Polyphyly of the traditional family Flabellinidae affects a major group of Nudibranchia: aeolidacean taxonomic reassessment with descriptions of several new families, genera, and species (Mollusca, Gastropoda)
Author
Korshunova, Tatiana
Author
Martynov, Alexander
Author
Bakken, Torkild
Author
Evertsen, Jussi
Author
Fletcher, Karin
Author
Mudianta, I Wayan
Author
Saito, Hiroshi
Author
Lundin, Kennet
Author
Michael Schroedl,
Author
Picton, Bernard
text
ZooKeys
2017
717
1
139
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.717.21885
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.717.21885
1313-2970-717-1
C19B43B1B3214CB1B1B2A246CEAC56BC
C19B43B1B3214CB1B1B2A246CEAC56BC
Polaria
gen. n.
Figs 2, 7, 11
Type
species.
Coryphella polaris
Volodchenko, 1946
Etymology.
After the northern Polar region, the predominant area of distribution of this genus.
Diagnosis.
Body wide. Notal edge present, well-defined, continuous. Cerata not stalked, continuous. Rhinophores smooth to wrinkled, longer than oral tentacles. Anterior foot corners present. Anus pleuroproctic under the notal edge. Rachidian teeth with strong smooth cusp and distinct denticles. Lateral teeth strongly denticulated with considerably attenuated process basally. Single distal receptaculum seminis.
Long
vas deferens without separate granulated prostate. No penial collar. Penis elongated conical.
Species included.
Polaria polaris
(Volodchenko, 1946), comb. n. (Figs 7, 11) (original description in
Volodchenko 1946
).
Remarks.
The type and single species of the genus
Polaria
,
Coryphella polaris
is the only available valid name (
Volodchenko 1946
) for the species
Goniaeolis typica
M. Sars, 1861 as incorrectly identified by
Bergh (1886)
,
Odhner (1907)
, and
Roginskaya (1987
,
1997
). True
Goniaeolis typica
possesses a triserial radula but has no digestive gland branches or cnidosacs in the cerata and the shape of radular teeth is very different from any traditional flabellinid (M.
Sars 1861
; G.O.
Sars 1872
;
Odhner 1922
). The name
Coryphella polaris
Voldochenko, 1946 was therefore resurrected to avoid this misidentification (
Martynov 2006a
). The genus
Polaria
forms a separate clade within
Paracoryphellidae
according to the molecular phylogenetic analysis (Figs 1, 2). By combination of relatively long vas deferens without distinct prostate (Figs 7, 10H, I), retractable penis without external collar, and lateral teeth with strongly attenuated process (Fig. 10G), the genus
Polaria
morphologically differs from all other genera of the family
Paracoryphellidae
.