck, Torsten H.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2021
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5776765
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/4633878EFFA0B0494B83FD04639262B3
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Summary:Marenzelleria neglecta Sikorski & Bick, 2004 (Figs 1 & 2) Marenzelleria neglecta Sikorski & Bick, 2004: 264–268, figs 2B, 3C, 5A–I, 6. Syomin et al. 2017: 977−979, figs 2−5. Blank & Bastrop 2009: 316-318, fig. 1 (phylogeny). Marenzelleria viridis : Maciolek 1984 ( Part .): 51–55, fig. 2. Bick & Burckhardt 1989: 239−241, fig. 1, pls VII−VIII. Bastrop et al. 1995: Baltic Sea population. Bochert & Bick 1995: 764−772, figs 2−12 (larval morphology). Bochert 1996a: 58−68, figs 1−31 (oogenesis); 1996b: 192−198, figs 1−27 (spermatogenesis). Röhner et al. 1996a: Baltic Sea population. Ysebaert et al. 1996: 178−179. Sikorski & Buzhinskaya 1998: 1118−1119, fig. 4. Fide Sikorski & Bick 2004 ( Part .): 264. Not Verrill 1873. ? Marenzelleria viridis : Cohen & Carlton 1995: A4-1. Thompson et al . 2000: 15; 2013: 2290. Cohen et al. 2005: 11. Ranasinghe et al . 2012: 646. Marenzelleria cf. viridis : Bick & Zettler 1997: 141−142, figs 3, 4. Fide Sikorski & Bick 2004: 264. Marenzelleria type II: Röhner et al. 1996b: 281−283. Bastrop et al. 1997: 125−127; 1998: 98−102. Fide Sikorski & Bick 2004: 264. Remarks. Bastrop et al. ’s (1997, 1998) Marenzelleria Type II was found on the both sides of the North Atlantic and not formally named until Sikorski & Bick (2004) described it as a new species, M. neglecta . As noted above, Darss- Zingst-Boddenchain, Baltic Sea, Germany, was designated as the type locality of the species, although M. neglecta was recognized as alien in Europe, being introduced with ballast water from the Atlantic coast of USA (Bastrop et al. 1997, 1998). Based on genetic data (allozyme electrophoresis and/or 16S sequences), Bastrop et al. (1997, 1998) documented the presence of M. neglecta (as M. Type II) in the United States (Durham, New Hampshire; Chesapeake Bay, Maryland; Currituck Sound, North Carolina; Ogeechee River estuary, Georgia) and in Canada (Tuktoyaktuk Harbor, Northwest Territories) (Fig. 2). Notably, specimens of the only sample from New Hampshire ...