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Zenodo
2021
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12824880 |
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Table of Contents:
- <p><b><i>Martesia fragilis</i> Verril and Bush 1898</b> (Fig. 7)</p><p><i>Martesia</i> (<i>Martesiella</i>) <i>fragilis</i> Verrill and Bush, 1898: 777, pl. 79, fig. 10.</p><p><i>Pholadidea</i> (<i>Penitella</i>) <i>minuscula</i> Dall, 1908: 425.</p><p><i>Martesia</i> (<i>Diploplax</i>) <i>exquisita</i> Bartsch and Rehder, 1945: 10.</p><p><i>Martesia</i> (<i>Diploplax</i>) <i>bahamensis</i> Bartsch and Rehder, 1945: 11.</p><p><i>Martesia</i> (<i>Martesia</i>) <i>fragilis</i> – Turner 1955: 111, pl. 65–66, figs. 1–9; Daniel and Srinivasan 1956: 59; Srinivasan 1959: 107; Klappenbach 1967: 167; Bernard 1983: 60; Turner and Santhakumaran 1989: 161, fig. 4; Rios 1994: 296: pl. 100, fig. 1440; 2009: 593, fig. 1635; Huber 2010: 476; Coan and Valentich-Scott 2012: 894, pl. 279.</p><p><i>Martesia fragilis</i> – Olsson 1961: 446; Keen 1971: 276; Hoagland and Turner 1981: 130; Díaz Merlano and Puyana Hegedus 1994: 101, pl. 30, fig. 288; Scarabino 2003: 242; Turgeon et al. 2009: 737; Dias Passos and Magalhães 2011: 148; Scarabino et al. 2016: 7; Velásquez et al. 2017: 252, figs. 9–10.</p><p><i>Type locality</i>: 360 miles Off Charles cape, Virginia, United States, Station N° 2566 R/V Albatross in a floating piece of wood, lat. 37°23'N, long. 68°8'W.</p><p><i>Ty p e m a t e r i a l</i>: <i>M a r t e s i a f r a g i l i s</i>: USNM 614180, lectotype, two valves; <i>Martesia</i> (<i>Diploplax</i>) <i>bahamensis</i>: USNM 573549, holotype, collected at Est side of Hudros Island, Andros Light, South Bight, Bahamas; <i>Martesia</i> (<i>Diploplax</i>) <i>exquisita</i>: USNM 573548, holotype, collected at Stony Cove, St. Mary Parish, Jamaica; <i>Pholadidea</i> (<i>Penitella</i>) <i>minuscula</i>: USNM 122946, syntypes, seven valves, collected at Azuero Peninsula, Punta Mala, SE of Gulf of Panama, Panama in 1891.</p><p><i>Description</i>: Shell: small, fragile, thin, equivalve, inequilateral; length up to 10 mm; anterior end rounded and short; pedal aperture closed by the callum in adults; dorso-anterior margin rounded toward the umbos; posterior end elongated, rounded, less developed in juveniles, laterally compressed in adult specimens; external surface with a deep sulcus that goes from the umbos to the ventral margin dividing the external sculpture in two areas; thin and concentric imbricate ribs over the anterior side of the sulcus; sculpture curved downward and form a distinct angle in line with the antero-ventral margin; concentric ribs crossed by fine radial lines; irregular growth lines on the posterior side of the sulcus; mesoplax thick, relatively large, and usually heart-shaped, ovate-elongate with a dorsal depression and concentric sculpture; metaplax long, narrow, placed above the dorsal margin, with free edges under the posterior end of mesoplax and the anterior end narrow.</p><p><i>Distribution</i>: <i>Martesia fragilis</i> was recorded from floating woods in the Northwestern Atlantic, USA (Turner 1955), in the southwestern Atlantic (Klappenbach 1967, Díaz Merlano and Puyana Hegedus 1994; Rios 2009), in the Eastern Pacific from Mexico to Panama (Díaz Merlano and Puyana Hegedus 1994), in the Indian and eastern Pacific Oceans (Daniel and Srinivasan 1956; Srinivasan 1959); and in the United Kingdom (Holmes et al. 2015).</p><p><i>Remarks</i>: <i>Martesia fragilis</i> had been occasionally recorded in fixed wooden substrates. It was first reported by Klappenbach (1967) for Uruguayan waters (Natural History National Museum, Montevideo, N° 1313). Nevertheless, it was widely registered in floating pieces of wood of different trees such as <i>Myristica fragrans</i> and <i>Mangifera indica</i> in the Indo Pacific; coconuts in the United Kingdom or the cork <i>Quercus suber</i> in the western Atlantic (Turner 1955; Srinivasan 1959; Klappenbach 1967; Holmes et al. 2015). It is considered a pelagic species (Turner 1955) with a wide geographical distribution suggesting the presence of an ocean traveler. However, more studies must be carried out to understand this process. Three species have been mentioned as synonym of <i>Martesia fragilis</i> in the literature. They are and <i>Pholadidea</i> (<i>Penitella</i>) <i>minuscula</i> (USNM 122946) (Fig. 7D–H), <i>Martesia</i> (<i>Diploplax</i>) <i>bahamensis</i> (USNM 573549) (Fig. 7I–L), <i>Martesia</i> (<i>Diploplax</i>) <i>exquisita</i> (USNM 573548) (Fig. 7M–P). The description of these three nominal species were based on very small specimens, juveniles (Fig. 7D–P) with equal external sculpture in comparison with the types of <i>M</i>. <i>fragilis</i><i>.</i> The synonyms listed above were described from the Caribbean Sea. The morphology of <i>M. fragilis</i> was studied by Holmes et al. (2015) who distinguished it from <i>M. striata</i> and <i>M. cuneiformis</i> by mesoplax morphology. The type species has a mesoplax large, circular with irregular wrinkles and without concentric sculpture as in <i>M. fragilis</i> and without a longitudinal groove and growth lines as in <i>M. cuneiformis</i>. In addition, <i>Martesia fragilis</i> can be distinguished from <i>M. striata</i> by the thinnest umbonal reflection, most elongated anterior adductor muscle, longest anterior part of the shell, lanceolate hypoplax and largest metaplax (Srinivasan 1959).</p>