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New deep-sea species of Xenoturbella and the position of Xenacoelomorpha
Rouse, G.W.; Wilson, N.G.; Carvajal, J.I.; Vrijenhoek, R.C. (2016). New deep-sea species of Xenoturbella and the position of Xenacoelomorpha. Nature (Lond.) 530(7588): 94-97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature16545
In: Nature: International Weekly Journal of Science. Nature Publishing Group: London. ISSN 0028-0836; e-ISSN 1476-4687, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Taxa > Species > New taxa > New species
    Xenacoelomorpha [WoRMS]; Xenoturbella Westblad, 1949 [WoRMS]
    IE, East Pacific [Marine Regions]
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Rouse, G.W.
  • Wilson, N.G., more
  • Carvajal, J.I.
  • Vrijenhoek, R.C.

Abstract
    The discovery of four new Xenoturbella species from deep waters of the eastern Pacific Ocean is reported here. The genus and two nominal species were described from the west coast of Sweden, but their taxonomic placement remains unstable. Limited evidence placed Xenoturbella with molluscs, but the tissues can be contaminated with prey. They were then considered deuterostomes. Further taxon sampling and analysis have grouped Xenoturbella with acoelomorphs (=Xenacoelomorpha) as sister to all other Bilateria (=Nephrozoa), or placed Xenacoelomorpha inside Deuterostomia with Ambulacraria (Hemichordata?+?Echinodermata). Here we describe four new species of Xenoturbella and reassess those hypotheses. A large species (>20?cm long) was found at cold-water hydrocarbon seeps at 2,890?m depth in Monterey Canyon and at 1,722?m in the Gulf of California (Mexico). A second large species (~10?cm long) also occurred at 1,722?m in the Gulf of California. The third large species (~15?cm long) was found at ~3,700?m depth near a newly discovered carbonate-hosted hydrothermal vent in the Gulf of California. Finally, a small species (~2.5?cm long), found near a whale carcass at 631?m depth in Monterey Submarine Canyon (California), resembles the two nominal species from Sweden. Analysis of whole mitochondrial genomes places the three larger species as a sister clade to the smaller Atlantic and Pacific species. Phylogenomic analyses of transcriptomic sequences support placement of Xenacoelomorpha as sister to Nephrozoa or Protostomia.

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