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A small slug from a tropical greenhouse reveals a new rathouisiid lineage with triaulic tritrematic genitalia (Gastropoda: Systellommatophora)
Manganelli, G.; Lesicki, A.; Benocci, A.; Barbato, D.; Miserocchi, D.; Pienkowska, J.R.; Giusti, F. (2023). A small slug from a tropical greenhouse reveals a new rathouisiid lineage with triaulic tritrematic genitalia (Gastropoda: Systellommatophora). Zool. J. Linn. Soc. 197(1): 76-103. https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlac054
In: Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. Academic Press: London. ISSN 0024-4082; e-ISSN 1096-3642, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Taxonomic status > New taxa > New species
    Gastropoda [WoRMS]; Systellommatophora [WoRMS]
    Terrestrial
Author keywords
    alien species, anatomy, COI mtDNA, Gastropoda, genitalia, 16S rDNA gene, 18S rDNA gene, internal transcribed spacer, new genera, new species

Authors  Top 
  • Manganelli, G.
  • Lesicki, A.
  • Benocci, A.
  • Barbato, D.
  • Miserocchi, D.
  • Pienkowska, J.R.
  • Giusti, F.

Abstract
    A small slug found in the tropical greenhouse of the Science Museum (MUSE) of Trento (Italy) turned out to be a species of the little-known systellommatophoran family Rathouisiidae. We undertook detailed comparative anatomical and molecular studies using specimens of the MUSE slug, Rathouisia sinensis, and sequences of other systellommatophoran species deposited in GenBank to conduct a systematic and phylogenetic assessment. Analysis of the genitalia of the MUSE slug and R. sinensis revealed an unusual triaulic tritrematic structure: two separate female ducts – one for egg release (oviduct), the other for intake of allosperm (vagina) – and a separate male duct for autosperm release. Analysis of the nucleotide sequences of several mitochondrial (COI, 16S rDNA) and nuclear (18S rDNA, ITS2 flanked by 5.8S and 28S rDNA fragments, H3) gene fragments supported assignation of the MUSE slug to Rathouisiidae, but also its distinction from the other rathouisiid genera Atopos, Granulilimax, Rathouisia and an undescribed genus from the Ryukyu Islands (Japan). Therefore, we decided to describe the MUSE slug as a new species in a new genus: Barkeriella museensis gen. et sp. nov. The species is certainly an alien introduced into the tropical greenhouse of MUSE, but its origin is unknown and calls for further investigation.

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