taxonID	type	description	language	source
6B1787E67C75AB566FB1FF28DE14FE30.taxon	description	Habitus The specimens of Falcidens vasconiensis used in this study were 1.35 – 4.85 mm long and white or transparent in vivo, in some cases brownish due to the alimentary tract (Figure 1). After fixation in 70 % ethanol, their colours are seldom altered. They have five body regions: anterium, neck, trunk, tail and tassel (Figure 1 A), differing by their morphology and the type of sclerites. The neck is delimited by two constrictions: one separating it from the anterium, the other one from the trunk. The specimens have a wide trunk and a tapering tail with very variable length, between a quarter and three quarters of the total length of the specimen (Figure 1 B – E). The pallial cavity bears two ctenidia. Buccal shield The buccal shield sometimes is difficult to distinguish in fixed specimens as the anterior part often contracts during fixation. In the specimens studied, the buccal shield (Figure 2 A, B) appears circular but really is horseshoe-shaped. It flanks the mouth opening laterally but is not closed preorally. The mouth is situated within a cleft formed by the flanks of the buccal shield; the cleft is three quarters as long as the shield diameter. The shield has a gland associated with it. Sclerites The scales are adpressed to the mantle and arranged in parallel to the longitudinal axis along the whole body (Figure 2 C), but occasionally they may be perpendicular to the mantle in the neck region (Figure 2 D). Each body region exhibits typical scales (Figure 3). In the anterior region, the scales are small (30 – 40 μm long × 10 – 15 μm wide), oval, flat, with two longitudinal grooves (Figure 3 A); these scales have two variants in the posterior part of the region: in the first variant, every groove has a small medial keel from the proximal end to the central area (Figure 3 B); in the second, the distal end of the scale is more pointed (Figure 3 C). The scales are larger in the neck (60 – 80 μm × 40 – 50 μm), triangular, flat, with a strengthened margin; they have a medial longitudinal keel narrowing from the proximal to the apical region and one or two shorter lateral keels from the base to the medial part of the scale (Figure 3 D, E). There are large scales in the trunk (70 – 100 μm × 25 – 50 μm), sagittiform, flat, with a more or less clear waist and a strengthened margin; they may occasionally exhibit a basal notch and very small wings on the base and they have a medial longitudinal keel, which is wider on the distal end, and one to three shorter lateral keels (Figure 3 F – J). Scales of the tail are similar to those described for the trunk, except for an additional three types of scales in their posterior part: lanceolate and flat scales (80 – 90 μm × 15 – 25 μm) with two longitudinal grooves and a medial keel (Figure 3 K), smaller, lanceolate and flat scales (50 – 65 μm × 10 – 20 μm) with a large central groove and two short striations extending from the base (Figure 3 L), and sagittiform, flat and wide scales (55 – 65 μm × 20 – 30 μm) with several short proximal striations (Figure 3 M). The tassel bears long acicular sclerites (100 – 200 μm × 5 – 20 μm); the longest are slightly flattened and exhibit two proximal longitudinal grooves (Figure 3 N, O). Internal anatomy Digestive system The mouth is in an anteroventral position, flanked by the buccal shield. The pharynx is short and the radular sac with radula is situated in its posterior end (Figures 4, 5 A, B). The radula (Figure 5 C, D) shows the typical structure of the genus, made up of a pair of sickle-shaped teeth with sclerotized tips and united at the base by a radular symphysis attached to the cone, two pairs of lateral supports of different sizes with sclerotized distal tips and two support muscles. It is lacking a central plate. The pharynx leads into a short oesophagus (Figures 4, 5 A, B). The pharynx walls and especially the oesophagus walls are thick and glandular (Figure 5 E, F). The oesophagus opens into a wide midgut that is divided posteriorly into a long and narrow intestine and a very wide and large midgut sac (Figures 4, 5 A, B). The posterior end of the midgut sac coincides with the area where the trunk merges with the tail. The intestine is located dorsally, however slightly displaced to the right in the specimen used for reconstruction; the anus is placed between the bases of the ctenidia in the pallial cavity. Nervous system The cerebral ganglion is located in a dorsoanterior position (Figures 4, 6); frontally to this, there is a cerebral complex formed by the union of three pairs of precerebral ganglia, which clearly separate as they extend towards the anterior part (Figure 6). These precerebral ganglia innervate the buccal shield, the gland associated with it, and the oral region. The unpaired lobe found in the posterior part of the brain of other species of the genus is lacking. The anterior part of the cerebral ganglion releases the pairs of ventral, lateral and buccal connectives (Figure 6), which originate close to each other and separate progressively. The buccal connectives end in the buccal ganglia, which are located at both sides of the radular sac. The ventral and lateral connectives continue along the ventral and lateral cords, which are connected by ventral commissures and lateroventral connectives. Both ventral and both lateral cords extend along the animal and unite in the posterior region, forming a ganglion and the suprarectal commissure; from here they innervate the pair of ctenidia and the dorsoterminal sense organ, which is located in a long groove dorsal to the pallial cavity.	en	Señarís, Marcos P., García-Álvarez, Oscar, Urgorri, Victoriano (2014): Morphology of Falcidens vasconiensis (Mollusca, Caudofoveata, Chaetodermatidae), including a 3 D reconstruction of the internal anatomy. Journal of Natural History 48 (45 - 48): 2871-2884, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2014.958114, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2014.958114
