Macrobiotus derkai, a new species of Tardigrada (Eutardigrada, Macrobiotidae, huziori group) from the Colombian Andes (South America)
Author
Degma, Peter
Author
Michalczyk, Łukasz
Author
Kaczmarek, Łukasz
text
Zootaxa
2008
1731
1
23
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.181336
00d30da5-864d-4153-8908-584711097246
1175-5326
181336
Macrobiotus derkai
sp. nov.
Figs. 1–74
, Tables 1–4
Type
locality:
North-eastern
Colombia
, Cordillera Oriental, Sierra Nevada del Cocuy National Park, near Laguna de la Plaza (mountain lake),
06°26’ N
,
72°15’ W
, ca.
4,300 m
a.s.l.
Type
material:
Holotype
– sex unidentified, leg. T. Derka,
11 January 2006
, moss from rock; mounted in Hoyer’s medium. The microscope slide with the
holotype
(350/20) is deposited in the Department of Zoology, Comenius University, Bratislava,
Slovakia
.
Paratypes
: 50 animals (including juveniles) and
88 eggs
(including
7 egg
shells,
39 eggs
with visible embryos and
5 eggs
with hatching juveniles) from the same sample as the
holotype
on 35 microscope slides (350/1, 350/3–9, 350/11–19, 350/21–38; all in Hoyer’s medium). Two slides are deposited in the collection of Łukasz Kaczmarek (Department of Animal Taxonomy and Ecology, A. Mickiewicz University, Poznań,
Poland
), two slides in the collection of Łukasz Michalczyk and two slides in the collection of Maria Grazia Binda & Giovanni Pilato (Department of Animal Biology ”Marcello La Greca”, University of Catania,
Italy
). Remaining slides are in the same depository as the
holotype
.
The 11
paratypes
(
5 adults
and
6 eggs
) prepared for SEM are not deposited in any collection.
Etymology:
The new species is named after Tomáš Derka (Comenius University, Bratislava), who kindly collected the sample for us.
FIGURES 3–5.
Macrobiotus derkai
sp. nov.
Hatching juveniles (paratypes:
3—
PhC;
4–5—
SEM).
Diagnosis:
Medium sized
Macrobiotus
with eyes. Cuticle smooth, without pores. Granulation on all legs present. All three bands of teeth in the oral cavity fully developed. Ventro-median tooth in the third band of the oral cavity armature most often subdivided into several teeth. Pharynx with three macroplacoids and without a microplacoid. The second macroplacoid is the shortest and it is placed closer to the first than to the third macroplacoid. Claws of the
hufelandi
-
type
, with smooth lunules and long, protruding accessory points. Eggs with short conical processes with a single short tip. Terminal parts of egg processes and their tips are covered by fine irregular tubercles. Egg areolation of the
huziori
-
type
(mostly oval areolae usually transversally divided into two shallow areolae and each of them usually deepens into two smaller areolae; spaces between neighboring areolae are usually broader than their widths).
FIGURES 6–9.
Macrobiotus derkai
sp. nov.
Dorsal cuticular structures:
6—
head with the cuticular depression;
7—
cuticular depression on a head;
8—
dorsal cuticle with cribriform areas;
9—
details of the dorsal cuticle (paratype, SEM).
Description:
Adults and juveniles (measurements of the
holotype
; other measurements and their
pt
ratios are provided in Tables 1–2): The body of median length, transparent/white (
Figs. 1–5
). Posterior eyes present (poorly visible or not visible in specimens fixed in the Hoyer’s medium and not visible in hatching juveniles). Cuticle smooth in LM, however wrinkled in SEM (
Figs. 8–9
), without pores but with fine regular granulation on external surface of all legs (0.1–0.3 μm; LM), better visible on hind legs (
Fig. 34
). Granulation may not be visible in just hatched specimens. In SEM, the complex structure of these granules is detectable: each granule consists of small cones (2–8 cones on each granule). On the dorsal side of the head a round cuticular depression is visible in SEM (
Figs. 6–7
).
Bucco-pharyngeal apparatus of the
Macrobiotus
type
(
Figs. 10–11
). Mouth opening antero-ventral, surrounded by a ring of 10 well developed peribuccal lamellae. The oral cavity armature very well developed, consisting of three bands of teeth (
Figs. 12–26
).
The first band of teeth covers the posterior part of peribuccal lamellae. It is composed of small (0.2–0.6 μm, mostly 0.3–0.4 μm in diameter) dense teeth in the shape of round or slightly oval granules/cones (spaces between teeth are usually smaller than teeth themselves) (LM). This band is continuous and looks the same on all oral cavity walls, usually consisting of approximately 6–7 irregular rows of teeth (partly visible on
Figs. 20 and 23
).
FIGURES 10–11.
Macrobiotus derkai
sp. nov.
Buccal apparatus:
10—
ventro-dorsal view of a whole buccal apparatus (holotype, PhC);
11—
lateral view of oral cavity and buccal tube (paratype, NC).
FIGURES 12–26.
Macrobiotus derkai
sp. nov.
The third band of the oral cavity armature:
12–18—
ventral teeth (
12—
one ventro-median tooth;
13–14—
two ventro-median teeth;
15–16—
three ventro-median teeth;
17–18—
four ventromedian teeth);
19–20—
lateral teeth;
21–26—
dorsal teeth (
21—
the dorso-median tooth absent;
22–24—
the dorsomedian tooth increasingly longer;
25—
two dorso-median teeth;
26—
the dorso-median tooth merged with one of the dorso-lateral teeth) (scale on
13–26
same as on
12
;
14—
holotype, rest—paratypes; asterisks indicate the ventral side; NC).
FIGURES 27–29.
Macrobiotus derkai
sp. nov.
Pharynx with placoids:
27–28—
ventral placoids (ventral view);
29—
dorso-lateral placoids (mid-section) (scale on
29
same as on
28
;
27—
paratype, PhC;
28–29—
holotype, NC).
The second band of teeth is placed in the posterior portion of the oral cavity just before the third band of teeth. This band is continuous and arranged in two sub-bands of teeth: an anterior and a posterior band of teeth. The teeth in the anterior band are in the shape of small ridges parallel to the main axis of the buccal tube and teeth in the posterior band (situated just before the third band of teeth) are in the shape of granules/cones. The teeth in the anterior band are regular, however often joined two by two (sometimes three together) mainly in their posterior parts. Joined teeth are V- or W-shaped. The teeth of this row are relatively wide (0.3–0.4 μm) and their lengths are not equal; the shortest are those on the lateral walls of the oral cavity and the dorsal ones are slightly longer (0.7–1.2 μm) than the ventral ones (0.7–0.8 μm). The posterior teeth of the second band of teeth are generally similar to those of the first band in their shape and size but are more irregularly distributed (less dense on the lateral walls of the oral cavity). The band of these small teeth is wider ventrally than dorsally (
Figs. 19–20
).
FIGURES 30–34.
Macrobiotus derkai
sp. nov.
Claws and leg granulation:
30—
claws I;
31—
claws IV;
32—
lunules I;
33—
lunules IV (unusually indented);
34—
granulation on hind legs (scale on
31–34
same as on
30
;
32—
paratype, restholotype; PhC)
The third band of teeth is not continuous and consists of two series (dorsal and ventral) of large, transverse ridge-shaped and round or oval teeth. The band is positioned in the rear of the oral cavity just behind the second band of teeth and just before the buccal tube opening. The three dorsal teeth are in the shape of ridges and they are situated more anteriorly than the ventral teeth of this band. The dorso-median tooth is transversally oval or rectangular with rounded edges (length and width are 1.8 x 1.0 μm) and it is usually distinctly separated from the dorso-lateral teeth, which are in the shape of long and thin ridges (lengths and widths: 3.6–4.3 x 0.8–0.9 μm). The ventro-median tooth is usually fragmented into 2–4 round or oval teeth (
Figs. 12–28
), most frequently two ventro-median teeth are present (two in the
holotype
with the lengths and widths of 0.9– 1.0 x 0.6–0.7 μm). The ventro-lateral teeth are wing-shaped, thicker in their median portions (lengths and widths: 3.0–3.1 x 0.7–0.9 μm). The dorso-lateral teeth are longer and slightly closer to each other than the ventro-lateral ones (
Figs. 12–18, 22–26
).
Buccal tube relatively wide (Tables 1–2) with an anterior bend (
Fig. 11
). Stylet supports inserted on the buccal tube farther down than three quarters of its length (Table 2). Pharyngeal bulb slightly oval (72.4 μm x 64.8 μm) with apophyses and three macroplacoids (
Figs. 27–29
). Pharyngeal apophyses distinct, drop-shaped (
Figs. 27–28
) (3.7 μm long and 1.2 μm wide in their posterior parts). The first macroplacoid thinner anteriorly, the second oval or slightly rectangular and the third one with a distinct subterminal constriction. The second macroplacoid is distinctly the shortest one (Table 1,
Figs. 27–29
) and it is evidently placed closer to the first than to the third macroplacoid (in the
holotype
inter-placoid distances are 2.0 μm and 5.6 μm, respectively). The third macroplacoid is usually slightly longer than the first one (see length ratio macroplacoid 3/macroplacoid
1 in
Table 1). The microplacoid is absent, however there is a faint cuticular match-like structure growing out of the posterior end of each of the third macroplacoids. These match-like structures are wider in their terminal parts (
Figs. 27, 29
).
FIGURES 35–38.
Macrobiotus derkai
sp. nov.
Claws:
35—
claws I;
36—
claws IV;
37—
accessory points on external claw I;
38—
lunules on external claw I (paratypes, SEM).
Claws of the
hufelandi
-
type
, slender (
Figs. 30–31
,
35–36
).
Hind
claws are slightly longer than claws I–III (Tables 1–2). Primary branches with long, protruding accessory points (
Fig. 30–31
,
35–37
). Lunules on all legs smooth (LM, SEM), better developed on legs IV (
Figs. 32
,
38
). Double transverse cribriform areas below claws of the first three pairs of legs are visible.
Eggs:
White/transparent, laid freely. Spherical or slightly oval, with 12–16 processes on the circumference, areolation around bases of processes present (
Figs. 39–46
,
48–50
).
Processes generally in the shape of short and relatively wide cones (the base diameter of each process is larger than the height) with a single short and flexible tip (
Figs. 51–70
). The tips are variable in their shapes and sizes (sometimes they can be undeveloped or broken). Terminal part of egg processes (including the tip) is usually covered by irregular tubercles poorly visible or invisible in LM (
Fig. 53
) but very distinct in SEM (
Fig. 70
). Processes consist of double walls with transverse supporting walls forming ‘cells’ visible in PhC and NC as a reticular design (
Figs. 52–54
). This reticulation is generally slightly elongated vertically (mesh 0.5–0.9 μm) and can form horizontal rows. External walls of processes without pores (
Figs. 67–69
).
The surface between processes is areolated and the ‘reticulation’ of egg processes walls continuously covers the areolae rims. The areolation is of the
huziori
-
type
. Mostly oval and narrow areolae are usually transversally divided into two shallow areolae and each of them branches into two smaller and deeper areolae towards the egg surface (some areolae are not branched). The spaces between neighbour areolae are usually broader than the areolae widths. Approximately 12 areolae form a ring around the base of each process (
Figs. 47
,
51
,
71–72
).