Published April 16, 2018 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Pseudechiniscus facettalis Petersen 1951

Description

Pseudechiniscus facettalis Petersen, 1951

(Figs 36–37)

Terra typica. Greenland.

Material examined. Eleven females, two males, and one juvenile, found together with Echiniscus granulatus, Testechiniscus spitsbergensis, and Hypsibius convergens (Urbanowicz, 1925) (PL.247, 248, 252, and 274; Kościeliska Valley, Ciemniak hillside, Kobylarzowy Coulouir).

Description. Small (females 152–201 µm, males 180–205 µm), light-orange. Black eyes present. Primary clavae long, secondary clavae large (females: 20.6–22.7%, male: 35.1%; Figs 36–37, arrowheads). Cirrus A very short (24.6–32.7 µm, cirrus A/body length ratio 14–20%). All plates weakly sclerotized, covered with fine granulation of suillus type. Cephalic and caudal plates clearly facetted (Figs 36–37, empty arrowheads). Pseudosegmental plate always divided longitudinally. Pedal (leg) plates present. Spine on the leg I absent. Venter with developed sculpture consisting of intracuticular pillars. Claws I–IV 7.7–11.0 µm long (34.0–46.2%), the internal claws with spurs, 1.2 2.1 µm long (4.7–9.3%).

Remarks. Additional Polish record. Dastych (1970) was the first to report this taxon from Poland (as P. suillus facettalis), but in his later monograph he synonymised it with P. suillus (Dastych 1988). Since one of the primary characters separating these two species is the presence of cephalic and caudal plate faceting, the status of P. facettalis as an element of the Polish fauna is restored.

Kristensen (1987) gave two features that allow differentiation of the sexes in the genus Pseudechiniscus: body shape (males are more elongate than females) and enlarged male secondary clavae. There are two additional qualitative traits which can be used to distinguish the sexes in P. facettalis, i.e. males are more flattened than females (compare Figs 36 and 37), and the faceting of the caudal plate in males is not as deep as that observed in females (visible only when specimens are laterally or dorso-laterally oriented). Similar sexual dimorphism was observed in the two populations from Norway and Tunisia used for comparisons (see Table 2).

Notes

Published as part of Gąsiorek, Piotr & Degma, Peter, 2018, Three Echiniscidae species (Tardigrada: Heterotardigrada) new to the Polish fauna, with the description of a new gonochoristic Bryodelphax Thulin, 1928, pp. 77-96 in Zootaxa 4410 (1) on page 91, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4410.1.4, http://zenodo.org/record/1221257

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Additional details

Biodiversity

References

  • Petersen, B. (1951) The tardigrade fauna of Greenland. Meddelelser om GrOnland, KObenhavn, 150 (5), 1 - 94.
  • Urbanowicz, C. (1925) Sur la variabilite de Macrobiotus oberhaeuseri. Bulletin biologique de la France et de la Belgique, Paris, 59, 124 - 142.
  • Dastych, H. (1970) Materialy do znajomosci niesporczakow (Tardigrada) Tatrzanskiego Parku Narodowego. Fragmenta Faunistica, 16 (8), 77 - 87.
  • Dastych, H. (1988) The Tardigrada of Poland. Monografie Fauny Polski, 16, 1 - 255.
  • Kristensen, R. M. (1987) Generic revision of the Echiniscidae (Heterotardigrada), with a discussion of the origin of the family. In: Bertolani, R. (Ed.), Biology of Tardigrada. Selected Symposia and Monographs. U. Z. I., Modena, pp. 261 - 335.