Four palaeonemerteans (Nemertea: Anopla) from a tidal flat in middle Honshu, Japan
Author
Kajihara, Hiroshi
text
Zootaxa
2006
2005-03-30
1163
1
47
journal article
27091
10.5281/zenodo.2645302
0aaba6ec-9b0d-49be-8ffa-36aedb1720b2
1175-5326
2645302
95608DB2-F9ED-4B68-8E9E-93EE84887227
Family
Tubulanidae Bürger, 1904 (1874)
Carinellidae McIntosh, 1874: 137
.
Tubulanidae
Bürger, 1904a
: 10
;
Bürger,
1897
–1907: 401, 402, 405.
Nomenclatural remarks
In response to
Melville’s (1986)
proposal, ICZN (1988) ruled under Article 40b of the third edition of the Code (ICZN 1985) that the name
Tubulanidae
has precedence over, but takes the date of, its senior subjective synonym
Carinellidae
. In his proposal,
Melville (1986)
stated that the name
Carinella trilineata
“has been regarded as a synonym of
Tubulanus polymorphus
since at least 1905”, referring to
Bürger (
1897
–1907), and that the family
Tubulanidae
“should be cited with the date ‘1905 (1874)’”. The ICZN’s ruling, basically following Melville’s proposal, states that “the name
Tubulanidae Bürger, 1905 (1874)
... is hereby placed on the Official List of FamilyGroup Names in Zoology”.
Bürger’s (
1897
–1907
) book was published in six different parts, and
Melville (1986)
was correct in that the relevant part about the replacement of
Carinellidae
with
Tubulanidae
was published in 1905 (pp. 401, 402, 405). However, the name
Tubulanidae
had already appeared prior to
1905 in
Bürger (1904a)
. Thus the family name should be cited as “
Tubulanidae Bürger, 1904 (1874)
”, with the date of priority being enclosed in parentheses in accordance with Recommendation 40A of the Code (ICZN 1985, 1999).
Genus
Carinina
Hubrecht, 1885
Carinina
Hubrecht, 1885
: 830
.
Procarinina
Bergendal, 1902a
: 422
, synonymised by
Hylbom (1957)
.
Type
species
Carinina grata
Hubrecht, 1887
, by monotypic designation; first mentioned in
Hubrecht (1885)
but with no specific epithet given.
Diagnosis
Brain and lateral nerve cords situated in epidermis; bodywall musculature consisting of outer circular, diagonal (occasionally), longitudinal, and inner circular muscle layers; longitudinal muscle plate present between rhynchocoel and alimentary canal; rhynchocoel wall consisting only of circular muscle layer in many species, but is occasionally composed of thin inner longitudinal muscle layer and outer layer of interwoven longitudinal and circular muscle fibres; excretory organs with glandlike anterior parts in close connection with lateral blood vessels, nephridial canals running posteriorly from the glandlike portions inside bodywall inner circular muscle layer, at their rear turning at right angles towards body surface to open at an excretory pore; two proboscis nerves extend forward from ventral commissure of brain, entering rhynchodaeum in tip of head; no eyes.