Showing posts with label Interstitial Fauna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interstitial Fauna. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 August 2025

Musellifer leasiae: A new species of Gastrotrich from Antarctica.

The waters of the Southern Ocean, which surrounds Antarctica, are considered to be a hotspot for marine biodiversity, yet only their macrofauna has been extensively studied. The meiobenthos (bottom dwelling organisms larger than single-celled microbes, but still difficult or impossible to see with the naked eye) of this region has been particularly poorly studied, and almost all of the studies which have occurred have been of Nematodes or Crustaceans. To date, twenty species of Tardigrades have been described from the waters around Antarctica, two Gnathostomulids, one of which was only identified to family level, and five Kinorynchs (although a study which should be published later this year is expected to add to this) have been described from this region, but not a single Scalidophoran, Loriciferan, or meiobenthic Priapulid.

Gastrotrichs are a phylum of minute animals, generally less than a millimetre in length, found in interstitial spaces in sediments. Their small size meant that they went unnoticed until the event of microscopy, with the group not being discovered until the 1860s. Despite this unfamiliarity they seem to be ubiquitous in marine sediments, and are also often found in non-marine settings. To date, only a single Gastrotrich, Thaumastoderma antarctica, has been identified from Antarctic waters, although there have been several reports of unidentified Gastrotrichs.

In a paper published in the journal Zootaxa on 17 June 2025, Martin Sørensen of the Natural History Museum of Denmark at the University of Copenhagen, Thiago Araújo of the University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lara Macheriotou and Ulrike Braeckman of the Marine Biology Research Group at Ghent University, Craig Smith of the Department of Oceanography at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, and Jeroen Ingels of the Coastal and Marine Laboratory at Florida State University, and the National Institute for Water and Atmospheric Research in Wellington, New Zealand, describe a second species of Gastrotrich from Antarctic waters.

The new species is described from specimens collected in December 2015 and April 2016 from sediment cores collected from depths of between 532 and 701 m in Andvord Bay the west coast of Graham Land, and the Gerlache Strait, which separates the Palmer Archipelago from the Antarctic Peninsula. It is placed within the genus Musellifer, and given the specific name leasiae, in honour of marine biologist  Francesca Leasi in recognition of her numerous contributions to Gastrotrich taxonomy and morphology.

Map showing the sampling stations. (A) Overview of Antarctica, with the Antarctic Peninsula framed. (B) Antarctic Peninsula with sampling area framed. (C) Sampling area with stations. Red star indicates the type locality; yellow dots indicate additional stations with Musellifer leasiae. Sørensen et al. (2025).

Specimens of Musellifer leasiae are between 322 and 415 μm in length, and have a body with a pointed head, a weakly defined neck, a parallel-sided body, and a pair of tapering furcal branches ('tails'). This body is covered by approximately 26 columns of scales, with an average of 45 scales per column. The columns can be divided into eight dorsal columns, two sets of five ventral columns, and eight ventral columns. The ventral surface also has two rows of locomotory cilia.

Line art illustration of Musellifer leasiae, (A) Dorsal view. (B) Ventral view. (C) Close-ups of head scales, anterior-, and posterior trunk scales, and terminal furca scales. Sørensen et al. (2025).

Five species of Musellifer have been described previously; Musellifer delamarei and Musellifer profundus from the Mediterranean, Musellifer tridentatus from the Caribbean, Musellifer reichardti from the Atlantic coast of Florida, and Musellifer sanlitoralis from the San Juan Archipelago in Washington State. Only a single specimen has previously been described from the Southern Hemisphere, a possible specimen of Musellifer profundus, making Musellifer leasiae the first known species in the genus with a Southern Hemisphere, as well as the first species from the Antarctic.

Light micrographs showing overviews and details of holotype NHMD-1801023 (A)-(H) and paratype NHMD-1801024 (I) of Musellifer leasiae. (A) Ventral overview. (B) Body, anterior, U0-32, dorsal view. (C) Body, anterior, U0-32, ventral view. (D) Body, median, U26-55, dorsal view. (E) Body, median, U28-60, dorsal view. (F) Body, posterior, U54-84, dorsal view. (G) Body, posterior, U54-86, ventral view. (H) Caudal furca branches, U67-100, ventral view. (I) Body, posterior, U54-82, focused on adhesive glandular tissue. Abbreviations: agt, adhesive glandular tissue; lcf, locomotory ciliary field; vcb, ventral ciliary bands. Sørensen et al. (2025).

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Saturday, 28 December 2019

Redudasys brasiliensis: A new species of Redudasyid Gastrotrich from Brazil.

Gastrotrichs are a phylum of minute animals, generally less than a millimetre in length, found in interstitial spaces in sediments (a phylum is the highest classification of organisms below that of kingdom; other animal phyla include Molluscs and Arthropods, the Vertebrates only have the status of a subphylum within the Phylum Chordata, which also includes animals such as Sea Squirts and Lancets). Their small size meant that they went unnoticed until the event of microscopy, with the group not being discovered until the 1860s. These animals appear to be almost ubiquitous in marine and freshwater ecosystems, as well as semi-terrestrial ecosystems such as bogs and swamps, although the majority of non-marine species belong to one of the two orders of Gastrotrichs, the bottle-shaped Chaetonotida, with the other order, the worm-like Macrodasyida, far less common, and all coming from a single family, the Redudasyidae.

In a paper published in the journal Scientific Reports on 14 February 2019, André Garraffoni of the Department of Animal Biology at the State University of Campinas, Thiago Araújo of the Departament of Zoology at the Federal University of Minas Gerais, Anete Lourenço of the Department of Biological Science at the Federal University of Jequitinhonha and Mucuri Valleys, and Loretta Guidi and Maria Balsamo, of the Department of Biomolecular Sciences at the University of Urbino, describe a new species of Gastrotrich from Minas Gerais State, Brazil.

The new species is placed in the genus Redudasys and given the specific name brasiliensis, meaning 'from Brazil'. These Gastrotrichs are 302–376 μm in total body length, with a body separated into head, trunk and caudal (tail) regions. The head is rounded with several sensory cilia, but lacking tentacles or ocelli (simple eyes). The trunk is cylindrical, two-lobed at the posterior, and lacks a peduncle (narrow region to which the tail is connected). The body is covered by a smooth cuticle without ornamentation, and there are paired bristles along the sides. There are adhesive tubes at the front and rear of the animal.

Redudasys brasiliensis, Scanning electron micrograph in dorsolateral view and close-up of an anterior adhesive tube (inset). c, locomotory ventral ciliation; e, egg; m, mouth; ph, pharynx; sb, sensory bristles; TbA, anterior adhesive tubes; TbP, posterior adhesive tubes. Garraffoni et al. (2019).

Redudasys brasiliensis was found in sediments of the Jequitinhonha Drainage Basin, where it is relatively common, and sediments of the São Francisco Drainage Basin, where it was more rare. It's distribution beyond this is unknown. The locations where it was found were all above 900 m above sealevel, in rocky areas with a highly endemic (localised) vegetation.

Redudasys brasiliensis. Reconstruction of the musculature from confocal laser scanning microscopy images. (a) Schematic drawing of musculature in dorsal view. (b) Schematic detail of ventral musculature in the pharyngeal and the caudal regions. (c) Volocity-rendered 3D view of muscles in lateral view. Confocal micrographs of phalloidin-stained specimens. (d) Helicoidal muscles in the pharynx (arrow). (e) Detail of the pharynx posterior end with pharyngeal pores. asm, anterior semicircular muscle; cm, circular muscles; dlm, dorsal longitudinal muscles; llm, dorsal longitudinal muscles; mr,  mouth ring, plm, pharyngeal longitudinal muscles; pp, pharyngeal pore; psm, posterior semicircular muscle; vlm, ventrolateral muscles. Garraffoni et al. (2019).

See also...

https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2017/10/chaetonotus-antrumus-new-species-of.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2015/05/cephalodasys-interinsularis-new-species.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2014/05/a-new-species-of-gastrotrich-from-coast.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2014/05/a-new-species-of-gastrotrich-from.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2014/01/a-new-species-of-gastrotrich-from.html
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Thursday, 21 April 2016

Three new species of Kinorhynchs from Singapore.

Kinorhynchs are tiny (generally less than 1 mm) worm like animals found in marine sediments. They appear to be ubiquitous members of the interstitial meiofuana (animals that live between sediment grains) in shallow marine habitats, but have been studied in relatively few locations. Kinorhynchs are thought to be related to Pripulid Worms (large unsegmented Worms with evertable pharyxes and Loriciferas (small unsegmented animals with cup-shaped rigid bodies and evertable pharynxes), and like these groups have evertable pharynxes, which is used not just in feeding, but in locomotion, being pushed ahead of the animal then anchored and used to pull it forwards.

In a paper published in the Raffles Bulletin of Zoology on 29 January 2016, Martin Sørensen, Ludwik Gąsiorowski and Phillip Randsø of the Section for GeoGenetics at the Natural History Museum of Denmark, Nuria Sánchez of the Department of Zoology and Anthropology at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and Ricardo Neves of the Biozentrum of the University of Basel, describe three new species of Kinorhynches from Singapore, as part of a study of this group around the island; Kinorhynches have previously been recorded but not identified from the Malaysian Peninsula, while elsewhere in Asia the specimens have been identified from Borneo, Indian territories around the Bay of Bengal and Anderman Sea, and the coasts of Japan, Korea, China and the Russian Far East.

The first new species is placed in the genus Centroderes, which has previously been described from the Black Sea, the Mediterranean, the Caribean and the Atlantic Coast of North America, and given the specific name 'impurus' meaning 'unclean' or 'covered with dirt' in reference to the sediment which covered the specimens and which made examination of them very difficult.

 Light micrographs showing lateral overviews of Centroderes impurus. (A) Adult male stage-2. (B) Putative J6 or adult stage-1 specimen of unknown gender. Sørensen et al. (2016).

The species is described from two stage 2 adult males and four specimens of indeterminate sex that are either stage 6 juveniles or stage 1 adults (Kinorhynches have eight growth stages, the first six considered to be juvenile stages and the final two adult, though sexual characteristics are only manifest in the final stage), collected at a depth of nine meters between Bedok Jetty and Sungei Bedok in the southeast part of Singapore Island.

 Line art illustration of Centroderes impurus, male stage-2, lateral view. Abbreviations: ij, intersegmentary joint line; lass, lateral accessory sensory spot; ldss, laterodorsal sensory spot; ltas, lateral terminal accessory spine; lts, lateral terminal spine; lv, lateroventral spine; mdp, middorsal placid; mds, middorsal spine; mls, midlateral spine; mlss, midlateral sensory spot; mts, midterminal spine; mvp, midventral process; pdss, paradorsal sensory spot; pf, pectinate fringe; sdss, subdorsal sensory spot; sf, secondary fringe; vms, ventromedial spine; vmss, ventromedial sensory spot. Digits following labels refer to segment numbers. Sørensen et al. (2016).

The second species described is placed in the genus Echinoderes, and given the specific name annae, after Anna, the girlfriend of Phillip Randsø. The species is described from two males, two females and a juvenile collected from muddy Seagrass aggregations on the intertidal zone on Saringat Island, a small Singapore terretory to the south of the main island.

 Light micrographs showing overviews and details of neck and trunk morphology in female  and male specimes of Echinoderes annae. (A) Lateroventral overview. (B) Neck and segments 1–2, lateroventral view. (C) Neck and segments 1–2, laterodorsal view. (D) Segments 3–7, lateroventral view. (E) Segment 4, middorsal. F, segments 8–10, lateroventral view. (G) Segments 6–8, dorsal view. (H) Segments 10–11, dorsal view, showing male morphology. (I) Segment 11, ventral view, showing female morphology. (J) Segments 9, laterodorsal view. Abbreviations: gco1/2, glandular cell outlet type 1 or 2; ldt, laterodorsal tube; ltas, lateral terminal accessory spine; lts, lateral terminal spine; lvt, lateroventral tube; mds, middorsal spine; mlt, midlateral tube; mvp, midventral placid; pe1–3, penile spines; si, sieve plate; te, tergal extensions; trp, trichoscalid plate. Dashed circles mark glandular cell outlet type 1. Sørensen et al. (2016).

The final species described is placed in the genus Leiocanthus. and given the specific name nagini, which is the female version of Nāgá, a Sanskrit word implying a devine Serpent or Dragon, as well as being the name of Voldemort's Snake in JK Rowling's Harry Potter novels. The species is described from a single male collected from a depth of 52 m to the southeast of Singapore island, and a female collected at a depth of nine meters between Bedok Jetty and Sungei Bedok in the southeast part of Singapore Island.

 Scanning electron micrographs of female Leiocanthus nagini in (A) ventrolateral overview, and (B) ventral overview. Sørensen et al. (2016).

In addition to the new species described, Sørensen et al. also record several previously described species from Singaporean waters for the first time, notably Condyloderes paradoxus, a species previously recorded from the Bay if Bengal, Echinoderes tchefouensis, a species widespread in East Asia, and two unidentified species of Echinoderes.

See also...

http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2016/01/scathascolex-minor-palaeoscolecid-worm.htmlScathascolex minor: A Palaeoscolecid Worm from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale of British Colombia.                            Palaeoscolecids are a group of vermiform animals (worms) known from Cambrian to Silurian deposits. They had rings similar to...
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/eokinorhynchus-rarus-kinorhynch-from.htmlEokinorhynchus rarus: A Kinorhynch from the Early Cambrian of Sichuan Province, China.                                                 Kinorhynches are tiny (at most 3 mm) worm like animals found in marine sediments, with segmented tube- or barrel-shaped bodies, separate head and neck regions and evertable pharynxes. They are related...
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2015/05/priapulid-worms-from-middle-cambrian-of.htmlPriapulid Worms from the Middle Cambrian of Canada.                                                Priapulid Worms are a form of marine worms with denticle-covered pharynxes which can be everted to form proboscises. They are a minor element of..

 
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Saturday, 28 November 2015

Neosabellides lizae: A new species of Ampharetid Worm from Lizard Island on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.

Ampharetid Worms are small, usually marine, Annelid Worms related to the tube-building Trumpet Worms and the Alvinellid Tube Worms found living around hydrothermal vents. They are small infaunal Worms, living in burrows in mud, sand, or other unconsolidated sediments and feeding by ingesting sediment and digesting organic material within it.

In a paper published in the journal Zootaxa on 18 September 2015, Tom Alvestad of Uni Research and Natural History Collections at the University Museum ofBergen and Nataliya Budaeva, also of Natural History Collections at the University Museum of Bergen, and of the P.P. Shirshov Instituteof Oceanology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, describe a new species of Ampharetid Worm from sediments off Casuarina Beach on Lizard Island on Australia's Great Barrier Reef, close to the LizardIsland Research Station of the Australian Museum.

The new species is placed in the genus Neosabellides, and given the specific name lizae in reference to the area where it was found. The worms are 3-5 mm in length, and a metalic silver grey in colour. They each have 26 thoracic segments and 14 abdominal segements with paradopodia (limbs) and one pair of eyes on the head.

Neosabellides lizae, live specimens. Arrows indicate the position of the eyes, br indicates branchial tentacles. Alvestad & Budaeva (2015).

See also...

http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2015/04/cretaceous-bone-eating-worms-from.htmlCretaceous Bone-eating Worms from England.                                                                          Siboglinid Worms are a distinctive group of Annelids which lack mouths and digestive tracts in their...
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2015/01/a-new-species-of-serpulid-worm-from.htmlA new species of Serpulid Worm from the Caribbean.                                                 Serpulids are distinctive Polychaete Worms found throughout the world’s oceans, from the intertidal zones to the deep seas. They live in calcareous tubes, which they cement to hard substrates, and are...
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/two-new-species-of-scolecodont-from.htmlTwo new species of Scolecodont from the Early Devonian of the Ukraine.               Scolecodonts are the fossilized remains of the chitinous teeth and jaw elements of Polychaete Worms. They are described as species since preservation of entire Worms more-or-less never happens. Scolecodonts are known in the fossil record from the Cambrian...

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Sunday, 7 June 2015

Quisarctus yasumurai: A new species of Tardigrade from a submarine cave in the Okinawa Islands.


Tardigrades, or Water Bears, are minute (generally less than 1 mm and always less than 3 mm) aquatic animals related to Arthropods, Nematodes and Onychophorans. They have segmented roughly cylindrical bodies with four pairs of limbs and a cephalic region (‘head’) undifferentiated from the body. Tardigrades have eutelic development, with all members species having the same pre-set number of cells at maturity, a trait they share with other small animals such as Nematodes. They are noted for their remarkable toughness, able to enter a dormant state in which they can survive freezing, high temperatures, dehydration and even exposure to vacuum, becoming active again when normal conditions return.

In a paper published in the journal Zootaxa on 20 April 2015, Shinta Fujimoto of the Department of Zoology at Kyoto University describes a new species of Tardigrade from the Daidokutsu submarine cave off the southern coast of Iejima, in the Okinawa Islands, part of the Ryukyu Island chain that run between Taiwan and Japan.

The new species is named Quisarctus yasumurai, where ‘Quisarctus’ means ‘What Bear?’ or ‘Who Bear’ indicating the surprise caused when Shinta Fujimoto first saw the species (the suffix ‘-arctus’, meaning ‘Bear’ is commonly applied to Tardigrades, in reference to their common name, ‘Water Bears’), and ‘yasumurai’ honours Koshin Yasumura who collected he specimens from which the species is described.

Adult female specimen of Quisarctus yasumurai in (A) dorsal and (B) ventral views. Fujimoto (2015).

The species is described from three specimens, two adult females and a juvenile, collected from sieved calcareous mud from a depth of 29 m. The adult female specimens were 109 μm in length and a cylindrical body with a smooth cuticle. The cephalic region is rounded and lacks lobes. The limbs have sheathed claws without a dorsal spur, the claws of the final pair of limbs being longer than those of the first three pairs.

Drawing of Quisarctus yasumurai female. (A) Dorsal view; (B) ventral view. a, anus; bt, buccal tube; cE, cirrus E; ec, external cirrus; ic, internal cirrus; g, gonopore; lc, lateral cirrus; mc, median cirrus; pb, pharyngeal bulb; pc, primary clava; pl, placoid; sr, seminal receptacle; st, stylet; s1–4, sense organs of legs I–IV. Fujimoto (2015).

See also…

Tardigrades are small animals (adult sizes of 0.1-1.5 mm) distantly related to Arthropods and Onychophorans (Velvet Worms). They are plump segmented...


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Thursday, 21 May 2015

Cephalodasys interinsularis: A new species of Gastrotrich from the Bahamas.


Gastrotrichs are a phylum of minute animals, generally less than a millimetre in length, found in interstitial spaces in sediments (a phylum is the highest classification of organisms below that of kingdom; other animal phyla include Molluscs and Arthropods, the Vertebrates only have the status of a subphylum within the Phylum Chordata, which also includes animals such as Sea Squirts and Lancets). Their small size meant that they went unnoticed until the event of microscopy, with the group not being discovered until the 1860s. Despite this unfamiliarity they seem to be ubiquitous in marine sediments, and are also often found in non-marine settings.

In a paper published in the journal Zootaxa on 16 April 2015, Alexander Kieneke of the Deutsches Zentrum für marine Biodiversitätsforschung, AndreasSchmidt-Rhasea of the Centrum für Naturkunde at the Zoologisches Museum in Hamburg and Rick Hochberg of the University of Massachusetts Lowell describe a new species of Gastrotrich from the Bahamas.

The new species is placed in the genus Cephalodasys and given the specific name interinsularis, meaning ‘between the islands’, as it was discovered in sediments from a sandbank between Lee Stocking Island and Norman’s Pond Cay. Specimens of Cephalodasys interinsularis measured 471 μm in length (if this seems rather precise it is because Gastrotrichs are eutelic, meaning adults have a fixed number of cells), with a body divided into head, neck and trunk regions. The head is pair shaped and separated from the neck by a constriction, the trunk slightly wider than the neck. The body is flat, with a convex ventral side.

Cephalodasys interinsularis,schematic drawings. Left: Ventral view. Right: Combined dorsal and internal view. Abbreviations: an, anus; fo, frontal organ; fop, frontal organ pore; lc, locomotory cilia; me, mature egg; mgp, male genital pore; ov, ovary; ph, pharynx; pp, pharyngeal pores; sc, sensory cilia; TbA, anterior adhesive tubes; TbP, posterior adhesive tubes; TbVL, ventrolateral adhesive tubes; te, testis. Kieneke et al. (2015).

Cephalodasysinter insulariswas found in calcareous biogenic sand (sand made up of shell fragments) at a depth of two meters, alongside a variety of other Gastrotrich species, including members of the genera Macrodasys, Paraturbanella, Tetranchyroderma and Draculiciteria. It is not known if it is also found in other environments.

Cephalodasys interinsularis, light microscopic. (A) Ventral view showing the adhesive tubes and locomotorycilia. (B) Horizontal focal plane showing internal organs. Abbreviations:fo, frontal organ; in, intestine; lc, locomotory cilia; me, mature egg; ov, ovary; ph, pharynx; pp, pharyngeal pores; TbA, anterior adhesive tubes; TbP, posterior adhesive tubes; TbVL, ventrolateral adhesive tubes; te, testis. Kieneke et al. (2015).

See also…

http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2014/05/a-new-species-of-gastrotrich-from-coast.htmlA new species of Gastrotrich from the coast of São Paulo State, Brazil.                              Gastrotrichs are microscopic animals of uncertain affinities, reaching at most 3 mm in size, though most species are far smaller. Less than eight hundred species have been described, living between...
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2014/05/a-new-species-of-gastrotrich-from.htmlA new species of Gastrotrich from the Atlantic coast of Florida.                                          Gastrotrichs are microscopic animals of uncertain affinities, reaching at most 3 mm in size, though most species are far smaller. Less than eight hundred species have been described, living between sediment particles on the ocean floor, at the bottom of ponds and rivers and in biofilms covering grains of soil. They have flattened bodies covered in cilia, with a through gut but...
A new species of Gastrotrich from KwaZulu-Natal.A new species of Gastrotrich from KwaZulu-Natal.                                                                             Gastrotrichs are microscopic animals of uncertain affinities, reaching at most 3 mm in size, though most species are far smaller. Less than eight...
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