Nomenclature
original description
Chamberlin, Ralph V. (1919). The Annelida Polychaeta [Albatross Expeditions]. <em>Memoirs of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College.</em> 48: 1-514., available online at http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/ia/memoirsofmuseumo4801harv
page(s): 325, 333; note: Genus name introduced in a key (p.325) then fully described on p.333 [details]
original description
(of Paraninoe Levenstein, 1977) Levenstein, R. Ya. (1977). A new genus and species of Polychaeta (Family Lumbrineridae) from the deep-water trenches the the North Pacific. <em>[Book section].</em> 189-198. IN: Reish, D.J. and Fauchald, K. (Ed.). Essays on Polychaetous Annelids in Memory of Dr. Olga Hartman: Los Angeles, The Allan Hancock Foundation, University of Southern California.
page(s): 190-191 [details]
Taxonomy
status source
Carrera-Parra, Luis F. (2001). Recognition of <i>Cenogenus</i> Chamberlin, 1919 (Polychaeta: Lumbrineridae) based on type material. <em>Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington.</em> 114(3): 720-724., available online at https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/34558884
page(s): 720; note: revalidation of the genus [details]
From editor or global species database
Diagnosis Single small antenna in nuchal fold. Setae include limbate capillaries, limbate robust, and simple multidentate hooded hooks. Anterior segments with a parapodial branchia dorsal and posterior to parapodia. Maxillary apparatus and labidognath type; with four pairs of maxillae, maxillae I forceps-like with smooth edges and bridles poorly developed, maxillae II of similar length to maxillae I, maxillae III and IV edentate plates (maxillae V absent); mandibles partially fused. [emended diagnosis of Carrera-Parra, 2001] [details]
Etymology Chamberlin (1919: 333) gives the translation from Greek of Cenogenus in a footnote as 'strange jaw'. Ceno- is more usually translated as new or recent (as in Eocene, Cenozoic), or perhaps new in the sense of unique. The Greek for jaw is more usually transliterated to Latin as 'genys' '-genyos', a feminine noun. [details]
Grammatical gender Cenogenus is evidently feminine. The Greek word for 'genus' meaning jaw (usually genys) is a feminine noun. Subsequent adjectival species names have had feminine endings kept when recombined into Cenogenus. As yet there appears to be no adjectival names named as original combinations in Cenogenus. The species name 'descendens' in the type species C. descendens appears to be derived from a verb. [details]
Status Carrera-Parra (2001) revalidated Cenogenus Chamberlin, 1919 from former synonymy under Lumbrineris and invalidated Paraninoe Levenstein, 1977. He placed Paraninoe fusca, the type species of Paraninoe (as Ninoe fusca), in Cenogenus, and recombined the following species by stating that "Following the list of species provided by Levenstein (1977) and Orensanz (1990), the species of Cenogenus includes C. abyssalis (Imajima & Higuchi, 1975), C. antarctica (Monro, 1930), C. brevipes (McIntosh, 1903), C. descendens Chamberlin, 1919, C. fusca (Moore 1911), C. fuscoides (Fauchald, 1970), C. hartmanae (Levenstein, 1977), C. monotentaculata (Averincev, 1972), C. nagae (Gallardo, 1968), and C. simpla (Moore, 1905)." [details]