Deep-water Ascidiacea from the Sea of Japan

Zootaxa ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 3245 (1) ◽  
pp. 63 ◽  
Author(s):  
KAREN SANAMYAN ◽  
NADYA SANAMYAN

Four solitary ascidians are recorded in the deep-water material from the Sea of Japan. Two species, Agnezia orthenteronand Pelonaia bursaria are recorded for the first time since original descriptions, a third species, Styela squamosa, is awidely distributed deep-water species not known previously from the Sea of Japan. A fourth species was identified only to a genus level.

Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4834 (3) ◽  
pp. 407-424
Author(s):  
ARTHUR ANKER ◽  
LAURE CORBARI

A new genus and species in the caridean shrimp family Palaemonidae is described based on three type specimens collected at a depth range of 208–385 m off Guadeloupe, French Antilles. Zoukaris festivus gen. et sp. nov. shares many characters with several western Atlantic deep-water species currently assigned to Periclimenes Costa, 1844, as well as with the monotypic western Atlantic genus Diapontonia Bruce, 1986 and the Indo-West Pacific genus Echinopericlimenes Marin & Chan, 2014. Zoukaris gen. nov. can be separated from all of them by a unique combination of morphological features, especially the configuration of the dactylus of the ambulatory pereiopods. In addition, Periclimenes milleri Bruce, 1986 is recorded from the French Antilles based on a single specimen, also from Guadeloupe; its colour pattern is illustrated for the first time. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4565 (2) ◽  
pp. 201 ◽  
Author(s):  
ZHIBIN GAN ◽  
XINZHENG LI

Four deep-water species of stalked barnacles were collected by the manned submersibles Jiaolong and Shenhaiyongshi during recent expeditions. Trianguloscalpellum regium (Wyville-Thomson, 1873), collected from the Mariana Trench at a depth of 5,462 m, represents a new distribution record. Glyptelasma gigas (Annandale, 1916), Poecilasma litum Pilsbry, 1907 and Poecilasma obliqua Hoek, 1907, collected from the South China Sea, are recorded for the first time from a mud volcano environment. Detailed photographs of these four species are presented and their partial sequences of 16S rRNA and mt COI genes are provided. 


2011 ◽  
Vol 91 (7) ◽  
pp. 1561-1566 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno Garcia Andrade ◽  
Paulo Márcio Santos Costa ◽  
Alexandre Dias Pimenta

The genus Opaliopsis from Brazil is revised based on three deep-water species. Opaliopsis atlantis (Clench & Turner, 1952) is confirmed as occurring in north-eastern and south-eastern localities. Opaliopsis opalina (Dall, 1927) is reported for the first time in the south-western Atlantic. A new species, Opaliopsis cearense, is described from the north-eastern Brazilian coast, and is distinguished by its large number of fine spiral cords per teleoconch whorl.


Zootaxa ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 1866 (1) ◽  
pp. 187 ◽  
Author(s):  
ENRICO SCHWABE ◽  
WINFRIED ENGL

Among benthic mollusc samples from the deep Southern Atlantic Ocean collected during various expeditions of the German Research Vessel Polarstern were several representatives of the genus Brookula, of which four new deep water records are presented herein. Two of the species, B. bohni sp. nov. and B. charleenae sp. nov. are described and differences to congeners are given. For Brookula argentina (Zelaya, Absalão & Pimenta, 2006) and B. exquisita Clarke, 1961 range extensions are provided. The problematic use of the genus Benthobrookula instead of the genus Brookula is discussed and the use of the genus name Benthobrookula is discouraged until more detailed data on morphology and anatomy are available. For the first time the soft part gross morphology of Brookula pfefferi Powell, 1951 has been investigated and illustrated. Brookula decussata (Pelseneer, 1903) has to be regarded as a potential senior synonym of B. pfefferi. Examination of the type material has shown that B. antarctica Dell, 1990 does not differ from B. strebeli Powell, 1951 and the former becomes a junior synonym of B. strebeli. Morphometric data for all Brookula species from the Subantarctic and Antarctic waters of the Southern Atlantic Ocean are also provided, allowing a total of nine species to be included in this sector.


1993 ◽  
Vol 71 (5) ◽  
pp. 997-1002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale R. Calder

Bougainvillia aberrans n.sp. is described from Bermuda in the western North Atlantic Ocean. Specimens were collected at a depth of 150 fathoms (274 m) from the polypropylene buoy line of a crab trap. The hydroid colony of B. aberrans is erect, with a polysiphonic hydrocaulus, a smooth to somewhat wrinkled perisarc, hydranths having a maximum of about 16 tentacles, and medusa buds arising only from hydranth pedicels. Medusae liberated in the laboratory from these hydroids differ from all other known species of the genus in having a long, spindle-shaped manubrium, lacking oral tentacles, having marginal tentacles reduced to mere stubs, and being very short-lived (surviving for a few hours at most). Gonads develop in medusa buds while they are still attached to the hydroids, and gametes are shed either prior to liberation of the medusae or shortly thereafter. The eggs are surrounded by an envelope bearing nematocysts (heterotrichous microbasic euryteles). The cnidome of both hydroid and medusa stages consists of desmonemes and heterotrichous microbasic euryteles. The diagnosis of the genus Bougainvillia is modified to accommodate this new deep-water species.


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