identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
297C87A48C36C819EEBE0665FAA1FEAB.text	297C87A48C36C819EEBE0665FAA1FEAB.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tripylella mexicana	<div><p>Tripylella mexicana sp. n.</p><p>(Fig. 1 A–D, Fig. 2 A–D)</p><p>Measurements: See Tables 1 and 2.</p><p>Female n=14: Body C-shaped upon relaxation and fixation. Cuticle very thin, 1 Μm, with fine striations and anastomoses. Small setae and pores present around and along the body. Head region rounded, 13–15 (14±0.2) Μm wide. Inner labial papillae conoid; outer labial setae conoid 2–3 (2.7±0.1) Μm long; cephalic setae small, 1 Μm long, and separated from the outer labial setae by &lt;1Μm so that they appear as a single whorl of six longer and four shorter setae. The dorsal tooth is 13–18 Μm (14.8±0.3) from the anterior end of the body and 2–3 (2.2±0.1) Μm behind the small subventral teeth. The dorsal tooth and subventral teeth are in adjacent stomal chambers; the anterior chamber is very small and sometimes appears to be contiguous with the posterior chamber. Amphids caliciform, 8–11 (9.7±0.2) Μm from anterior end of the body. Distance from base of pharynx to vulva is 141–283 (205±10) Μm. Cardia very conspicuous, 20–27 (25±0.6) Μm long and 20–26 (24±0.6) Μm wide, comprised of six cells, the anterior and posterior of medium size and the median cells larger. Excretory pore observed in ten of the 14 specimens.</p><p>TABLE.2. Morphometric data for paratypes of Tripylella spp. n. (measurements in Μm ± S.D followed by range, except where indicated).</p><p>Female gonads reflexed, the anterior 47–104 (81±5.4) Μm long, 6.2–14.2 (10.9±0.7)% of the body length, and the posterior 19–132 (88±8.6) Μm long, 2.4–16.2 (11.9±1.1)% of the body length (we consider the very short posterior gonad in one specimen to be a developmental anomaly). Vulva without protruding lips but with small oval cuticular structures. Rectum 18–25 (21±0.6) Μm long or 0.7–1.0 (0.8±0.02) times anal body diameter. Tail cylindroid, wide anteriorly for 22–27 (25±0.4) Μm or 42–65 (56 ± 1.86)% of its length and then narrowing abruptly, ending in a spinneret 2–4 (3.1±0.2) Μm long. Two pairs of caudal setae present, one pair at seven annuli posterior to the anus, in a lateral position, and the second pair in a latero-dorsal position, also a single seta in a dorsal position, less than 20 µm from the point at which the tail becomes reduced in diameter.</p><p>Male: Unknown.</p><p>Type Locality and Habitat: Moss on the trunk of a pirul tree, Schinus molle L., in La Purificación, Tepetitla, Texcoco, México State, México, N19°31'01.7", W98°48'37.7", 2421 m above sea level. Collector I. Cid del Prado- Vera on August 10, 2008.</p><p>Type Specimens: Holotype female (CNHE 9053) and paratypes (CNHE 9054) in CNHE; paratypes in CNCP and NCE.</p><p>Etymology: The specific epithet refers to México, the type locality of the species. Diagnosis and Relationships: Tripylella mexicana sp. n. is characterized by the small size of the body, the finely-striated cuticle that has many anastomoses, pores and small setae along the body, the short pharynx, short tail, and the presence of a readilyvisible excretory pore, the anterior position of the subventral teeth in relation to the small dorsal tooth and the teeth contained in adjacent stomal chambers, the absence of cervical setae, the vulval lips not protruding, and the vulva with small oval sclerotized pieces.</p><p>Tripylella mexicana sp. n. is close to T. iucunda Andrássy, 2008 in the lengths of the body, setae, pharynx, and tail. It differs in having a finely-striated cuticle vs. the smooth cuticle of T. iucunda, in having a smaller dorsal tooth, in the presence of an excretory pore and of abundant body pores, in the spherical (20– 27 x 20–26 µm) vs. discoid (17– 20 x 9–12 µm) cardia, and in the small oval vs. larger heart-shaped sclerotized pieces in the vulva. As a caveat, some of the minute surface characters described are only evident by SEM which was not used in the Andrássy (2008) descriptions.</p><p>Tripylella mexicana sp. n. is similar to T. intermedia (Bütschli, 1873) Brzeski &amp; Winiszewska-Ślipińska, 1993 in the shape of the tail, the size of the outer labial and cephalic setae, the short gonads, and the finely-striated cuticle. It differs in the presence of body pores, the distance of the excretory pore from the anterior end, 80–93 (86±1.4) Μm vs. 94–101 Μm, in the length of the body 0.63–0.82 (0.74±0.02) mm vs. 0.81–0.96 mm, in the c ratio, 5.5–7.5 (6.3±0.1) vs. 7.3–8.3, in the relative length of the cylindrical anterior part of the tail 42–65 vs. 60–67% of tail length, and in the absence of setae on the tail of T. intermedia .</p><p>Also, T. mexicana is close to T. muscusi in the size of the outer labial and cephalic setae, in the presence of abundant body pores, the position of the vulva, the subventral teeth anterior to the dorsal tooth, and the finelystriated cuticle. It differs in that T. mexicana is a smaller nematode than T. muscusi, with body length 0.63–0.82 (0.74±0.02) mm vs. 0.80–1.02 (0.94±0.02) mm, pharynx length 141–184 (160±3.6) Μm vs. 184–207 (201±1.8) Μm, in the length of the tail, 99–132 (117 ±2.8) vs. 123–160 (140±2.9) Μm, in the distance from vulva to anus 222–292 (256±7.1) vs. 273–380 (339±7.8) Μm, in smaller values of indices a and ć 20.25 (22±0.3) and 4.1–5.1 (4.7±0.08) vs, 24–29 (26±0.4) and 4.9.5.7 (5.3±0.06), respectively, and in the oval shape of sclerotized pieces around the vagina vs. pear shaped pieces in T. muscusi .</p><p>Molecular Characteristics: See Molecular Diagnostics section.</p><p>Comments: We have examined specimens of a population of Tripylella sp. from Pueblo Nuevo, Hidalgo State, México. Tripylella mexicana sp. n. is very close to that population in the size of the body, size of the pharynx and tail, the position of the vulva, and in that the subventral teeth are usually posterior to the dorsal tooth although in some specimens they appear to be anterior. It differs in the size of the cardia 20–27 vs. 12–21 Μm long and 20–26 vs. 17–24 Μm wide, in the length of the narrower portion of the tail 38–57 vs. 40–70 Μm, and in having a more finely-striated cuticle. We consider the Pueblo Nuevo population to be a variant of T. mexicana sp. n ..</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/297C87A48C36C819EEBE0665FAA1FEAB	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Prado-Vera, Ignacio Cid Del;Ferris, Howard;Nadler, Steven A.	Prado-Vera, Ignacio Cid Del, Ferris, Howard, Nadler, Steven A. (2016): Five new species of the genus Tripylella (Nematoda: Enoplida: Tripylidae). Zootaxa 4109 (2): 198-217, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4109.2.5
297C87A48C32C818EEBE04B3FE3CFAC3.text	297C87A48C32C818EEBE04B3FE3CFAC3.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tripylella muscusi	<div><p>Tripylella muscusi sp. n.</p><p>(Fig.1. E–H, Fig. 3 A–D)</p><p>Measurements: See Tables 1 and 2.</p><p>Female (n=14): Body an open C shape after relaxation. Cuticle 1 Μm thick, with fine striations and sparse anastomoses along the body. Abundant pores and a few small setae present along and around the body. Labial region rounded 14–15 (14±0.1) Μm wide; inner labial papillae conical; outer labial setae conical, 3 Μm long; cephalic setae small, 1 Μm long, and separated from outer labial setae by &lt;1 Μm so that there appears to be a single whorl of six longer and four shorter setae. The single stomal chamber contains two subventral teeth 1–2 (1.9±0.07) Μm anterior to the small dorsal tooth, which is 10–17 (15±0.4) Μm from the head end; amphids caliciform, 8–15 (10.9±0.5) Μm from anterior end of the body; pharynx-vulva distance 212–292 (258±5.9) Μm; cardia very conspicuous, 16–29 (24± 1.0) Μm long and 20–29 (24±1.0) Μm wide, composed of six cells with the median cells largest; excretory pore observed in six specimens at 21–110 (82±9.3) Μm from the anterior end.</p><p>Female gonads short and reflexed, the anterior 61–118 (79±4.9) Μm long and 6.5–13 (8.3±0.5)% of the body length and the posterior 33–123 (84±9.0) Μm long and 3.3–13 (7.8±1.1)% of the body length; vulva with slightly protruding lips ornamented with longitudinal striations, and conspicuous pear-shaped cuticular structures surrounding the vagina; vulva 274–379 (339±7.8) Μm anterior to the anus; rectum 20–25 (22±0.5) Μm long or 0.7–1.0 (0.9±0.02) times anal body diameter; tail cylindroid, 122–160 (140±2.9) Μm long and 14–17 (15±0.2)% of body length, narrowing abruptly at 27–54 (39±1.8)% of its length, ending in a small spinneret, 2–3 Μm long.</p><p>Male: Unknown.</p><p>Type Locality and Habitat: Moss on trunk of oak tree, Quercus peduncularis Née, in a forested area of San Pablo Ixayo, Texcoco, México State, México N19°28'06.8", W98°47'15.2", 2587 m above sea level. Collector: I. Cid del Prado-Vera on October 10, 2008.</p><p>Type Specimens: Holotype female (CNHE 9055) and paratypes (CNHE 9056) in CNHE; paratypes in CNCP and NCE.</p><p>Etymology: The specific epithet indicates the type locality habitat of the species is moss.</p><p>Diagnosis and Relationships: Tripylella muscusi sp. n. is characterized by the body length (average 0.94 mm), abundant body pores and a few somatic setae along the body, pharynx length (average 201 Μm), tail length (average 140 Μm), the thin, finely-striated cuticle with anastomoses, the anterior position of the subventral teeth in relation to the small dorsal tooth, with all teeth in a single stomal chamber, the absence of cervical setae, the presence of an excretory pore, the slightly protruding vulval lips and pear-shaped sclerotized pieces in the vaginal region.</p><p>Tripylella muscusi sp. n. is similar to T. intermedia (Bütschli, 1873) Brzeski &amp; Winiszewska-Ślipińska, 1993 in the length of the body, abundant body pores, the shape of the tail, the position of the excretory pore, and the sizes of the anterior and posterior cephalic setae. It differs in having a single stomal chamber, the anterior position of the subventral teeth, the position of the vulva 47–51 (49±0.3)% vs. 51–52%, in the c ratio, 6.0–7.2 (6.7±0.09) vs. 7.3–8.3 (7.7) and in the ć ratio, 4.9–5.6 (5.3±0.06) vs. 3.6–4.5 (4.1). Tripylella muscusi sp. n. is close to T. mexicana n. sp. but distinguished as indicated in the description of that species.</p><p>Molecular Characteristics: See Molecular Diagnostics section.</p><p>Comments: We examined specimens of a population of Tripylella sp. from San Diego Huehuecalco, Amecameca, México State, México. They resemble Tripylella muscusi sp. n. in the body and pharynx length, position of the vulva, the anterior position of the subventral teeth in relation to the dorsal tooth, the length of the tail and the abrupt narrowing of the tail. The Amecameca population differed in the distance of amphid apertures to the anterior end of body, in the distance of posterior end of pharynx to anus, in the size of narrow part of the tail and the smaller protrusion of the vulval lips. We consider that the Amecameca population does not differ morphologically from T. muscusi sp. n ..</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/297C87A48C32C818EEBE04B3FE3CFAC3	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Prado-Vera, Ignacio Cid Del;Ferris, Howard;Nadler, Steven A.	Prado-Vera, Ignacio Cid Del, Ferris, Howard, Nadler, Steven A. (2016): Five new species of the genus Tripylella (Nematoda: Enoplida: Tripylidae). Zootaxa 4109 (2): 198-217, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4109.2.5
297C87A48C33C816EEBE001BFADFF83A.text	297C87A48C33C816EEBE001BFADFF83A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tripylella quitoensis	<div><p>Tripylella quitoensis sp. n.</p><p>(Fig. 4 A–D, Fig. 5 A–D)</p><p>Measurements: See Tables 1 and 2.</p><p>Female (n=10): Body C-shaped upon relaxation and fixation. Cuticle 2 Μm thick, with fine striations. Setae and pores present posterior to the cervical region, scattered along the body. Head region rounded, 12–16 Μm wide; inner labial papillae conical and very small; outer labial setae conical 1.8–2.9 Μm long; cephalic setae small, &lt;1 Μm long and very difficult to see, separated from the outer labial setae by &lt;1Μm so that there appears to be a single whorl of six longer and four shorter setae. The dorsal tooth is 9–16 (12±0.7) Μm from the anterior end and 1–3 (1.9±0.2) Μm posterior to the two subventral teeth; the dorsal tooth and subventral teeth are in the same stomal chamber. Amphids caliciform, 7–8 Μm from anterior end of the body. Cervical setae absent. Distance between base of pharynx and vulva 160–238 (196±8.4) Μm. Cardia very conspicuous, 15–25 (21±1.1) Μm long and 15–26 (22±1.0) Μm wide, comprised of six cells, the anterior and posterior of medium size and the median cells larger. Excretory pore not observed.</p><p>Female gonads reflexed, the anterior 36–118 (70±8.6) Μm long and 5.1–15.6 (9.7±1.1)% of the body length and the posterior 47–80 (59±3.3) Μm long and 7.1–11.3 (8.3±0.4)% of the body length. Vulva 226–292 (253±6.8) Μm anterior to the anus, without protruding lips and with very small oval cuticular structures. Rectum 11–25 (16±1.6) Μm long, 0.9–1.9 (1.4±0.1) times anal body diameter, anus with protruding lips. Tail cylindroid, narrowing abruptly at 54–64 (58±1.0)% of its length and ending in a spinneret 2–4 Μm long.</p><p>Male: Unknown.</p><p>Type Locality and Habitat: Moss on trunk of tree, in the botanical garden, Parque La Carolina, Quito, Ecuador, S0°11'10.8", W78°29'07.7", 2779 m above sea level.</p><p>Type Specimens: Holotype female (CNHE 9057) and paratypes (CNHE 9058) in CNHE; paratypes in CNCP and NCE.</p><p>Etymology: The specific epithet refers to the geographic location of the type species, Quito, Ecuador.</p><p>Diagnosis and Relationships: Tripylella quitoensis sp. n. is characterized by the short body length (0.7–0.8) mm, the small outer labial setae, 1.8–2.9 Μm long, the dorsal tooth and subventral teeth in the same stomal chamber, the subventral teeth anterior to the dorsal tooth, the short tail (72–112 Μm), the absence of an excretory pore, the presence of body pores, the finely-striated cuticle, the non-protruding vulval lips, and the vulva with very small oval sclerotized pieces.</p><p>Tripylella quitoensis sp. n. is close to T. mexicana sp. n. in the lengths of the body and pharynx, in the position of the vulva, the finely-striated cuticle and in the anterior position of the subventral teeth and their presence in the same stomal chamber as the dorsal tooth. It differs in having a thicker cuticle, the larger index c, 6.9–10.1 (7.5±0.3) vs. 5.5–7.5 (6.3±0.2), in the length of the tail 71–112 (98±3.8) vs. 99–132 (117±2.8) Μm, and in the proportion of the tail that is reduced in diameter 36–60 (45±2.2)% vs. 28–48 (41±1.5)%.</p><p>Tripylella quitoensis sp. n. is close to T. iucunda Andrássy, 2008 in the short pharynx and tail and small somatic setae, and in the posterior position of the subventral teeth. It differs in having a finely-striated cuticle vs. the smooth cuticle of T. iucunda, in the tail length 71–112 (98±3.8) vs. 105–120 Μm, in the presence of body pores, in the absence of cervical setae vs. the two present in T. iucunda, in the length of the pharynx 160–189 (175±3.2) vs. 150–158 Μm and in small oval vs. larger heart-shaped sclerotized pieces in the vulva.</p><p>Molecular Characteristics: There was no material available for molecular characterization of T. quitoensis .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/297C87A48C33C816EEBE001BFADFF83A	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Prado-Vera, Ignacio Cid Del;Ferris, Howard;Nadler, Steven A.	Prado-Vera, Ignacio Cid Del, Ferris, Howard, Nadler, Steven A. (2016): Five new species of the genus Tripylella (Nematoda: Enoplida: Tripylidae). Zootaxa 4109 (2): 198-217, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4109.2.5
297C87A48C3EC814EEBE05B0FA2DF859.text	297C87A48C3EC814EEBE05B0FA2DF859.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tripylella fatimaensis	<div><p>Tripylella fatimaensis sp. n.</p><p>(Fig. 4 E–I, Fig. 6 A–D, Fig. 7 A–D)</p><p>Measurements: See Tables 1 and 2.</p><p>Female n=12: Body C-shaped upon relaxation and fixation. Cuticle thin, 1–2 Μm, with fine striations. Pores and setae present posterior to the cervical region, scattered along the body. Head region rounded, 14–16 Μm wide; inner labial papillae conical, very small; outer labial setae conical, 2–3 Μm long; cephalic setae small, 1 Μm long, and separated from the anterior cephalic setae by &lt;1Μm so that they appear as a single whorl of six longer and four shorter setae. The dorsal tooth is 13–16 (15±0.31) Μm from the anterior end and 2–4 (3±0.1) Μm posterior to the two subventral teeth. The dorsal tooth and subventral teeth are in the same stomal chamber. Amphids caliciform, 7–12 Μm from anterior end of the body. Pharynx-vulva distance 132–255 (190±9.4) Μm. Cardia very conspicuous, discoid, 16–26 (19±0.8) Μm long and 15–27 (22±1.1) Μm wide, comprised of six cells, the anterior and posterior of medium size and the median cells larger. Excretory pore at 58–89 Μm from the anterior end.</p><p>Female gonads reflexed, the anterior 40–115 (76±7.4) Μm long and 6–22.9 (11±1.39)% of the body length and the posterior 39–86 (66±5.3) Μm long and 6.5–11.4 (8.7±0.6) % of the body length. Vulva 189–292 (254±8.9) Μm anterior to the anus, with slightly protruding lips and with very small oval cuticular structures. Rectum 17–22 (20±0.5) Μm long, 0.8–1.4 (1.2±0.1) times anal body diameter. Tail cylindroid, narrowing abruptly at 50–60 (56±0.9)% of its length, ending in a spinneret 2–4 Μm long; three pairs of postanal caudal setae present: one pair latero-ventral, one pair latero-dorsal and one pair ventral.</p><p>Male: Unknown.</p><p>Type Locality and Habitat: Moss on a tree trunk in the garden of the Santuário de Fátima, Fátima, Portugal, N39°37'52.0", W8°40'29.9", 350 m above sea level. Collector I. Cid del Prado-Vera on September 10, 2011.</p><p>Type Specimens: Holotype female (CNHE 9059) and paratypes (CNHE 9060) in CNHE; paratypes in CNCP and NCE.</p><p>Etymology: The specific epithet refers to the geographic location of the type species, Fátima, Portugal.</p><p>Diagnosis and Relationships: Tripylella fatimaensis sp. n. is characterized by the short body (0.59–0.81) mm, by the length of the pharynx, length of the tail (90–128 Μm), length of the narrower portion of the tail (45–58 Μm), the presence of very small oval cuticular structures in the vulva region and by the slightly protruding vulval lips.</p><p>Tripylella fatimaensis sp. n. is very close to T. quitoensis sp. n. in the length of the tail, in the proportional length of the wider region of the tail, 53–60 vs. 54–64%, in the position of the vulva and in the absence of cervical setae. It differs from in T. quitoensis sp. n, in the length of the tail (90–128 (110±2.8) µm vs. 71–112 (98±3.8) µm), in the length of the narrower portion of the tail (40–58 (49±1.1) µm vs. 35–45 (42±1.2) µm) and in the index c (6.2–7.2 (6.7±0.1) vs. 6.9–10.1 (7.5±0.3). Also, T. fatimaensis sp. n. is close to T. iucunda Andrássy, 2008, in the width of the head, the shape of the dorsal tooth and its distance from the anterior end of the body, the position of the vulva and the shape of the tail. It differs in the length of the body 0.59–0.80 (0.73±19.9) vs. 0.68–0.75, pharynx 160–207 (180±3.7) µm vs. 150–158 µm, in the index c 6.2–7.2 (6.7±0.1) vs 6.0–6.5, in the length of tail 90–128 (110±2.8) vs. 105–120 µm and the annulated vs. smooth cuticle in T. iucunda .</p><p>Molecular Characteristics: There was no material available for molecular characterization of T. fatimaensis .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/297C87A48C3EC814EEBE05B0FA2DF859	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Prado-Vera, Ignacio Cid Del;Ferris, Howard;Nadler, Steven A.	Prado-Vera, Ignacio Cid Del, Ferris, Howard, Nadler, Steven A. (2016): Five new species of the genus Tripylella (Nematoda: Enoplida: Tripylidae). Zootaxa 4109 (2): 198-217, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4109.2.5
297C87A48C3BC80FEEBE003FFA34FECB.text	297C87A48C3BC80FEEBE003FFA34FECB.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tripylella	<div><p>Key to the species of Tripylella (see Table 3)</p><p>1. Two large teeth in the posterior stomal chamber and two subventral teeth in a smaller anterior chamber..... T. dentata sp. n. Stoma with one dorsal and two subventral teeth.............................................................. 2</p><p>2. Tail cylindrical then narrowing abruptly; outer labial setae 2.0–3.0 Μm long....................................... 3 Tail tapering evenly; outer labial setae&gt;3 Μm long; subventral teeth anterior or posterior to dorsal tooth................. 9</p><p>3. Subventral teeth anterior to dorsal tooth.................................................................... 4 Subventral teeth posterior to dorsal tooth................................................................... 8</p><p>4. Dorsal tooth large; excretory pore absent......................................... T. subintermedia Zhao et al., 2014 Dorsal tooth small; excretory pore present or absent........................................................... 5</p><p>5. Pharynx length 141–189 Μm............................................................................. 6 Pharynx length 160–207 Μm............................................................................. 7</p><p>6. Pharynx length 141–184(161) Μm; posterior of pharynx to vulva 141–282(205) Μm; excretory pore present, 80–93(85.6) Μm behind head........................................................................... T. mexicana sp. n. Pharynx length 160–189(175) Μm; posterior of pharynx to vulva 160–238(196) Μm; excretory pore absent..................................................................................................... T. quitoensis sp. n.</p><p>7. Pharynx length 160–207(180) Μm; posterior of pharynx to vulva 132–255(191) Μm; tail length 90–128(110) Μm; excretory pore 58–86(73.8) Μm behind head........................................................ T. fatimaensis sp. n. Pharynx length 184–207(200) Μm; posterior of pharynx to vulva 212–292(258) Μm; tail length 122–160(140) Μm; excretory pore 95–110(82) Μm behind head............................................................ T. muscusi sp. n.</p><p>8. Body length 0.81–0.96 (0.87) mm; head width 18–19 Μm................................................................................................... T. intermedia (Bütschli, 1873) Brzeski &amp; Winiszewska.Ślipińska, 1993 Body length 0.68–0.75(0.72) mm; head width 15–16 Μm.................................. T. iucunda Andrássy, 2008 9. Body length 1.1–1.4 mm; outer labial setae 7–9 Μm long, excretory pore absent; subventral teeth anterior to dorsal tooth................................................................................... T. maiuscula Andrássy, 2006 Body length 0.86–0.98 mm; outer labial setae 3.4 Μm long; excretory pore present; subventral teeth posterior to dorsal tooth................................................................................ T. minuscula Andrássy, 2006</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/297C87A48C3BC80FEEBE003FFA34FECB	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Prado-Vera, Ignacio Cid Del;Ferris, Howard;Nadler, Steven A.	Prado-Vera, Ignacio Cid Del, Ferris, Howard, Nadler, Steven A. (2016): Five new species of the genus Tripylella (Nematoda: Enoplida: Tripylidae). Zootaxa 4109 (2): 198-217, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4109.2.5
