Paraganitus

Genus of gastropods From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paraganitus ellynnae is a species of sea slug, an acochlidian, a shell-less marine gastropod mollusc in the family Parhedylidae.

Phylum:Mollusca
Genus:Paraganitus
Challis, 1968[1]
Quick facts Scientific classification, Binomial name ...
Paraganitus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Family: Parhedylidae
Genus: Paraganitus
Challis, 1968[1]
Species:
P. ellynnae
Binomial name
Paraganitus ellynnae
Challis, 1968
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Paraganitus ellynnae is the only species in the genus Paraganitus.[2]

Description

Paraganitus ellynnae is smaller than 5 mm and is externally symmetric.[2] It has no shell in adults, and no operculum in adults.[2] It has also no head shield and no posterior shield.[2] It is able to partially retract parts of its anterior body into a temporal visceral cavity.[2] The visceral sac is largely separated from the rest of the body.[2] The mantle is robust.[2] The visceral hump is conical.[2] The tail is short and pointed.[2] The foot is narrow, the anterior foot edge is rounded and it can crawl on the whole foot.[2] It has no mantle cavity.[2] It has elongated/pointed rhinophores.[2] Like all acochlidians, it has oral (= labial) tentacles.[2] Paraganitus ellynnae has long and slightly recurved oral tentacles.[2] Oral tentacle nerves have been present in all examined acochlidians to date, but those nerves were not examined in this species.[2]

Like all acochlidians, it lacks plicate gills.[2] The position of the anus is unknown.[2] It has no calcareous spicules, but it has integumental concrements.[2] It has no keel on the visceral hump.[2]

It has aggregations of precerebral ‘accessory ganglia’.[2] It has no eyes.[2] The presence or absence of Hancock's organ is unknown.[2] It has prepharyngeal CNS as is the case in all other acochlidians.[2]

Ecology

Paraganitus ellynnae is marine and is a mesopsammic species, in other words, these very small slugs live in the interstitial spaces of marine sands.[2]

References

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