Mesotardigrada | |
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Illustration accompanying Rahm's (1937) description | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Tardigrada |
Class: | Mesotardigrada |
Order: | Thermozodia |
Family: | Thermozodiidae Rahm, 1937 |
Genus: | Thermozodium Rahm, 1937 |
Species: | T. esakii |
Binomial name | |
Thermozodium esakii | |
The type locality and only locality of observation, near Nagasaki, Japan |
Mesotardigrada is one of three classes of tardigrades, [3] consisting of a single species, Thermozodium esakii. [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] The animal reportedly has six claws of equal length at each foot. This species was described in 1937 by German zoologist Gilbert Rahm from a hot spring near Nagasaki, Japan. The inability of taxonomists to replicate Rahm's finding has cast doubt on the accuracy of the description, making T. esakii, and by extension the entire class Mesotardigrada, a taxon inquirendum. [11]
The type specimen Rahm used as the basis of his description has either been lost [12] or it was never preserved in the first place, which Grothman et al. (2017) suggest is consistent with the lax taxonomic standards of the 1930s. [11] Thus, re-examination of the original specimen is not possible. Complicating matters further, the type locality from which Rahm collected his specimen may have been destroyed by an earthquake[ which? ] and subsequent searches for additional specimens matching the original description have been unsuccessful. [11]
Grothman et al. (2017) suggest that Rahm might have observed and misinterpreted a species in the class Heterotardigrada, possibly belonging to the genus Carphania or Oreella. [11]
The class Heterotardigrada includes tardigrades that have cephalic appendages and legs with four separate but similar digits or claws on each. 444 species have been described.
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