Biodiversity of marine planarians revisited (Platyhelminthes, Tricladida, Maricola)
Author
Sluys, Ronald
Author
Kawakatsu, Masaharu
text
Journal of Natural History
2005
2005-02-28
39
6
445
467
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930410001671309
journal article
10.1080/00222930410001671309
1464-5262
5221453
Uteriporus pacificus
?
Sluys, 1989
(
Figures 29, 30
)
Comparative discussion
Poljakova (1991)
mentioned a presumably new species of
Uteriporus
from the Avachinska Bay and the
Gulf
of Kronotski, on the east coast of Kamchatka, and from the Komandorskyi Archipelago, namely
Uteriporus
sp. n.
The preserved specimens measured 5–9×
4 mm
, with rounded front and hind end. Dorsal surface red-brown, ventral surface pale. The posterior gut trunks fuse in the hind end of the body. Testes numerous, distributed between the gut diverticula and occurring throughout the body length. According to
Poljakova (1991)
, the oviducts fuse posterior to the male copulatory apparatus to form a common oviduct, which subsequently gives rise to three ducts (
Figure 29
): two receptacular ducts, opening into the anterior copulatory bursa, and the female genital duct that communicates with the atrium. According to
Poljakova (1991)
, common oviduct and female genital duct are penetrated by shell glands.
In our opinion, Poljakova’s reconstruction of the female copulatory apparatus most likely is not fully correct. In the two species of the genus
Uteriporus
Bergendal, 1890
that have been described up to the present, the posterior, expanded portions of the receptacular ducts do not communicate directly with the female genital duct. The swollen portions of the receptacular ducts only receive a short, narrow branch of the oviduct before the latter communicates with the female genital duct (cf.
Bergendal 1896
: pl. 1, figure 4;
Sluys 1989
: figures 101–104). In her reconstruction,
Poljakova (1991)
may have been misled by
Tomkiewicz and Ball’s (1973)
description of the copulatory apparatus of
U. vulgaris
Bergendal, 1890
, since she bases her description of this species on the account of these workers and reproduces their reconstruction figure of the copulatory complex (incorrectly, Poljakova refers to Ball, 1973). However, Tomkiewicz and Ball’s reconstruction is incorrect in that it describes a direct connection between the expanded portions of the receptacular ducts and the female genital duct, as already noted by
Sluys and Ball (1983)
.
On the basis of
Poljakova’s (1991)
description it is difficult to decide whether her specimens from the Far East represent
U. vulgaris
,
U. pacificus
or a third, new species. For
U. pacificus
a light brown or reddish brown dorsal surface was reported, which is in agreement with the Kamchatkan specimens, while the dorsal body surface of
U. vulgaris
varies from milky white to pale brown. In
U. vulgaris
the posterior sections of the receptacular ducts may be expanded to greater or lesser extent and thus may approach the generally smaller expansions in
U. pacificus
as well as those reported by
Poljakova (1991)
for the Russian animals. According to
Sluys (1989)
, diagnostic features for
U. pacificus
are the testes occupying the entire dorso-ventral space (contrasting with the ventral follicles in
U. vulgaris
), and the absence of an anterior copulatory bursa (contrasting with the welldeveloped bursa in
U. vulgaris
). Unfortunately,
Poljakova (1991)
does not describe the vertical dimension of the testes, but a photomicrograph of a histological section (her figure 16A) seems to suggest that a testis follicle extends considerably towards the dorsal body surface. In
U. pacificus
the receptacular ducts fuse to form a common duct that opens to the exterior, whereas in
U. vulgaris
they open into an anterior bursa that subsequently opens to the outside. It must be noted that re-examination of the
type
material of
U. pacificus
revealed that the receptacular ducts do not merely fuse to form a common duct but expand before uniting and/or open into a small expansion (
Figure 30
). In the Russian specimens there seems to be an anterior bursa, which is suggested in Poljakova’s reconstruction drawing (
Figure 29
) but also in a series of photomicrographs of serial sections (her figure 17). However, it must be noted that her reconstruction is not drawn to scale and that the photomicrographs show a distinct duct leading to the second, anterior gonopore. Such a duct is present in
U. pacificus
, whereas in
U. vulgaris
there is only a short and shallow opening of the anterior bursa to the exterior (cf.
Bergendal 1896
: pl. 4, figure 32;
Sluys 1989
: pl. 4, figure F).
Figure 31. Map of species richness on an equal area grid map from the Worldmap program. Maximum richness shown in black and minimum in light grey, with intermediate scores grouped into grey-scale classes of approximately equal numbers of grid cells. Numbers within cells denote number of species recorded within that grid cell.
Although we do not consider it to be impossible that an Atlantic species, like
U. vulgaris
, also occurs on the coasts of the Bering Sea, we do here attribute Poljakova’s animals to the species
U. pacificus
, albeit with some reservations in view of the absence of more detailed anatomical information. This record considerably extends the range of
U. pacificus
since the species was originally recorded for the coast of
British Columbia
,
Canada
(
Sluys 1989
).