Description of Three New Species of Rhadinorhynchus Lühe, 1911 (Acanthocephala: Rhadinorhynchidae) from Marine Fish off the Pacific Coast of Vietnam

2019 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 528-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Omar M. Amin ◽  
Nataliya Yu. Rubtsova ◽  
Nguyen V. Ha
Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4808 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-250
Author(s):  
ALAN A. MYERS ◽  
JAMES K. LOWRY

The amphipod genus Orchestia is revised. It now includes 10 species of which three are new: O. forchuensis sp. nov. from north-eastern North America and Iceland., O. perezi sp. nov. from Chile and O. tabladoi sp. nov. from Argentina. Orchestia inaequalipes (K.H. Barnard 1951) is reinstated. The type species of the genus, O. gammarellus is redescribed based on material from Fountainstown, Ireland and a neotype is established to stabilize the species. The species was originally described from a garden in Leiden, far from the sea. Its true identity is unknown and no type material exists. Orchestia gammarellus (Pallas, 1776) is shown to be a sibling species group with members in both hemispheres of the temperate Atlantic as well along the Pacific coast of South America. A hypothesis for the establishment of the current distribution of Orchestia species is presented that extends back to the Cretaceous. 


2018 ◽  
Vol 96 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Omar M. Amin ◽  
Richard A. Heckmann ◽  
Nguyen Van Ha

2018 ◽  
Vol 66 (1-1) ◽  
pp. 187 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Taiti ◽  
Giuseppe Montesanto ◽  
José A. Vargas

Abstract: Seven species of terrestrial isopods are recorded from the coasts of the Pacific and Caribbean sides of Costa Rica. Three species (Buchnerillo neotropicalis, Hawaiioscia nicoyaensis and Trichorhina biocellata) are described as new and two species (Tylos niveus and Armadilloniscus cf. caraibicus) are newly recorded from the country. The poorly known species T. niveus is also illustrated. At present the total number of terrestrial isopod species recorded from Costa Rica is 30. Interestingly four typical littoral halophilic species (Ligia baudiniana, Tylos wegeneri, T. niveus and A. cf. caraibicus) are present on both the Pacific coast of Costa Rica and on the coasts of the lands encompassed by the Caribbean Sea. With the sole exception of A. cf. caraibicus, no morphological differences could be detected from the Pacific and Caribbean populations of those species. Rev. Biol. Trop. 66(Suppl. 1): S187-S210. Epub 2018 April 01. 


Diversity ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 161 ◽  
Author(s):  
César Aguilar-Puntriano ◽  
César Ramírez ◽  
Ernesto Castillo ◽  
Alejandro Mendoza ◽  
Victor J. Vargas ◽  
...  

Three new species of Liolaemus belonging to the L. montanus group are described from Perú. Two new species are restricted to the Ica and Moquegua departments on the Pacific coast, and one new species is only known from an isolated highland in Ayacucho department. These three new species differ from closely related species in their coloration patterns and head shape. We comment on the conservation issues of the new species and other Peruvian species of the L. montanus group.


1939 ◽  
Vol 71 (12) ◽  
pp. 258-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hugh B. Leech

Male. Length (anterior margin of labrum to posterior margin of elytra) 4.0 mm.; width 1.8 mm. Body feebly convex. Head dark reddish-brown, labrum and ocelli paler; first four segments of antennae pale reddish-brown, five to eleven tinged with piceous; scutellum and disc of pronotum reddish-brown, sides of latter paler; elytra black, except the following areas which are reddish-yellow: basal third and along suture, and an irregular oblique fascia extending inward and posteriorly from the margin at middle almost to the suture at apical fourth, narrowly connected laterally with the basal area; apices of elytra vaguely paler.


2013 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 123-139 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Román–Valencia ◽  
◽  
R. I. Ruiz-C. ◽  
D. C. Taphorn B. ◽  
C. García-A. ◽  
...  

Three new species of characid fishes of the genus Bryconamericus are described from the Pacific coast and Amazon Basin in Ecuador, based on pigmentation and morphometric, meristic and osteological characters. B. bucayensis (n = 48) is distinguished by the number of scales between the lateral line and the pelvic–fin insertions (7–8 vs. 2–7, except B. terrabensis with 7–8 and B. arilepis with 9–10), the number of branched anal–fin rays (33–38 vs. 31 or fewer), the number of anterior anal–fin rays covered by a row of scales at their bases (28–31 vs. 4–26), and its wide anterior maxillary tooth being at least twice the width of the posterior tooth, both of which are pentacuspid (vs. maxillary teeth of same size). B. zamorensis (n = 126) is distinguished from congeners by having five teeth on the maxilla (vs. 1 or 2 teeth on maxilla), except B. rubropictus and B. thomasi, from which it differs in a reticulated pattern over the lateral stripe, generated by the concentration of melanophores, the scale margins, all along the sides of the body, the high number of branched anal–fin rays and vertebras, and the low branched dorsal–fin rays. The dorsal expansion of the rhinosphenoid forms a bony wall between olfactory nerves (vs. dorsal expansion of rhinosphenoid between olfactory nerves absent). Lateral process of palatine surpasses anterolateral margin of ectopterygoid (vs. palatine without lateral processes that laterally surpass the ectopterygoid), and the distal tip of sphenotic spine is laterally wide and undulated (vs. narrow). B. oroensis n. sp. (n = 124) is distinguished by having a dark lateral stripe overlaid with a peduncular spot and a reticulated pattern on the sides of the body (vs. peduncular spot and other body pigments not superimposed over a dark lateral stripe). It has three simple dorsal–fin rays, the first only visible in cleared and stained material and articulated, along with the second simple ray, with the first dorsal pterygiophores. The third simple ray is longer, and articulated with second dorsal pterygiophores (vs. only two simple dorsal–fin rays, both articulated with first dorsal pterygiophores). The anterior frontal is separated and so the fontanel front parietal is continued on the mesethmoids (vs. anterior tips of frontals united, and not separated by mesethmoids). Keys for identification of the species of Bryconamericus known to occur in Ecuador are included and the validity of the genus Knodus (vide Knodus carlosi) is discussed for cis Andean species.


1980 ◽  
Vol 58 (7) ◽  
pp. 1306-1317 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathryn Coates

Four new species of Marionina and one of Enchytraeus have been discovered during marine oligochaete surveys in British Columbia. Three new species of Marionina, M. vancouverensis, M. charlottensis, and M. neroutsensis, are similar to a group of other species including M. spicula (Leuckart, 1847), M. brevis Finogenova, 1977, M. istriae Giere, 1974, and M. sublittoralis Erséus, 1976. Marionina vancouverensis is estuarine; M. charlottensis is less estuarine and associated with upper intertidal algae such as Fucus and Enteromorpha; M. neroutsensis is also an upper intertidal form but from saturated fine sediments. In contrast, M. trevori has an unusual combination of generic characters separating it from other species of the genus. It was collected from coarse sand with decaying algae near a sewage outflow. Enchytraeus rupus is similar to several other small Enchytraeus species only a few of which have been found intertidally and none previously on the Pacific coast of North America.


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