identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
9200010C390DFF8DFE39FCE5FDC5F250.text	9200010C390DFF8DFE39FCE5FDC5F250.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Setosabatieria jingjingae Tchesunov & Mokievsky 2005	<div><p>Setosabatieria jingjingae sp.nov</p><p>(fi gures 1, 2c)</p><p>Type material</p><p>Holotype: one male ( Station D 3); paratype three males ( Stations D3, G 3, G 5) and four females (Station A1, D3, G 2).</p><p>Type locality. Sublittoral in the Bohai Sea: A1: 37 ° 59.56 ' N, 121 ° 35.04 ' E, wa ter depth 20.5 m, silt with M D 0.0233 mm. G 5: 39 ° 00.24 ' ’N, 121 ° 00.06 ' E, wa ter depth 38.5 m, silt with M D 0.0072 mm. D 3: 38 ° 15.43 ' N, 119 ° 44.14 ' E, wa ter depth 24.3 m, silt with M D 0.0122 mm. G 2: 38 ° 59.96 ' N, 119 ° 29.84 ' E, water depth 26.5 m, clay with M D 0.0029 mm. G 3: 39 ° 00.08 ' N, 120 ° 00.26 ' E, water depth 21.6 m, silt with MD 0.0241 mm.</p><p>Etymology Setosabatieria jingjingae is named after the daughter of the fi rst author.</p><p>Measurements (table 1)</p><p>- 175 M 1465 Holotype male 1: 1620 µ m; a =29, b =9, c=10, Sc =44 13 50 56 38</p><p>- 208 V 1660 Paratype female 1: 1830 µ m; a =30, b =9, c =11, V =53% 14 53 62 38</p><p>Description</p><p>Body cylindrical, tapering toward extremeties. Head slightly set off by narrow neck region. Cuticle not punctate but marked with faint transverse striations indiscernible in the lateral fi elds. Buccal cavity cup-shaped, surrounded by six short cephalic setae, 1.5–2 µ m, and four long submedian cephalic setae, 8–10 µ m. Four sublateral rows of fi ve to eight cervical setae of similar length to submedian cephalic setae. Other somatic setae shorter and more scattered. Amphids 3.5 turns, 8–11 µ m wide. Oesophagus with gradual pear-shaped swelling at base, not forming a true bulb. N erve ring 100–124 µ m behind anterior end (54–59% of oesoph ageal length). Excretory pore 113–135 µ m (56–65% of oesoph ageal length). Tail 3.6–5.2 a.b.d. conico-cylindrical with three terminal setae 11–13 µ m.</p><p>c.d., corresponding body diameter.</p><p>Males. Spicules paired, equal, arcuate, 39–47 µ m (1.03–1.62 a.b.d.) long as chord, pointed distally, with characteristic central cuticularized strip about 26–35 µ m long. Gubernaculum bearing long dorso-caudally directed apophyses about 15 µ m long. Nine poorly developed tubular precloacal supplements, posterior supplements with closer spacing. The posteriormost situated about 10 µ m anterior to the cloaca. There is a triangular cuticular extension on either side of the cloaca.</p><p>Females. Two outstretched ovaries, vulva at 43–56% of total length. Female differs from the male in having slightly longer tail (3.9–5.2 a.b.d.) and fewer subventral setae on the tail.</p><p>Differential diagnosis</p><p>Setosabatieria was fi rst erected to accommodate two Sabatieria species possessing synapomorphic features warranting recognition as a separate genus, namely the lack of cuticular punctations and the presence of characteristic sublateral fi les of numerous long cervical setae. The other two species of Setosabatieria so far included are S. hilarula (De Man, 1922) and S. fi bulata (Wieser, 1954). All three species in this genus differ from one another in a combination of the number of amphid turns, the number of cervical setae, the number of pre-cloacal supplements and the structure of the spicules. Setosabatieria hilarula, recorded in south-west England, north-west England, Denmark and the West coast of Scotland, has a wide range of numbers of cervical setae (3–21 per fi le). The number per fi le in S. jingjingae sp. nov. is also variable (fi ve to eight), and so may not be a reliable or stable distinguishing character between species. S. jingjingae sp. nov. and S. fi bulata differ in the number of amphid turns (4.25 in S. fi bulata) and S. fi bulata is characterized by a tail with short cylindrical part, 3–3.3 anal diameters long, with slender terminal setae. Setosabatieria jingjingae sp. nov. is closest to S. hilarula in the number of amphid turns, the De Man ratio ‘a’, the number of cervical setae and the tail length measured in corresponding anal diameters. The main difference between them is in the structure of the spicules and the number of precloacal supplements. There are central strips longer than half of the spicule in S. jingjingae sp. nov. (58–67% of the spicule length measured as the arc). There are nine precloacal supplements in S. jingjingae sp. nov. and 11–16 in S. hilarula (table 2 and fi gure 2).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9200010C390DFF8DFE39FCE5FDC5F250	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.		Plazi	Tchesunov, Alexei V.;Mokievsky, Vadim O.	Tchesunov, Alexei V., Mokievsky, Vadim O. (2005): Three new species of free-living nematodes from the Bohai Sea, China. Journal of Natural History 35 (11): 1575-1586, DOI: 10.1080/002229301317092333, URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/002229301317092333
9200010C3908FF83FECDFD25FC12F556.text	9200010C3908FF83FECDFD25FC12F556.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Amphimonhystera circula Tchesunov & Mokievsky 2005	<div><p>Amphimonhystera circula sp. nov.</p><p>(fi gure 3)</p><p>Type material Holotype: one male; paratypes: three males and several juveniles.</p><p>Type locality</p><p>Station A 4 in the Bohai sea, China (38 ° 24.8 ' N, 121 ° 35.15 ' E), wa ter depth 50.8 m, sand with MD 0.068 mm.</p><p>Etymology</p><p>Amphimonhystera circula is so-called because of the circular form of the amphids, as opposed to an elongated oval in the only other known species.</p><p>Measurements (table 3)</p><p>- 160 M 858 Holotype male: 970 µ m; a =44, b =6, c =9, Sc =32 10 20 22 19</p><p>- 142 M 530 Juvenile 1: 630 µ m; a =36, b =4.4, c=6.3 7 17 18 15</p><p>Description</p><p>Body slender. Cuticular striations, about 1.5 µ m apart. Large amount of granular material throughout epidermis, especially in oesophageal and cloacal areas. Coloration of preserved specimens yellow. Distinct hyaline lips with six 3.5–5 µ m labial setae; 14 cephalic setae, eight longer (18 µ m, 1.7–1.8 h.d.) and six shorter (13 µ m, 1.3 h.d.). Slender somatic setae very sparse, but more numerous near the cloacal area. Amphids circular, about one h.d. from anterior, 10 µ m in diameter, thick-walled with an internal cuticularized opening. Buccal cavity small with posterior chamber. Anterior oesophagus slightly swollen, no oesophageal bulbs present. Cardia triangular. N erve ring 85 –95 µ m behind anterior end (0.52–0.67 of oesophageal length). Tail 5.9–6.1 a.b.d., conico-cylindrical with three terminal setae 8–9 µ m long.</p><p>Abbreviations:</p><p>TL, total body length (µ m); A, De Man ratio ‘a’ (total body length/maximum body diameter); Hd, head diameter as percentage of posterior oesophagus body diameter; A%, amphid diameter as percentage of corresponding body diameter; At, number of turns of amphid; R3, R3 sensilla length as percentage of head diameter; Cs, number of cervical setae in each sublateral row; Spic: length measured in cloacal body diameters; Ps, number of precloacal supplements; T, tail length measured in cloacal body diameters.</p><p>Males. Spicules paired, equal and arcuate, proximally cephalate and distally pointed, 30–32 µ m (1.52–1.78 a.b.d.) long as chord. G ubernuculum a simple tube.</p><p>No females found.</p><p>Differential diagnosis</p><p>So far only the type species A. anechma (Southern, 1914) has been described (R iemann, 1967; Lorenzen, 1977). Amphimonhystera circula sp. nov. can be distinguished from A. anechma by its size (910–970 µ m in the former, 1660–1860 µ m in the latter) and the shape of amphids in the male which are circular in the former compared to oval, 27 µ m long and 20 µ m wide, in the latter. The shape of the tail is also different (5.9–6.1 a.b.d. in A. sp. nov., 3.5–4.2 a.b.d. in A. anechma), and the gubernaulum in A. anechma has a much more complicated structure.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9200010C3908FF83FECDFD25FC12F556	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.		Plazi	Tchesunov, Alexei V.;Mokievsky, Vadim O.	Tchesunov, Alexei V., Mokievsky, Vadim O. (2005): Three new species of free-living nematodes from the Bohai Sea, China. Journal of Natural History 35 (11): 1575-1586, DOI: 10.1080/002229301317092333, URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/002229301317092333
9200010C3906FF87FE05FA25FDD1F31A.text	9200010C3906FF87FE05FA25FDD1F31A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Belbolla zhangi Tchesunov & Mokievsky 2005	<div><p>Belbolla zhangi sp. nov.</p><p>(fi gure 4)</p><p>Type material</p><p>Holotype: one male ( Station G3); paratypes: three males (Station G 3, E4, E5) and two females (Station G 3) .</p><p>Type locality</p><p>Sublittoral in the Bohai sea. G 3 39 ° 00.08 ' N, 120 ° 00.26 ' E, wa ter depth 21.6 m, silt with M D 0.0241 mm; E4 38 ° 30.15 ' N, 120 ° 00.40 ' E, wa ter depth 27 m, silt with M D 0.0197 mm; E5 38 ° 30.08 ' N, 120 ° 30.10 ' E, water depth 30.7 m, silt with M D 0.0387 mm.</p><p>Etymology This species is named in honour of Professor Z. N. Zhang.</p><p>Measurements (table 4)</p><p>- 560 M 2408 Holotype male: 2600 µ m; a =34.7, b =4.6, c =13.5, Sc =56 11 61 75 192</p><p>- 590 V 2620 Paratype female 1: 2780 µ m; a =33.1, b =4.7, c=16.3, V =44.6% 11 78 84 160</p><p>Description</p><p>The anterior end tapers to a very small diameter. Large right ventro-lateral tooth, 7 µ m long, and two less prominent teeth (dorsal and left ventro-lateral in position). Mouth surrounded by six small papillae and 10 cephalic setae, 8–10 µ m, arranged in one circle. Cuticular ring separating the two buccal chambers smooth (no denticles). Oesophagus expands gradually and evenly, posteriorly modi fi ed into eight or nine bulbs (fi rst bulb may not be clear in males). Nerve ring 40–50% oesoph agus length. Tail 2.9–4.0 a.b.d., conico-cylindrical.</p><p>Males. Tail relatively stout over most of length narrowing sharply in posterior quarter. Spicules equal, with rounded, blunt proximal ends. G ubernaculum has pair of 40–45 µ m apophyses. Two well-developed pre-cloacal supplements lie close together, distant from the cloacal opening. Anterior supplement 0.6–0.9 a.b.d., posterior 0.5–0.8 a.b.d.</p><p>Females. Ovaries paired, equal, opposed, re fl exed. Vulva at 44.6–44.1% of body length.</p><p>Differential diagnosis</p><p>Belbolla zhangi sp. nov is characterized by the number of oesophageal bulbs, the shape of the spicules and gubernacular apophysis, and the size of the two winged precloacal supplements. It is closest to B. tenuidens Cobb, 1920 which also has a long gubernacular apophysis. There are some minor differences in the shape of spicules and tail, but the principal difference between the two species is in the size of the two winged pre-cloacal supplements which are much longer in B. tenuidens (1.4–1.5 a.b.d.) than in B. zhangi (0.5–0.9 a.b.d.). Whilst it is possible that intermediate forms might be found, we are not inclined to ascribe the present specimens to B. tenuidens, particularly in view of the very different habitats and geographical areas that the two species inhabit ( B. tenuidens is from an intertidal sandy beach at Woods Hole, USA). The number of bulbs is an important feature in keys to the genus presented by Belogurov and Belogurova (1980). In four out of six adult specimens we examined there are nine bulbs.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9200010C3906FF87FE05FA25FDD1F31A	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.		Plazi	Tchesunov, Alexei V.;Mokievsky, Vadim O.	Tchesunov, Alexei V., Mokievsky, Vadim O. (2005): Three new species of free-living nematodes from the Bohai Sea, China. Journal of Natural History 35 (11): 1575-1586, DOI: 10.1080/002229301317092333, URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/002229301317092333
