New species of free-living marine Sabatieriinae (Nematoda: Monhysterida: Comesomatidae) from around South Korea *
Author
Barnes, Natalie
Department of Zoology, The Natural History Museum, London, SW 7 5 BD, UK & Department of Life Sciences, Hanyang University, Seoul, 133 - 791, Korea
Author
Kim, Hyeong Geun
Department of Life Sciences, Hanyang University, Seoul, 133 - 791, Korea
Author
Lee, Wonchoel
Department of Life Sciences, Hanyang University, Seoul, 133 - 791, Korea
text
Zootaxa
2012
2012-07-04
3368
1
263
290
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.3368.1.14
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3368.1.14
1175-5326
5252511
Genus
Laimella
Cobb, 1920
Emended diagnosis.
Sabatieriinae
with striate cuticle; fine punctations may be also observed. Anterior and posterior cephalic sensilla closely spaced, posterior setae usually longer than anterior. Buccal cavity small, three small teeth may appear as weak cuticularisation at base of anterior buccal cavity. Spicule simple arcuate, gubernaculum with posteriorly directed paired apophyses. Supplements minute or absent. Tail elongate, posterior section filiform.
Remarks.
Presently, there are 7 species of
Laimella
recognised as valid species;
L. filipjevi
Jensen 1979
,
L. minuta
Vitiello 1970
,
L. longicauda
Cobb 1920
and
L. vera
Vitiello 1970
(following the revision by
Jensen (1979))
, and
L. annae
Chen & Vincx, 2000
,
L. sandrae
Chen & Vincx, 2000
and
L. subterminata
Chen & Vincx, 2000
, described by
Chen & Vincx (2000)
. Two species formerly described as belonging to
Laimella
have been reclassified as
Paracomesoma
(
P. quadrisetosum
and
P. hexasetosum
, both B.
Chitwood (1937))
, and a third species reclassified as
Paramesonchium
(
P. serialis
Wieser 1954
) all by
Jensen (1979)
. However,
Jensen (1979)
also undertook a number of synonimisations, specifically:
1.
Laimella filipjevi
nom. nov.
, pro
Laimella longicaudata
, syn.
Sabatieria longicaudata
Filipjev 1922
.
2.
L. longicauda
Cobb 1920
, syn.
L. filicaudata
Ward 1974
.
Laimella filipjevi
has been recently re-examined by
Tchesunov (2000)
who additionally recorded the species in the White Sea. However, the current authors believe that the reasons given to refer
L. filicaudata
to the status of junior synonym of
L. longicauda
are not valid: The description of
L. filicaudata
and the differences listed therein between this species and
L. longicaudata
are well defined (
Ward 1974
). Namely, relative tail length (11.2 vs 17.7 abd,
L. filicauda
and
L. longicauda
respectively), proportion of tail cylindrical (81 % vs 66 %) and relative lengths of the cephalic setae (R2:R3 = 1:3 vs 1:4).
Laimella filicaudata
Ward, 1974
is therefore reinstated here.
Published descriptions of these now eight known species of
Laimella
differ in the morphological characters considered of note, but reviewing these species the relative body proportions, including the de Man’s ratios, are particularly important. Therefore Table 1 presents a comprehensive comparison of the morphometric measurements of these species and
Table 2
provides the calculated body proportions, such as de Man's ratios. Where measurements were not presented in the original publications they are supplemented by measurements made by the authors from the original published figures where possible.