Three new species of the genus Dendronotus from Japan and Russia (Mollusca, Nudibranchia)
Author
Martynov, Alexander
Author
Fujiwara, Yoshihiro
Author
Tsuchida, Shinji
Author
Nakano, Rie
Author
Sanamyan, Nadezhda
Author
Sanamyan, Karen
Author
Fletcher, Karin
Author
Korshunova, Tatiana
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-03-04
4747
3
495
513
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4747.3.4
9a8e166e-b20d-4c78-b26e-5175b2a1e10b
1175-5326
3696233
357D0749-89D1-4DE4-8BDE-A32F40C4EF38
Dendronotus bathyvela
sp. nov.
(
Figures 4
,
5C
)
http://zoobank.org/
28A36F6D-C221-4C34-B40A-631E3129B943
Type material.
Holotype
, NSMT-Mo 94455, 45 mm long preserved, dissected,
Japan
,
Tohoku
, off
Ofunato
,
Iwate Prefecture
,
38° 53.5’ N
142° 2.8’ E
,
18.10.2007
, depth
303–307 m
, collector
K. Hasegawa
, H. Komatsu
.
Three
paratypes
, NSMT-Mo 94450, 25, 26, 27 mm long (preserved),
Japan
,
Tohoku
, off
Shimokita Peninsula
,
Aomori Prefecture
,
41° 0.5’ N
141° 2.0’ E
,
10.10.2006
, depth 511–
510 m
, collector
T
. Kuramochi,
T
. Fujita
.
Paratype
, NSMT-
Mo
94452, 35 mm long (preserved),
Japan
,
Tohoku
, off
Kinkazan
,
Miyagi Prefecture
,
38° 23.2’ N
141° 58.2’ E
,
04.11.2006
, depth
305–309 m
, collector
H. Komatsu.
Paratype
, NSMT-Mo 93078, 35 mm long (preserved),
Japan
,
Tohoku
, off
Kesennuma
,
Miyagi Prefecture
,
38° 4.6’ N
141° 55.3’ E
,
19.11.2005
, depth
249 m
, collector
T
.
Fujita, H
. Saito
.
Paratype
, NSMT-Mo 93080, 21 mm long (preserved),
Japan
,
Tohoku
, off
Kesennuma
,
Miyagi Prefecture
,
38° 4.2’ N
141° 58.9’ E
,
19.11.2005
, depth
306–309 m
, collector
T
.
Fujita, H
. Saito
.
Paratype
, NSMT-Mo 93061, 14 mm long (preserved),
Japan
,
Tohoku
, off
Kinkazan
,
Miyagi Prefecture
,
38° 2.3’ N
142° 2.1’ E
,
17.11.2005
, depth 382–
376 m
, collector
T
.
Fujita, H
. Saito
.
Type
locality.
Japan
, off the
Pacific
coast of
Northern Honshu
.
Etymology.
From Ancient Greek βάθος (deep sea) + velum (veil) in reference to the deepest record so far known of this wide-bodied
Dendronotus
species with a broad oral veil.
Diagnosis.
Body broad, 6–7 pairs dorsolateral appendages, colour dull reddish-brownish with numerous white spots, central tooth with well-defined denticles and furrows, vas deferens moderate in length, penis long, very thin.
Description.
Body broad, up to
45 mm
in length (
Fig. 4
A–D), 10–15 long branched appendages of oral veil, 5 appendages of rhinophoral stalks, 15–25 rhinophoral lamellae, branched rhinophoral lateral papilla absent, 6–7 pairs dorsolateral appendages (including smallest posterior ones), ca. 50–70 lip papillae. Dorsolateral appendages with moderate primary stalk, moderately branched secondary branches, and elongated tertiary branches (
Fig. 4
A–D). Reproductive and anal openings placed laterally on right side. General colour dull reddish-brownish with numerous distinct opaque white dots on notum, tips of lateral appendages, oral appendages (
Fig. 4 D
).
The jaws are ovoid with strong dorsal processes, denticles present (
Fig. 4
E–F). Masticatory processes apparently bear ca 60 denticles. Radula formula is 36 × 1–13.1.13–1 (
paratype
21 mm
), 41 × 1–12.1.12–1 (
paratype
27 mm
), 37 × 1–13.1.13–1 (
paratype
35 mm
), 36 × 1–14.1.14–1 (
holotype
45 mm
). Central tooth with broad, relatively low cusp, strongly denticulated and bearing up to over 30–35 distinct to small denticles (
Fig. 4G
). Lateral teeth are long, slightly curved, commonly completely smooth or bearing few (up to 2) weak denticles (
Fig. 4H
).
Reproductive system triaulic (
Fig. 5C
), ampulla folded several times (
Fig. 5C
, am), prostate consisting of 21–25 alveolar glands (
Fig. 5C
, pr), vas deferens long (
Fig. 5C
, vd) expanding to elongate penial sheath (
Fig. 5C
, psh), penis very long, thin (
Fig. 5C, p
), vagina very long and considerably twisted (
Fig. 5C
, vg), bursa copulatrix is large, rounded, and elongated (
Fig. 5C
, bc) with small seminal receptaculum placed distally (
Fig. 5C
, rs).
Biology.
Inhabits sand and muddy substrates with stones.
Distribution.
Presently known only off the Pacific coast of Northern Honshu (
Japan
), at depths of
249–
510 m
.
Remarks.
According to the morphological data
Dendronotus
bathyvela
sp. nov.
clearly belongs to the group of wide-bodied
Dendronotus
species, which includes only a few species, i.e.
D. patricki
,
D. robustus
and
D. velifer
.
Because all available
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
were formalin-fixed, this prevented us from including this species in the molecular phylogenetic analysis. However, the present morphological data are enough to distinguish
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
from all other wide-bodied species of the genus
Dendronotus
. The abyssal NE Pacific species,
D. patricki
,
readily differs from the bathyal NW Pacific
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
by its uniform pinkish colouration (white pig- ment presents only on apices of dorsolateral and velar appendages, but not on the body) and details of the radula (
Stout
et al.,
2011
). Particularly, in
D. patricki
the number of lateral teeth is up to eight, whereas in
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
—up to 14. The number of lateral denticles on the central teeth is about
20 in
D. patricki
, whereas in
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
there are over 30 denticles. Previously,
D. robustus
had been recorded from the Sea of
Japan
and the Pacific side of Honshu (
Roginskaya 1997
;
Hasegawa 2009
). However, the true
D. robustus
from the shallow waters of the North Atlantic (see
Lundin
et al.
2017
) considerably differs from the North Pacific material in the details of colouration and the radula. For a long time,
D. velifer
from Northern Europe and the Arctic was also confused with
D. robustus
, however recently it was shown that this is a distinct species, according to both morphological and molecular data (
Lundin
et al.
2017
). The following differences between
D. velifer
and
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
are: 1) Appendages of the oral veil in living specimens of
D. velifer
are distinctly shorter than in living
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 4
A–D); 2) Large specimens of
D. velifer
commonly bear not more than four main dorsolateral appendages (an exceptionally large specimen was reported as having up to five main appendages plus a sixth smaller one), whereas even moderately sized
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
possess up to six main dorsolateral appendages (plus a seventh smaller one); 3) Colouration of living specimens of
D. velifer
is bright reddish, whereas
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
is dull reddish-brownish (
Fig. 4D
); 4) Number of denticles on the central teeth of
D. velifer
is commonly less than 30, whereas in
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
it reaches over 30; 5) Number of radular rows in
D. velifer
is up to 36, whereas in
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
the number of rows is up to 41 and more. It is remarkable that the North Atlantic shallowwater species
D. robustus
has up to seven dorsolateral appendages, like the NW Pacific shelf to bathyal new species
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
, but not like the true predominantly Arctic shelf species
D. velifer
, which commonly has only four dorsolateral appendages. This feature readily distinguishes
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
from
D. velifer
. At the same time,
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
is well-distinguished from
D. robustus
by the shape of the central radula and external colouration. Bathymetrically
D. velifer
is known from relatively shallow waters with a range commonly ca.
15–230 m
, whereas
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
inhabits the low part of the continental shelf (not shallower than
249 m
) to upper bathyal (
510 m
) depths. True North Atlantic
D. robustus
is in turn exclusively a shallow water species and was not recorded deeper than
20–30 m
(see
Lundin
et al.
2017
). This set of several complex morphological and ecological features allow us to distinguish
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
from
D. velifer
. Recently a deep-sea (but not wide-bodied) species,
D. claguei,
was described (
Valdés
et al.
2018
) off the NE Pacific coast.
D. claguei
fundamentally differs from
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
by its uniform translucent white colour, elongate body shape, radular details, and in addition
D. claguei
inhabits upper abyssal depths (
2369 m
) and not shelf to upper bathyal depths (
249–510 m
) as
D.
bathyvela
sp. nov.
does. In addition, the NE Pacific shallow-water species
D. albopunctatus
Robilliard, 1972
is somewhat similar to the wide-bodied species group of the genus
Dendronotus
, but has fewer, and longer, oral veil appendages, lacks lip papilla and considerably differs by the presence of distinct denticulation on the lateral teeth of the radula (
Robilliard, 1972
).