Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 8 de 8
Filter
Add more filters










Language
Publication year range
1.
Zootaxa ; 5296(4): 501-524, 2023 May 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37518430

ABSTRACT

The lacertid Latastia ornata was known to date only by its holotype collected in 1938 in Bafatá, central Guinea-Bissau. We report new specimens and localities from Guinea-Conakry, a new country record and major range extension of 700 km SE of the type-locality. We provide an updated diagnosis of the species, including the first genetic and osteological data, and confirm that Latastia ornata is closely related to, but distinct from, L. longicaudata based on external morphology, cranial osteology, DNA data and zoogeography.

2.
Zookeys ; 1054: 173-184, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34393568

ABSTRACT

Sea cucumber taxonomy and systematics has in the past heavily relied on gross external and internal anatomy, ossicle assemblage in different tissues, and molecular characterisation, with coloration, habitat, and geographical and bathymethric distribution also considered important parameters. In the present paper, we made these observations and techniques in detail and complemented them with the novel technique of micro-computed tomography of the calcareous ring. We investigated a single European species, the so-called gravel sea cucumber, Neopentadactylamixta (Östergren, 1898), using recently collected material from the Chausey Islands, Normandy, France. We redescribed the species, illustrated its ossicle assemblage through scanning electron microscopy, and visualised the calcareous ring through stacking photography and through micro-CT scanning. Additionally, a DNA fragment of 955 base pairs of the 18S ribosomal RNA gene was sequenced from one specimen, which showed a high similarity with the only sequence of N.mixta publicly available. We completed this integrative study by providing a detailed distribution of the occurrence of N.mixta based on published, verifiable accounts.

3.
Zootaxa ; 4576(2): zootaxa.4576.2.1, 2019 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31715759

ABSTRACT

The Indo-Pacific portunid, Charybdis hellerii (A. Milne-Edwards, 1867), is a crab species native to the Indian and Western Pacific Oceans and has previously colonized the Eastern Mediterranean and the Western Atlantic. It is now recorded in the Eastern Atlantic, on the coast of Benin, where a thriving population has established. This invasive and widely distributed species exhibits morphological variations within and between populations, which are discussed in detail. Its current distribution is presented, and its future expansion along the West African coast and future impact on coastal ecosystems and local fisheries are the object of tentative forecasts. Illustrations of sexually mature specimens from different sizes and regions are presented, and their allometric, individual and geographical variations are discussed. A new synonymy and a new account on the taxonomy and the biology of the species are presented. Illustrations of the lectotype and the paralectotype of C. hellerii are also provided for the first time. Charybdis spinifera (Miers, 1884), C. merguiensis (De Man, 1887) and C. vannamei Ward, 1941 are here treated as subjective junior synonyms of C. hellerii. The holotype of C. spinifera and two syntypes of C. merguiensis are illustrated.


Subject(s)
Brachyura , Decapoda , Introduced Species , Animals , Benin , Ecosystem , Pacific Ocean
4.
Zootaxa ; 4369(2): 186-196, 2018 Jan 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29689886

ABSTRACT

A new crested amphipod, Epimeria cleo sp. nov., is described after specimens collected in the western Ross Sea, Southern Ocean, at 151-409 m depth. This increases the number of Epimeria species known from the Ross Sea to eleven. This new species belongs to the subgenus Drakepimeria d'Udekem d'Acoz Verheye, 2017. E. cleo sp. nov. has very robust walking pereiopods, no mid-dorsal tooth or bump on pereonites 1-2, no lateral tooth or angle on the lateral carina of coxa 4 and no pair of small teeth pointing upwards on urosomite 2. It is morphologically very similar to Epimeria leukhoplites d'Udekem d'Acoz Verheye, 2017, E. reoproi Lörz Coleman, 2001 and E. vaderi Coleman, 1998, the latter three species being known only from the Antarctic Peninsula and South Shetland Islands. Epimeria cleo sp. nov. can be distinguished from them by the following combination of characters: flexed rostrum, narrow coxa 3, long ventral tooth on coxa 4 and non-duplicate lateral tooth on pleonites 1-2. The phylogenetic relationships between E. cleo sp. nov. and other Epimeria of the subgenus Drakepimeria, for which DNA sequences are available, are briefly outlined based on a phylogenetic analysis of 28S rDNA fragments.


Subject(s)
Amphipoda , Animal Structures , Animals , Antarctic Regions , Base Sequence , DNA, Ribosomal , Phylogeny
5.
Zootaxa ; 4392(2): 201-240, 2018 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29690403

ABSTRACT

A new, over 10 cm long, sub-Antarctic shrimp, Fresnerhynchus crozeti n. gen., n. sp. is described based on a unique specimen collected with long lines at 1889 m on the slope of a seamount northwest of the Crozet Islands. It is included in the previously monotypic family Lipkiidae Burukovsky, 2012 based on morphological and molecular data. However, the posterior pereiopods of Fresnerhynchus are reminiscent to those of the Rhynchocinetidae, especially by the short spinose dactyli, and by the absence of a sternal plate. The elusive nature of F. crozeti, which is a large and highly characteristic shrimp, is attributed to its putative habitat (hard bottom, steep deep sea slopes), which is difficult to sample with conventional gear, and the remote geographical location. A brief discussion on the biogeography of Antarctic and sub-Antarctic decapods is provided. A review of Antarctic and sub-Antarctic dendrobranchiate and caridean shrimps is appended.


Subject(s)
Decapoda , Animals , Antarctic Regions , Ecosystem , Islands , Oceans and Seas
6.
Thomson, Scott A; Pyle, Richard L; Ahyong, Shane T; Alonso-Zarazaga, Miguel; Ammirati, Joe; Araya, Juan Francisco; Ascher, John S; Audisio, Tracy Lynn; Azevedo-Santos, Valter M; Bailly, Nicolas; Baker, William J; Balke, Michael; Barclay, Maxwell V. L; Barrett, Russell L; Benine, Ricardo C; Bickerstaff, James R. M; Bouchard, Patrice; Bour, Roger; Bourgoin, Thierry; Boyko, Christopher B; Breure, Abraham S. H; Brothers, Denis J; Byng, James W; Campbell, David; Ceriaco, Luis M. P; Cernak, Istvan; Cerretti, Pierfilippo; Chang, Chih-Han; Cho, Soowon; Copus, Joshua M; Costello, Mark J; Cseh, Andras; Csuzdi, Csaba; Culham, Alastair; D'Elia, Guillermo; d'Acoz, Cedric d'Udekem; Daneliya, Mikhail E; Dekker, Rene; Dickinson, Edward C; Dickinson, Timothy A; van Dijk, Peter Paul; Dijkstra, Klaas-Douwe B; Dima, Balint; Dmitriev, Dmitry A; Duistermaat, Leni; Dumbacher, John P; Eiserhardt, Wolf L; Ekrem, Torbjorn; Evenhuis, Neal L; Faille, Arnaud; Fernandez-Trianam, Jose L; Fiesler, Emile; Fishbein, Mark; Fordham, Barry G; Freitas, Andre V. L; Friol, Natalia R; Fritz, Uwe; Froslev, Tobias; Funk, Vicki A; Gaimari, Stephen D; Garbino, Guilherme S. T; Garraffoni, Andre R. S; Geml, Jozsef; Gill, Anthony C; Gray, Alan; Grazziotin, Felipe Gobbi; Greenslade, Penelope; Gutierrez, Eliecer E; Harvey, Mark S; Hazevoet, Cornelis J; He, Kai; He, Xiaolan; Helfer, Stephan; Helgen, Kristofer M; van Heteren, Anneke H; Garcia, Francisco Hita; Holstein, Norbert; Horvath, Margit K; Hovenkamp, Peter H; Hwang, Wei Song; Hyvonen, Jaakko; Islam, Melissa B; Iverson, John B; Ivie, Michael A; Jaafar, Zeehan; Jackson, Morgan D; Jayat, J. Pablo; Johnson, Norman F; Kaiser, Hinrich; Klitgard, Bente B; Knapp, Daniel G; Kojima, Jun-ichi; Koljalg, Urmas; Kontschan, Jeno; Krell, Frank-Thorsten; Krisai-Greilhuberm, Irmgard; Kullander, Sven; Latelle, Leonardo; Lattke, John E; Lencioni, Valeria; Lewis, Gwilym P; Lhano, Marcos G; Lujan, Nathan K; Luksenburg, Jolanda A; Mariaux, Jean; Marinho-Filho, Jader; Marshall, Christopher J; Mate, Jason F; McDonough, Molly M; Michel, Ellinor; Miranda, Vitor F. O; Mitroiulm, Mircea-Dan; Molinari, Jesus; Monks, Scott; Moore, Abigail J; Moratelli, Ricardo; Muranyi, David; Nakano, Takafumi; Nikolaeva, Svetlana; Noyes, John; Ohl, Michael; Oleas, Nora H; Orrell, Thomas; Pall-Gergele, Barna; Pape, Thomas; Papp, Viktor; Parenti, Lynne R; Patterson, David; Pavlinov, Igor Ya; Pine, Ronald H; Poczai, Peter; Prado, Jefferson; Prathapan, Divakaran; Rabeler, Richard K; Randall, John E; Rheindt, Frank E; Rhodin, Anders G. J; Rodriguez, Sara M; Rogers, D. Christopher; Roque, Fabio de O; Rowe, Kevin C; Ruedas, Luis A; Salazar-Bravo, Jorge; Salvador, Rodrigo B; Sangster, George; Sarmiento, Carlos E; Schigel, Dmitry S; Schmidt, Stefan; Schueler, Frederick W; Segers, Hendrik; Snow, Neil; Souza-Dias, Pedro G. B; Stals, Riaan; Stenroos, Soili; Stone, R. Douglas; Sturm, Charles F; Stys, Pavel; Teta, Pablo; Thomas, Daniel C; Timm, Robert M; Tindall, Brian J; Todd, Jonathan A; Triebel, Dagmar; Valdecasas, Antonio G; Vizzini, Alfredo; Vorontsova, Maria S; de Vos, Jurriaan M; Wagner, Philipp; Watling, Les; Weakley, Alan; Welter-Schultes, Francisco; Whitmore, Daniel; Wilding, Nicholas; Will, Kipling; Williams, Jason; Wilson, Karen; Winston, Judith E; Wuster, Wolfgang; Yanega, Douglas; Yeates, David K; Zaher, Hussam; Zhang, Guanyang; Zhang, Zhi-Qiang; Zhou, Hong-Zhang.
PLoS. Biol. ; 16(3): e2005075, 2018.
Article in English | Sec. Est. Saúde SP, SESSP-IBPROD, Sec. Est. Saúde SP | ID: but-ib15045
7.
Zootaxa ; 4269(4): 455-459, 2017 05 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28610312

ABSTRACT

Note. This original form of this rebuttal was submitted to Science on 3 March 2017 (limited to 300 words as per Science editorial policy) but rejected on 13 March 2017. Herein, we elaborate on our original Science submission in order to more fully address the issue without the length limitations. This rebuttal is followed by the list of the signatories who supported our original submission.


Subject(s)
Photography , Zoology , Animals
8.
PLoS One ; 8(8): e68787, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23936311

ABSTRACT

There has been a significant body of literature on species flock definition but not so much about practical means to appraise them. We here apply the five criteria of Eastman and McCune for detecting species flocks in four taxonomic components of the benthic fauna of the Antarctic shelf: teleost fishes, crinoids (feather stars), echinoids (sea urchins) and crustacean arthropods. Practical limitations led us to prioritize the three historical criteria (endemicity, monophyly, species richness) over the two ecological ones (ecological diversity and habitat dominance). We propose a new protocol which includes an iterative fine-tuning of the monophyly and endemicity criteria in order to discover unsuspected flocks. As a result nine « full ¼ species flocks (fulfilling the five criteria) are briefly described. Eight other flocks fit the three historical criteria but need to be further investigated from the ecological point of view (here called "core flocks"). The approach also shows that some candidate taxonomic components are no species flocks at all. The present study contradicts the paradigm that marine species flocks are rare. The hypothesis according to which the Antarctic shelf acts as a species flocks generator is supported, and the approach indicates paths for further ecological studies and may serve as a starting point to investigate the processes leading to flock-like patterning of biodiversity.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Biological Evolution , Fishes/physiology , Animals , Antarctic Regions , Ecology , Ecosystem , Population Density
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...