The tardigrade fauna of Australian marine caves: With descriptions of nine new species of Arthrotardigrada
Author
Jørgensen, Aslak
Author
Boesgaard, Tom M.
Author
Møbjerg, Nadja
Author
Kristensen, Reinhardt M.
text
Zootaxa
2014
3802
4
401
443
journal article
45658
10.11646/zootaxa.3802.4.1
43524c34-a5b7-4f7e-908a-3e3b61ffc6db
1175-5326
252490
CF479CC3-C014-460D-9C71-3A6C2AB2778B
Family:
Batillipedidae
Ramazzotti, 1962
Diagnosis (following Gallo D’Addabbo
et al.
2005):
Arthrotardigrada
with a trapezoid head divided into three parts: two lateroventral triangular lobes bearing all the cephalic cirri (except the medial cirrus) along with the primary and secondary clavae, and a central lobate portion with the medial cirrus. Simple cephalic cirri with lancelike or frayed distal tips. Tubular primary clavae with or without one or more constrictions; papillar secondary clavae, not always evident. Lipoid eye spots sometimes present. Stylet supports always present. Lateral intermetamerical processes present or absent. Legs digitate with four or six digits, according to age, bearing terminal adhesive discs. Claws absent. Sense organs present on all the legs. Cirrus E dorsal to the fourth pair of legs. A longitudinal groove generally present between the rosette-like female gonopore and the anus. Single internal seminal receptacle sometimes present, opposite the oviduct. Circular male gonopore covered by a crescent fold. Caudal apparatus present or absent. Cuticular punctuations, consisting of pillars in the epicuticle, always present. Dorsal cuticular pillars always taller than the ventral ones.
Type
genus:
Batillipes
Richters, 1909
Discussion
. The
Batillipedidae
originally included the genera
Batillipes
and
Orzeliscus
. In the present study the subfamily
Orzeliscinae
(including
Orzeliscus
) is placed in the family
Halechiniscidae (
Jørgensen
et al.
2010
)
. The
Batillipedidae
is currently generically monogeneric.