taxonID	type	description	language	source
4E45BF75BE0DFFDDFB8C7596FBCDF892.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Orzeliscinae with adhesive pads of two different lengths; legs I – III: digits I – III with both proximal adhesive pad and distal claw, digit IV with adhesive pad only; legs IV: digits II & III with proximal adhesive pad and distal claw, digits I & IV with adhesive pads only; claws II & III of each foot with single accessory point; complete set of cephalic cirri present; primary clavae and lateral cirri from common base, on a distinct lateral extension; secondary clavae in form of bent sausage-shaped structure lateral to ventral mouth cone; stylets, stylet supports and placoids present; paired seminal receptacles with coiled ducts opening lateral to large gonopore; pointed lateral and caudal alae present.	en	Gross, Vladimir, Miller, William R., Hochberg, Rick (2014): A new tardigrade, Mutaparadoxipus duodigifinis gen. nov., sp. nov. (Heterotardigrada: Arthrotardigrada), from the Southeastern United States. Zootaxa 3835 (2): 263-272, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3835.2.6
4E45BF75BE0DFFDDFB8C7596FBCDF892.taxon	materials_examined	Type species. Mutaparadoxipus duodigifinis gen. nov., sp. nov.	en	Gross, Vladimir, Miller, William R., Hochberg, Rick (2014): A new tardigrade, Mutaparadoxipus duodigifinis gen. nov., sp. nov. (Heterotardigrada: Arthrotardigrada), from the Southeastern United States. Zootaxa 3835 (2): 263-272, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3835.2.6
4E45BF75BE0DFFDDFB8C7596FBCDF892.taxon	etymology	Etymology. The genus name is derived from mutabilis (Latin), “ changeable or inconstant, ” referring to the variable foot morphology and from Paradoxipus, referring to its resemblance to Paradoxipus orzeliscoides. Comparisons. Species of Mutaparadoxipus gen. nov. differ from those of Paradoxipus because species of Paradoxipus have adhesive pads and claws on all digits of all legs and the claws do not have accessory points. Alternatively, species of Mutaparadoxipus gen. nov. lack claws on some of the digits, and the claws on digits II & III bear accessory points. Morphology of legs I – III different from that of leg IV.	en	Gross, Vladimir, Miller, William R., Hochberg, Rick (2014): A new tardigrade, Mutaparadoxipus duodigifinis gen. nov., sp. nov. (Heterotardigrada: Arthrotardigrada), from the Southeastern United States. Zootaxa 3835 (2): 263-272, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3835.2.6
4E45BF75BE0CFFDBFB8C74E7FC05F801.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Same as for the genus.	en	Gross, Vladimir, Miller, William R., Hochberg, Rick (2014): A new tardigrade, Mutaparadoxipus duodigifinis gen. nov., sp. nov. (Heterotardigrada: Arthrotardigrada), from the Southeastern United States. Zootaxa 3835 (2): 263-272, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3835.2.6
4E45BF75BE0CFFDBFB8C74E7FC05F801.taxon	description	Description. Body length of 108 – 123 µm. Maximum width (between legs III – IV) of 50 – 53 µm. Cuticle without plates but with fine punctations, which are more prominent dorsally than ventrally. Indistinct segmentation is observable from both dorsal and ventral aspects. Caudal ala (12 µm long, 25 µm wide) is flap-like and extends posteriorly approximately one-third the length of legs IV (Figs. 1, 2 B, 3 C). Lateral alae (9 µm long, 13 µm wide) are less distinct and attach slightly anterior to leg IV. The female gonopore consists of six rosette cells and is midventral, approximately halfway between legs III and IV (Figs. 1, 3 C). The male gonopore is U-shaped, opens posteriorly, and is positioned slightly more posterior than the corresponding female gonopore. Seminal receptacles are kidney-shaped with a coiled, S-shaped duct as in P. orzeliscoides (Kristensen & Higgins 1989), located adjacent to lateral ala. The seminal receptacle ducts open to the outside on either side of the gonopore. The mouth cone extends ventrally and is positioned approximately halfway between the rostral margin of the animal and leg I (Figs. 1, 3 A). A typical heterotardigrade-type bucco-pharyngeal apparatus is present, with three placoids and a pair of straight stylets. Stylet supports could not be observed. The median cirrus (19 µm) is dorsal and, like all of the other cirri, consists of a scapus, a thick flagellum, and a thin flagellum (Figs. 1, 2 A). The thin flagellum is approximately one-third the length of the thick flagellum. The internal cirri (30 µm) are anteroventral and attach via a cirrophore at the base (Figs. 1, 2 A, 3 A). The external cirri (14 µm) are ventral and attach directly posterior to the internal cirri, almost exactly lateral to the lateral cirri / clavae, which share a common pedestal. The lateral cirri (27 µm) are longer than and dorsal to the primary clavae (20 µm), which lack constrictions but have a terminal pore (Figs. 1, 2 A, 3 A). The sausage-shaped secondary (buccal) clavae (20 µm) are lateral to the mouth cone and curve posteroventrally (Figs. 1, 3 A). There is no evidence of any buccal sensory plates at their bases. The cirrus E (20 µm) is located on the posterior dorsal trunk and consists of a cirrophore, scapus, and 3 - part flagellum (Figs. 1, 2 B). Each telescopic leg consists of a coxa, femur, tibia, and tarsus. Attached to the tarsus are four digits (14 µm long), each of which bears a ventral proximal paddle-shaped adhesive pad (Figs. 1, 3 B). The adhesive pads on the clawless digits are longer than those of the clawed digits (8 µm vs. 5 µm). Additionally, a distal sickle-shaped claw (5 µm) is present on digits I – III of legs I – III as well as digits II & III of leg IV (see Fig. 2 A for digit numbering scheme). Accessory points are present only on the claws of digits II & III of each leg. A short sense organ consisting of two parts, a cylindrical base and a teardrop-shaped terminal structure (5 µm each, 10 µm total), is present on leg IV (Fig. 2 B). The coxae of legs I – III each bear a single spine (9 – 10 µm).	en	Gross, Vladimir, Miller, William R., Hochberg, Rick (2014): A new tardigrade, Mutaparadoxipus duodigifinis gen. nov., sp. nov. (Heterotardigrada: Arthrotardigrada), from the Southeastern United States. Zootaxa 3835 (2): 263-272, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3835.2.6
4E45BF75BE0CFFDBFB8C74E7FC05F801.taxon	materials_examined	Type specimens. Holotype female (USNM 1231540), 108 µm long, dorsoventral orientation, collected by V. Gross on 11 June 2012. Paratype male, 119 µm long. Digital photos and videos of the paratype were submitted to the Smithsonian Institution for archival. Second paratype male (USNM 1231541) submitted on SEM stub.	en	Gross, Vladimir, Miller, William R., Hochberg, Rick (2014): A new tardigrade, Mutaparadoxipus duodigifinis gen. nov., sp. nov. (Heterotardigrada: Arthrotardigrada), from the Southeastern United States. Zootaxa 3835 (2): 263-272, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3835.2.6
4E45BF75BE0CFFDBFB8C74E7FC05F801.taxon	etymology	Etymology. The species epithet, duodigifinis (“ two toe ends ”), is derived from duo, “ two ”; digitus, “ toe ”; and finis, “ end, ” referring to the two different types of toes present in the species; either with or without claws.	en	Gross, Vladimir, Miller, William R., Hochberg, Rick (2014): A new tardigrade, Mutaparadoxipus duodigifinis gen. nov., sp. nov. (Heterotardigrada: Arthrotardigrada), from the Southeastern United States. Zootaxa 3835 (2): 263-272, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3835.2.6
4E45BF75BE0CFFDBFB8C74E7FC05F801.taxon	materials_examined	Type locality. Approximately 7 km east of Hutchinson Island near Fort Pierce, Florida (27 ° 28.90 ′ N, 80 ° 13.72 ′ W). Depth of 9.1 – 11.5 m. Collected in June 2012. Comparisons. Additional species of Mutaparadoxipus gen. nov. have not been discovered. Thus, comparisons remain at the generic level. M. duodigifinis gen. nov., sp. nov. differs from P. orzeliscoides, which has claws and adhesive pads on all digits of all legs; Opydorscus fonsecae, which has adhesive pads and claws on all digits of legs I but lacks claws on all digits of legs II – IV; and Orzeliscus belopus, which has elongated adhesive pads on all digits but lacks claws altogether. Additional meiofauna found in the same samples with the new species include: Tardigrada (Batillipes, Tanarctus, Wingstrandarctus, Paradoxipus, Orzeliscus, and Halechiniscus), Nematoda, Rotifera (Bdelloidea), Crustacea, Acoelomorpha, Kinorhyncha, Platyhelminthes (Kalyptorhynchia), and Gastrotricha (Chaetonotida and Macrodasyida). LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS gp gonopore ic internal cirrus la lateral ala an anus lc lateral cirrus ad adhesive pad ls leg spike ap accessory point mc median cirrus bc buccal clavae mo mouth cone bt buccal tube op seminal receptacle duct opening ca caudal ala pc primary clava ce cirrus E ph pharynx cl claw sd seminal receptacle duct cs claw sheath so leg IV sense organ ec external cirrus sr seminal receptacle gl gut lumen st stylet	en	Gross, Vladimir, Miller, William R., Hochberg, Rick (2014): A new tardigrade, Mutaparadoxipus duodigifinis gen. nov., sp. nov. (Heterotardigrada: Arthrotardigrada), from the Southeastern United States. Zootaxa 3835 (2): 263-272, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3835.2.6
