Ulleung-do earthworms - Dagelet Island revisited
Author
Blakemore, Robert J.
text
Journal of Species Research
2013
2013-02-28
2
1
55
68
http://dx.doi.org/10.12651/jsr.2013.2.1.055
journal article
10.12651/JSR.2013.2.1.055
2713-8615
Eisenia fetida
(Savigny, 1826)
Material examined.
INV0000261249, four Tongumi specimens, one a posterior amputee.
Description.
Lengths
70-85 mm
, colour red-striped with pale intersegments and pale laterally on 9-11. Epilobous with first dorsal pore in 4/5. Clitellum 25,26-31,32 with tubercula pubertates in 27,28-30.
Remarks.
Cosmopolitan species, previously recorded from Ulleung-do (Song & Paik 1996: 14,
Hong & Kim, 2005: 130
). Often variously mixed with “
Eisenia fetida andrei
Bouché, 1972
” as either a synonym, as invalid morph or ‘variety’, as a sub-species or as a separate species but none with justification based on
types
nor priority. For example, Hong
et al.
(2001) claimed
E. andrei
from
Korea
but offered no DNA support. Thus
E. andrei
is not confirmed from
Korea
- nor elsewhere - mainly because as there are ca. 15 ignored or overlooked names currently in synonymy of
E. fetida
that have priority over
E. andrei
and are as yet untested. Some of these synonyms, listed in
Blakemore (2002
;
2004
; 2010; 2012d), which are mostly still available under rules of ICZN are:
1.
Lumbricus semifasciatus
Burmeister, 1835
.
2.
Lumbricus annularis
Templeton, 1836
.
3.
Lumbricus xanthurus
Templeton, 1836
?
4.
Lumbricus olidus
Hoffmeister, 1842
.
5.
Lumbricus luteus
Blanchard, 1849
.
6.
Lumbricus rubrofasciatus
Baird, 1873
.
7.
Allolobophora nordenskiöldi
Eisen, 1879
(in part.)?
[Review by Blakemore (in press)].
8.
Lumbricus annulatus
Hutton, 1876
/7.
9.
Allolobophora foetida
var.
fimetoria
Örley, 1881
.
10.
Endrilus? annulatus
: Smith, 1887.
11.
Eisenia nordenskiöldi caucasica
Michaelsen,
1903?
12.
Eisenia foetida attica
Tzelepe, 1943
.
13.
Eisenia fasciata
Backlund, 1948
apparently retain- ed as a valid species by some authors, e.g.
Stöp-Bowitz (1969: 260
, Table V), again this reference mostly overlooked.