WoRMS source details

Jimi, N., Tanaka, M., Kajihara, H. (2017). Leocratides (Annelida: Hesionidae) from the Pacific coast of Middle Honshu, Japan, with a description of Leocratides kimuraorum sp. nov. Species Diversity. 22(2): 133–141.
287270
10.12782/specdiv.22.133 [view]
Jimi, N., Tanaka, M., Kajihara, H.
2017
<i>Leocratides</i> (Annelida: Hesionidae) from the Pacific coast of Middle Honshu, Japan, with a description of <i>Leocratides kimuraorum</i> sp. nov.
Species Diversity
22(2): 133–141.
Publication
A new species of hesionid polychaetes, Leocratides kimuraorum sp. nov., is described based on material collected from the Shima Peninsula and Sagami Bay (middle Honshu, Japan), as well as museum specimens collected from Sagami Bay, Suruga Bay, and Shirahama. Leocratides kimuraorum sp. nov. is the third species in this genus and can be discriminated from the two congeners, L. filamentosus Ehlers, 1908 and L. ehlersi (Horst, 1921), by i) the length of the antennae, which are as long as palps, ii) the presence of pharyngeal terminal papillae, and iii) the absence of a papillose peristomial membrane. On the other hand, L. filamentosus, originally described from off Western Sumatra, Indonesia, was also collected from Sagami Bay, and represents a new record of this species for Japanese waters. Partial mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I gene sequences from the holotype of L. kimuraorum sp. nov. and newly collected specimen of L. filamentosus are provided for reliable species identification in the future.
Japan
Systematics, Taxonomy
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Date
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by
2017-12-05 07:41:11Z
created

Holotype NSMT NMST-Pol H-622, geounit Honshu, identified as Leocratides kimuraorum Jimi, Tanaka & Kajihara, 2017
Japanese hanakago-otohime-gokai for Leocratides filamentosus Ehlers, 1908
Japanese Kimura-hanakago-otohime-gokai for Leocratides kimuraorum Jimi, Tanaka & Kajihara, 2017
 Etymology

authors: "The specific name is a noun in the genitive plural, after a Japanese marine ecologist Dr. Taeko Kimura ... [details]

 Habitat

Living on sponges, especially hexactinellid sponges [details]

 Type locality

Shima Peninsula, Honshu, Japan, 34.1938°, 136.7093° (34°11.63′ N, 136°42.56′ E), 103–104 m [details]