Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Type: Article
Published: 2009-04-20
Page range: 56–68
Abstract views: 49
PDF downloaded: 1

A review of the genus Aponema Jensen, 1978 (Nematoda: Microlaimidae) with description of three new species

Department of Invertebrate Zoology, Faculty of Biology, Moscow State University, Moscow 119992, Russia
P.P.Shirshov Institute of Oceanology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 36, Nakhimov Prospect, Moscow 117997, Russia Actual address: Abt. DZMB, Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg, Südstrand 44, 26382 Wilhelmshaven, Germany
Nematoda Microlaimidae Aponema taxonomy

Abstract

The taxonomy of the genus Aponema Jensen, 1978 is discussed. An emended diagnosis and identification keys at species level are provided. Two Aponema species – A. decramerae and A. mnazi are transferred from the genus Aponema to Microlaimus because of the presence of two testes. One known Microlaimus species, Microlaimus nanus Blome, 1982, is transferred from the genus Microlaimus to Aponema because of the presence of a single testis in males. Three new Aponema species are described. A. bathyalis sp. n. is characterized by a small body, smooth or slightly transversely striated cuticle, amphids with rod-like protruding corpus gelatum, almost round pharyngeal bulb and presence of three papilliform precloacal supplements in males. A. bathyalis is similar to A. nympha and A. nanum but differs from the former by the position of amphidial fovea (at about 1.5 head diameters from anterior end vs less than 0.7 head diameters from anterior in A. nympha) and from the latter by the presence of a gubernaculum, a protruding corpus gelatum from the amphidial fovea and by the shorter tail (c = 8.2–11.3 vs c = 5.8–7.8). A. minutissima sp. n. is characterized by a very small slender body, transversely striated cuticle, roundish amphidial fovea, spherical pharyngeal bulb, presence of short somatic setae, large spermatozoa, and a weakly developed copulatory apparatus without gubernaculum. It differs from the other Aponema species by the small body size (0.20–0.43 mm). It mostly resembles A. bathyalis sp. n. but differs by smaller size, slightly striated cuticle and absence of a gubernaculum. A. westindicum sp. n. is characterized by a larger body, annulated cuticle, discernible dorsal tooth, pyriform pharyngeal bulb and conical tail. It differs from A. nanum (Blome, 1982) by longer body size and structure of buccal cavity. All Aponema species described in this paper are characterized by monorchic males without gubernacular apophyses, females with two outstretched ovaries and a conical tail.

References

  1. Gerlach, S. A. & Riemann, F. (1973, 1974) The Bremerhaven Checklist of Aquatic Nematodes. Veröffentlichungen des Instituts für Meeresforschung in Bremerhaven, Supplement 4, Heft 1–2, 736 pp.

    Jensen, P. (1978) Revision of Microlaimidae, erection of Molgolaimidae fam. n., and remarks on the systematic position of Paramicrolaimus (Nematoda, Desmodorida). Zoologica Scripta, 7, 160–173.

    Lorenzen, S. (1973) Freilebende Meeresnematoden aus dem Sublitoral der Nordsee und der Kieler Bucht. Veröffentlichungen des Instituts für Meeresforschung in Bremerhaven, 14, 103–130.

    Lorenzen, S. (1994) The phylogenetic systematics of freeliving marine nematodes. Ray Society , London, 383 pp.

    Muthumbi, A.W. & Vincx, M. (1999) Microlaimidae (Microlaimoidea: Nematoda) from the Indian Ocean: description of nine new and known species. Hydrobiologia, 397, 39–58.

    Pastor de Ward, C. (1980) Aponema papillatum sp. nov., nueva especie de nematode marino de Puerto Deseado. Contribucion Cientifica, Centro de Investigación de Biologỉa Marỉna (CIBIMA), 160, 3–11.

    Seinhorst, J.W. (1959) A rapid method for the transfer of nematodes from fixative to anhydrous glycerin. Nematologica 4, 67–69.

    Stewart, A.C. & Nicholas, W.L. (1987) Acanthomicrolaimus jenseni n. g., n. sp. (Nematoda: Microlaimidae) from marine sand. Cahiers de Biologie marin, 28, 91–96.

    Turpeenniemi, T.A. (1997) Four new nematode species from the Bothnian Bay, Northern Baltic Sea, with a redescription of Microlaimus globiceps de Man, 1880 (Nematoda). Nematologica, 43, 31–58.

    Wieser W. (1954) Free-living marine nematodes. II. Chromadoroidea. Acta University of Lund (N.F. 2), 50 (16), 1–148