A phylogenetic analysis and systematic revision of the cryptobranch dorids (Mollusca, Nudibranchia, Anthobranchia)
Author
Valdés, Ángel
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2002
2002-12-31
136
4
535
636
https://academic.oup.com/zoolinnean/article-lookup/doi/10.1046/j.1096-3642.2002.00039.x
journal article
5419
10.1046/j.1096-3642.2002.00039.x
8acc9095-eaff-47d7-b3da-91b6c2fb636e
0024-4082
4634200
GENUS
DISCODORIS
BERGH, 1877
Discodoris
Bergh, 1877a: 518
. Type species:
Discodoris boholiensis
Bergh, 1877
, by subsequent designation by
O’Donoghue (1926)
.
Fracassa
Bergh, 1878a: 598
. Type species:
Fracassa zibethina
Bergh, 1878
, by monotypy,
syn. nov.
Erythrodoris
Pruvot-Fol, 1933: 133
. Type species:
Erythrodoris dollfusi
Pruvot-Fol, 1933
, by monotypy,
syn. nov.
Tayuva
Marcus & Marcus, 1967b: 191–192
. Type species:
Tayuva ketos
Ev. Marcus & Er.
Marcus, 1967
, by original designation,
syn. nov.
Diagnosis
Dorsum covered with simple tubercles, stiffened by integumentary spicules, which occasionally protrude from the dorsal surface in an irregular fashion. Head with two conical oral tentacles. Anterior border of the foot grooved and notched. Labial cuticle armature with rodlets. Radula composed of simple, hamate teeth. The outermost teeth may be simple or denticulate. Reproductive system with a flattened, granular prostate, having two well differentiated regions. Penis and vagina devoid of hooks. Vestibular or accessory glands absent.
Remarks
Bergh (1877b)
introduced the genus
Discodoris
based on
Doris granulata
Ehrenberg, 1831
,
Doris crucis
Mörch, 1863
,
Doris pardalis
Alder & Hancock, 1864
,
Doris concinna
Alder & Hancock, 1864
,
Doris fragilis
Alder & Hancock, 1864
, and eight hitherto undescribed species:
Discodoris boholiensis
,
D. meta
,
D. cebuensis
,
D. notha
,
D. muta
,
D. modesta
and
D. schmeltziana
.
Bergh (1877a)
described these species, and at the same time reproduced the original description of the genus
Discodoris
.
O’Donoghue (1926)
subsequently designated
Discodoris boholiensis
Bergh, 1877
as the
type
species.
Bergh’s (1877a)
paper was published in
December 1877
(see
Winckworth, 1946
), whereas the date of publication of
Bergh (1877b)
is unspecified. According to Article 21.3 (
ICZN, 1999
), as the exact day of publication is not specified for any of these papers, and one of them was published in December, the date of publication of both papers is determined to be the last day of 1877. If
Bergh’s (1877b)
paper is selected to be the original description of the genus,
D. boholiensis
is not eligible to be the
type
species (it was undescribed). Therefore, acting as First Reviser (
ICZN, 1999
: Article 24), I select
Bergh’s (1877a)
paper as the original description of the genus; thus
D. boholiensis
becomes eligible to be the
type
species.
Bergh (1878a)
described the genus
Fracassa
for
Fracassa zibethina
Bergh, 1878
, collected from the
Philippines
. According to
Bergh (1878a)
this genus is characterized by having a quite smooth dorsum, conical oral tentacles, tripinnate branchial leaves, wide foot with the anterior border grooved and notched, presence of jaws, radular teeth simple and hamate, large differentiated prostate and penis unarmed. Re-examination of the
holotype
of
Fracassa zibethina
revealed that the dorsum of this species is covered with small, rounded simple tubercles. All these characteristics are also present in the genus
Discodoris
, for which
Fracassa
is a synonym.
Pruvot-Fol (1933)
described the genus
Erythrodoris
based on
Erythrodoris dollfusi
Pruvot-Fol, 1933
, characterized by having a labial cuticle with articulated plates, elongated body and unarmed penis. These features of
Erythrodoris
are also present in
Discodoris
, and these names are regarded as synonyms. It is impossible to determine the identity of
Erythrodoris dollfusi
Pruvot-Fol, 1933
based on the original description and the
type
material is probably lost.
Marcus & Marcus (1967b)
introduced the new genus
Tayuva
for
Tayuva ketos
Ev. Marcus & Er.
Marcus, 1967
. The diagnosis of
Tayuva
included the following characteristics: pointed tentacles, labial plates with rodlets, hook-shaped radular teeth, stout penial papilla, large vestibule (atrium) stiffened by spicules and lodging the penial papilla and the vaginal aperture, nidamental opening independent from that of the atrium. This structure of the genital opening was considered ‘aberrant’ by
Marcus & Marcus (1967b)
and they could not find another genus that could ‘receive’ that species. In fact, this anatomical arrangement is present in all species of cryptobranch dorids. The combination of the characters described above and simple dorsal tubercles indicates that
Tayuva ketos
clearly belongs to the genus
Discodoris
; thus
Tayuva
is a junior synonym of
Discodoris
.