identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03B6C56AFFA51A0EFF7EF8BEFE22FE23.text	03B6C56AFFA51A0EFF7EF8BEFE22FE23.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Temnocephala catarinensis Seixas & Amato & Amato & Damborenea 2022	<div><p>Temnocephala catarinensis sp. nov. Seixas, Amato &amp; Damborenea</p> <p>(Figs 1C – 6)</p> <p>Description. Based on 15 specimens collected from A. jarai; 12 specimens mounted in toto (11 adults and 1 juvenile); 1 specimen mounted on stubs for SEM; 2 extracted cirri mounted in Faure: External characteristics. Body (Figs 1C, 3A), without tentacles 980–1817 (1408, 258) long, 820–1350 (1040, 192) wide; adhesive disk ventral, subterminal, partially covered by body 190–474 (317, 82) long, 260–572 (361, 88) wide; disc peduncle 150–300 (219, 61) diameter; ratio between total body length/adhesive disk length 4.4:1. Two dorsolateral, small epidermal ‘excretory’ syncytial plates (EPs), almost triangular; external margin in half circumference, sometimes reaching laterally the margin of body (Fig. 2A); left plate 204 (n = 1) long, 200 (n = 1) wide; right plate 254 (n = 1) long, 154 (n = 1) wide; ratio between total body length, without tentacles/length of EPs 6.9: 1; ratio between total body width/width of the EPs 5:1. Nephridiopore (excretory pore) in the anterior half of the plate near the interior portion of the body (Fig. 2A). Live specimens presented eyespots with red pigmentation. Digestive system. Pharynx 180–280 (223, 32) long, 250–510 (370, 75) wide, small, wider than long with a smaller anterior sphincter (Fig. 3A); and a ‘bow-tie’-shaped intestine (Figs 1C, 3A). Glands. Rhabditogen glands small and numerous, with granular appearance 25–60 (43, n = 10, 9) in diameter, forming bunches (~ 70 cells) in lateral fields of body tending from the base of the lateral tentacles to below the posterior testes (Fig. 1B —black arrow head), ducts inconspicuous. Three pair of Haswell glands (Fig. 3A) in front of the brain transverse band, largest cell diameter 15–75 (42, n = 10, 23). Disc glands 27.5–55 (38, n = 10, 9) in diameter, between adhesive disc and genital complex forming two lateral bunches extending from the posterior testes up to the middle of the back portion of the body (Fig. 1B —white arrow head), including one pair, of large, round and more central paranephrocytes (Fig. 3A), 25–72.5 (60, n = 7, 17) in diameter. Reproductive system. Female. Vitellaria arborescent and slender extending in the limits of the intestine (Figs 1C, 3A); a small and ovoid ovary (Figs 3D, 5A, B), 60–135 (84, 25) long, 65–130 (92, 22) wide; a conspicuous vesicula intermedia (Figs 3D, 4A, B), 12.5–52.5 (34, n = 8, 12) long; a short vagina with a weak muscular wall (Figs 3D, 4A), 15–40 (26, n = 6, 10) long, 25–40 (30, n = 6, 5) maximum width; a single, well-developed and slightly asymmetrical vaginal sphincter (Figs 3D, 5A), 45–60 (52, n = 6, 5) in total diameter; diameter of anterior portion 22.5 (n = 1), diameter of posterior portion 27.5 (n = 1); vesicula resorbens large and usually full of sperm (Figs 3D, 4A, B) 72.5–155 (110, n = 9, 28) long, 112.5–190 (154, n = 9, 29) wide, wall thickness 2.5–10 (8, n = 7, 3); sessile and small eggs fixed on the external surface of the exoskeleton, especially in the chelipeds (Fig. 1A), opercular plates not observed. Male. Four small and ovoid testes (Figs 1C, 3A), located two by two on each side of the body; right anterior testis 110–210 (145, n = 10, 30) long, 50–150 (95, n = 10, 29) wide; right posterior testis 115–330 (181, 60) long, 90–120 (155, n = 10, 44) wide; left anterior testis 100–180 (134, n = 10, 24) long, 60–100 (81, n = 10, 13) wide; left posterior testis 120–310 (166, 52) long, 80–240 (161, 46) wide; long and robust seminal vesicle (Figs 3C, 5C) 87.5–162.5 (127, n = 10, 29) long, 45–100 (65, n = 10, 17) wide; wall thickness 5–10 (7, n = 7, 2); large and wider prostatic bulb with a thin muscular wall (Figs 3C, 5C), 70–125 (99, 18) long, 52.5–75 (64, 8) wide; wall thickness 2.5–17.5 (5, n = 10, 5); small prostatic vesicle with abundant prostatic secretion (Fig. 3C). Cirrus slightly curved (Fig. 5) 187.5–202.5 (195, n = 2, 11) long; shaft 157.5–172.5 (165, n = 2, 11) long, shaft base 80–85 (82.5, n = 2, 3) wide; introvert 30 (n = 2) long, 15–22.5 (19, n = 2, 5) wide at base; maximum introvert width at level of swelling, 20–25 (22.5, n = 2, 3). Introvert swelling with, approximately, 22 longitudinal rows of spines with ~ 10 spines each (Fig. 5E). Introvert has two distinct portions, a proximal one with grooves and no spines and a distal one with small and sturdy spines 3.8–4.8 (4, n = 5, 0.4) (Figs 5I). Ratio between total body length, without tentacles/ total length of cirrus 7: 1; ratio between total length of cirrus/maximum width of shaft’s base 2: 1; ratio between total length of cirrus/total length of introvert 6: 1.</p> <p>Taxonomic summary.</p> <p>Type host. Aegla jarai Bond-Buckup &amp; Buckup, 1994 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Anomura).</p> <p>Type locality. Parque Nacional da Serra do Itajaí, Indaial, Santa Catarina, Brazil.</p> <p>Site of infestation. Adults and juveniles in the branchial chamber and on the body surface, egg laying on the external and ventral surface of the exoskeleton: perioral area, pereiopods, chelipeds and in the first abdominal segments.</p> <p>Additional host and localities. Samastacus spinifrons (Philippi, 1882) (Crustacea, Decapoda, Parastacidae). Lago Lleu-Lleu; Río Donguil; Lago Rupanco; Río Duqueco; and Rio Contaco. All localities in Chile.</p> <p>Helminth specimens deposited. ‘Coleção Helmintológica do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz (CHIOC)’— HOLOTYPE: CHIOC 39480; Paratype: CHIOC 39481; Additional material from S. spinifrons: CHIOC 39482, CHIOC 39483 and CHIOC 39484. “ Colección de Invertebrados, División Zoologia Invertebrados, Museo de La Plata (MLP)”— Paratypes: MLP-He 7721 (two specimens); Additional material from S. spinifrons: MLP-He 7722 and MLP-He 7723 (two specimens).</p> <p>Host specimens deposited. Aegla jarai Bond-Buckup &amp; Buckup, 1994, “Coleção de Crustáceos do Departamento de Zoologia”, UFRGS 4833–4846.</p> <p>Other helminth specimens examined. Temnocephala kingsleyae —“ Coleção de Invertebrados do Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia (INPA)”, Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil: INPA 211 (seven specimens), and “ Colección de Invertebrados, División Zoologia Invertebrados, Museo de La Plata (MLP)”, La Plata, Argentina: MLP-He 2226 (five specimens); Temnocephala mexicana —“ Colección Nacional de Helmintos, Laboratorio de Helmintologia, Instituto de Biología, Universidade Nacional Autónoma de México (CNH-UNAM)”, Ciudad de México, México: 1311 and 1309.</p> <p>Diagnosis. Temnocephalid with an elongated-rounded body; eyespots with red pigmentation; almost triangular EPs with external margin in half circumference, sometimes reaching laterally the margin of body; a small pharynx, wider than long with a smaller anterior sphincter; a ‘bow-tie’-shaped intestine with thin wall and weak-marked septa; one pair of paranephrocytes, central and between the posterior testes; a small vagina with a weak muscular wall; a single, well-developed and slightly asymmetrical vaginal sphincter; a conspicuous vesicula intermedia; a sessile and small eggs fixed on the external surface of the exoskeleton, especially in the chelipeds with a thin subapical filament, opercular plates not observed; long and robust seminal vesicle that opens almost polarly into a large and wider prostatic bulb; four small and ovoid testes, located two by two on each side of the body, anterior testes smaller than the posterior ones; cirrus long and slightly curved (195μm on average), it appears less curved in lateral view; introvert with two distinct portions, a proximal one with grooves and no spines and a distal one with small and sturdy spines.</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B6C56AFFA51A0EFF7EF8BEFE22FE23	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Seixas, Samantha A.;Amato, Suzana B.;Amato, José F. R.;Damborenea, Cristina	Seixas, Samantha A., Amato, Suzana B., Amato, José F. R., Damborenea, Cristina (2022): New species of Temnocephala (Platyhelminthes, Temnocephalidae) ectosymbiont on decapod crustaceans Aegla jarai (Aeglidae) from Brazil and Samastacus spinifrons (Parastacidae) from Chile. Zootaxa 5209 (1): 139-150, DOI: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5209.1.8
