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1.
Zootaxa ; 3994(3): 411-24, 2015 Aug 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26250281

RESUMO

Uktena riparia n. gen., n. sp. has been collected in hyporheic habitats at several sites in North Carolina, southeastern USA. The genus is defined by unusual characters related to reproductive structures, including the formation of encapsulated spermatophores for sperm transfer and large bundles of genital chaetae, both previously unknown in the Lumbriculidae. The simultaneous occurrence of both spermatophores and spermathecae is rare in the microdrile oligochaetes. Uktena spermatophores appear more similar to those reported in leeches than to those in other microdrile oligochaete families. Possible synapomorphies associating Uktena with the genera Kincaidiana and Guestphalinus include a filiform, ringed proboscis, a forward shift of reproductive organs relative to the usual position in the family, and spermathecae in the atrial segment. The new species adds to the already diverse, endemic lumbriculid fauna of the North Carolina Sandhills ecoregion.


Assuntos
Oligoquetos/classificação , Espermatogônias/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Distribuição Animal , Estruturas Animais/anatomia & histologia , Estruturas Animais/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Animais , Tamanho Corporal , Ecossistema , Feminino , Masculino , Oligoquetos/anatomia & histologia , Oligoquetos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Tamanho do Órgão
2.
Zookeys ; (451): 1-32, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25493045

RESUMO

Three new species of Lumbriculidae were collected from floodplain seeps and small streams in southeastern North America. Some of these habitats are naturally acidic. Sylphellapuccoon gen. n., sp. n. has prosoporous male ducts in X-XI, and spermathecae in XII-XIII. Muscular, spherical atrial ampullae and acuminate penial sheaths distinguish this monotypic new genus from other lumbriculid genera having similar arrangements of reproductive organs. Cookidriluspocosinus sp. n. resembles its two subterranean, Palearctic congeners in the arrangement of reproductive organs, but is easily distinguished by the position of the spermathecal pores in front of the chaetae in X-XIII. Stylodriluscoreyi sp. n. differs from congeners having simple-pointed chaetae and elongate atria primarily by the structure of the male duct and the large clusters of prostate cells. Streams and wetlands of Southeastern USA have a remarkably high diversity of endemic lumbriculids, and these poorly-known invertebrates should be considered in conservation efforts.

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