Search results for "tardigrades"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

A New Species of the Genus Crenubiotus (Tardigrada: Eutardigrada: Adorybiotidae) from Salt Spring Island, Strait of Georgia, British Columbia (Canada)

2022

Currently, the recently erected genus Crenubiotus (Adorybiotidae, Macrobiotoidea) includes only three species, all of which are characterised by dentate lunulae and cuticular tubercules organised in the band in the dorso-caudal part of the body. By means of integrative taxonomy, we describe a fourth species of the genus: Crenubiotus salishani sp. nov., from Salt Spring Island in British Columbia, Canada. The new species has been found in the moss growing on rock and differs from the other species in the genus due to the presence of a median anterior mucrone in the third band of the oral cavity armature (OCA) and by the presence of evident thickenings on the eggshell connecting the neighbour…

Southern Gulf IslandstardigradeskarhukaisetvalomikroskopiaSalish Seasystematiikka (biologia)fylogenetiikkalajinmääritysconfocal microscopyegg ornamentationgenotyyppiintegrative taxonomy
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Sisubiotus hakaiensis sp. nov. (Tardigrada, Macrobiotidae), a new tardigrade species from Calvert Island (British Columbia, Canada)

2022

Tardigrades reports from British Columbia (Canada) trace back to 1908 and numerous species have been recorded from this region, despite the relatively few published sampling studies. We describe by integrative taxonomy (light microscopy morphology, morphometrics, and DNA sequencing) a new tardigrade species, Sisubiotus hakaiensis sp. nov. from the British Columbia central coast. The new species has been found in moss collected from a vertical rock outcrop near the Hakai Institute Calvert Island Field Station. Sisubiotus hakaiensis sp. nov. differs from all the other known species in the genus by the presence of a labyrinthine layer inside the egg process walls, whereas no consistent differe…

tardigradesHakaikarhukaisetsystematiikka (biologia)BC central coastMacrobiotidaeBiodiversityegg morphologymorfologiaddc:590EutardigradaParachelaTardigradalajinmääritysAnimaliaintegrative taxonomyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTaxonomy
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The toughest animals of the Earth versus global warming: Effects of long-term experimental warming on tardigrade community structure of a temperate d…

2021

Abstract Understanding how different taxa respond to global warming is essential for predicting future changes and elaborating strategies to buffer them. Tardigrades are well known for their ability to survive environmental stressors, such as drying and freezing, by undergoing cryptobiosis and rapidly recovering their metabolic function after stressors cease. Determining the extent to which animals that undergo cryptobiosis are affected by environmental warming will help to understand the real magnitude climate change will have on these organisms. Here, we report on the responses of tardigrades within a five‐year‐long, field‐based artificial warming experiment, which consisted of 12 open‐to…

karhukaisetexperimentalTemperate deciduous forestglobal warmingEffects of global warmingAbundance (ecology)CryptobiosisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsQH540-549.5Nature and Landscape ConservationOriginal Researchclimate change; experimental; global warming; Tardigrades; water bearsbiologyEcologyEcologywater bearsGlobal warmingPlant litterilmastonmuutoksetbiology.organism_classificationclimate changemaaperäeläimistöTardigradesEnvironmental scienceSpecies richnessTardigradelämpeneminenympäristönmuutokset
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