identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03A887D86D50FFC1ABE5761EFC6E2FE2.text	03A887D86D50FFC1ABE5761EFC6E2FE2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eumida dracodermica	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Eumida dracodermica sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Figs 6–9</p>
            <p>Holotype. Saco do Limoeiro, Mel Island, Paraná State, Brazil, 25°33’37.8”S 48°18’03.0”W, in the intertidal region, 28 Oct. 2010 (ZUEC –16049).</p>
            <p>Paratypes. A total of 42 paratypes, length ranging from 2 to 37 mm and number of segments ranging from 18 to 92. Continental shelf in Campos Basin, Brazil: Hab11 E02 R1, 22º6'56.2"S 40º38'58.2"W, 53 m, 26 Feb. 2009 (4 paratypes, ZUEC –16050); Hab17 Foz09 R2, 22º11'30.6"S 40º55'24.4"W, 44 m, 17 Jul. 2009 (2 paratypes, ZUEC – 16051); Hab17 Foz09 R1, 22º11'30.6"S 40º55'24.4"W, 44 m, 17 Jul. 2009 (2 paratypes, ZUEC –16052); Hab11 C02 R3, 22º37'31.8"S 41º21'51.8"W, 53 m, 27 Feb. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16053); Hab17 Foz09 R1, 22º11'30.6"S 40º55'24.4"W, 44 m, 17 Jul. 2009 (3 paratypes, ZUEC –16054); Hab16 B04 R3, 23º10'5.0"S 41º3'7.5"W, 107 m, 2 Jul. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16055); Hab11 E2 R3, 22º6'55.6"S 40º38'58.3"W, 53 m, 2 Jul. 2009 (2 paratypes, ZUEC –16056); Hab11 B2 R3, 22º12'53.4"S 40º51'12.4"W, 52 m, 26 Feb. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16057); Hab17 Foz21 R1, 22º6'22.0"S 40º43'42.3"W, 47 m, 17 Jul. 2009 (4 paratypes, ZUEC –16058); Hab11 D1 R3, 22º6'42.2"S 40º54'44.3"W, 29 m, 26 Feb. 2009 (2 paratypes, ZUEC –16059); Hab13 Foz21 R3, 22º1'9.9"S 40º31'54.4"W, 49 m, 12 Mar. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16060); Hab13 Foz9 R3, 22º11'32.1"S 40º55'24.1"W, 44 m, 13 Mar. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16061); Hab13 Foz2 R1, 22º6'21.2"S 40º43'39.3"W, 47 m, 12 Mar. 2009 (6 paratypes, ZUEC – 16062); Hab13 Foz21 R3, 22º6'21.9"S 40º43'39.4"W, 47 m, 12 Mar. 2009 (3 paratypes, ZUEC –16063); Hab11 E2 R1, 22º6 56.2"S 40º38' 58.2 W, 53 m, 26 Feb. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16064); Hab13 foz29 R1, 21°24'43.621"S, 40°25'18.618"W, 33 m, 3 Jul. 2009, (2 paratypes, ZMUC-POL-2363); Hab11 E02 R03, 22º6'55.6"S, 40°38'58.3"W, 53 m, 26 Feb. 2009, (6 paratypes, ZMUC-POL-2364).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis. Whitish pigmentation present dorsally on segment 2 (first dorsally visible segment), posterior edge of prostomium, anterior edge of segment 3 and cirrophores of dorsal tentacular cirri of segments 2 and 3. Dorsal cirri on anterior and median segments cordiform, almost as wide as long, on posterior segments lanceolate.</p>
            <p>Description. Holotype a complete female with 92 segments, 37 mm long, 2.5 mm wide at the median part of the body, including parapodia and excluding chaetae. Body long, dorso-ventrally flattened, with tapered posterior end. Prostomium cordiform to pentagonal, clearly longer than wide, with rounded outline. Paired frontal, cylindrical antennae and palps of similar size. Antennae and palps about as long as prostomium. Median antenna located on median part of prostomium, at anterior margin of eyes, reaching fifth segment (Fig. 6 A–B). One pair of red eyes, of medium size, located at posterior margin of prostomium. Undivided proboscis, with 6 longitudinal rows of tubercles and micropapillae (Fig. 6 C). Terminal ring with 18 rounded papillae; each papilla with two longitudinal rows of micropapillae (Fig. 6 F–E). First segment not visible dorsally. Four pairs of cylindrical tentacular cirri, biarticulate, located on first three segments. Tentacular cirri of first segment reaching segment 4.</p>
            <p>Dorsal and ventral tentacular cirri of segment 2 reaching segments 10 and 4, respectively. Dorsal tentacular cirri of segment 3 extend to segment 10. Neuropodia from second segment. Normal dorsal cirri symmetrical, with welldeveloped cirrophores without dorsal extensions, from segment 4. Dorsal cirri of anterior and median segments cordiform, with distal extremities more tapered, almost as wide as long, on posterior segments lanceolate. Prechaetal lobes bilobate and rounded, supracicular lobe twice as large as subacicular lobe. Postchaetal lobes rounded. Normal ventral cirri horizontally oriented in relation to lobes, present from segment 3, on anterior and median segments rounded, on posterior segments more elongate, almost lanceolate (Fig. 7 A–C). Compound spinigerous chaetae, from segment 2. Chaetal rostrum surrounded by rows of conical denticles, article with serrated outer edge (Fig. 8 A–C). Pygidium with one pair of conical, short anal cirri. Pygidial papilla absent (Fig. 9 A–B).</p>
            <p>Colour. Living individuals with iridescent whitish pigmentation dorsally on segment 2 (the first dorsally visible segment), the posterior edge of the prostomium, the anterior edge of segment 3 and the cirrophores of the dorsal tentacular cirri of segment 2 and 3. White dots present throughout the mediodorsal part of the body. Other parts of the body with dark olive green pigmentation (Fig. 6 A).</p>
            <p>Habitat. Cliffs and unconsolidated sediments at Mel Island (Paraná) and the continental shelf in the Campos Basin, Brazil.</p>
            <p>Geographical distribution. Atlantic Ocean, Brazil, Mel Island and the continental shelf of Campos Basin, Brazil.</p>
            <p>Etymology. The name of this species is derived from the Latin words draco (dragon) and dermalis (dermal), meaning dragon skin. There is a certain similarity between the dorsal cirri of living individuals and the scales on the dorsal region of mythical Japanese dragons.</p>
            <p> Remarks. All the previous Brazilian records (Duarte &amp; Nalesso 1996; Duarte 1980; Morgado &amp; Amaral 1984; Nogueira 2000; Amaral et al. 2006 –12) of  Eumida sanguinea (Öersted, 1843) , which was originally described from the North Atlantic Ocean (Denmark), should actually be referred to  Eumida dracodermica sp. nov. The two species differ in the size of the prostomium, the distribution of micropapillae on the proboscis, and the shape of the dorsal cirri. In  E. sanguinea the prostomium is almost as long as wide, the proboscis has irregularly distributed micropapillae and the dorsal cirri are cordiform, whereas in  E. dracodermica sp. nov. the prostomium is clearly longer than wide, the proboscis has six rows of tubercles with micropapillae regularly distributed, and the dorsal cirri of anterior and median segments are cordiform, almost lanceolate on posterior segments. They share the presence of two longitudinal rows of micropapillae on each papilla in the terminal ring of the proboscis.  E. dracodermica sp. nov. shares the presence of cordiform dorsal cirri on the median part of the body with  Eumida longicirrata Hartmann-Schroder, 1975 (known from the NE Atlantic Ocean, Iberian Basin). It also resembles this species in having supracicular prechaetal lobes that are twice as large as the subacicular lobes, but they differ in the characters of the proboscis, which is smooth in  E. longicirrata and possesses tubercles with micropapillae in  E. dracodermica sp. nov. E. dracodermica sp. nov. shares the presence of a cordiform prostomium and median dorsal cirri with  Eumida longicornuta (Moore, 1906) known from the Northern Pacific Ocean and  Eumida minuta (Grube, 1880) , known from Ilha de Santa Catarina, in southern Brazil (previously Desterro Island, Santa Catarina, Brazil). However,  E. dracodermica clearly differs from them in the shape of the dorsal cirri, which are symmetrical in anterior and median segments and lanceolate in posterior segments. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A887D86D50FFC1ABE5761EFC6E2FE2	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Oliveira, Verônica Maria De;Eibye-Jacobsen, Danny;Lana, Paulo Da Cunha	Oliveira, Verônica Maria De, Eibye-Jacobsen, Danny, Lana, Paulo Da Cunha (2015): Description of three new species of Eumida Malmgren, 1865 (Phyllodocidae, Annelida) from Southern and Southeastern Brazil. Zootaxa 3957 (4): 425-440, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3957.4.4
03A887D86D5BFFC2ABE5741AFA5E2B47.text	03A887D86D5BFFC2ABE5741AFA5E2B47.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eumida macrophthalma	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Eumida macrophthalma sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Figs 10–12</p>
            <p>Holotype: Maciel River, COTS 1 3 (PROSUL Project-CNPq), Paranaguá Bay, Paraná State, S Brazil, 25°31'01.4"S 48°29'15.8"W, 14 m, 29 Jul 2008 (ZUEC –16075).</p>
            <p>Paratypes. A total of 21 paratypes, length ranging from 2 to 37 mm and number of segments ranging from 18 to 92. Paranaguá Bay, Brazil: Maciel River, COTS 2 6 (PROSUL), 25°31'56.6"S 48°27'50.8"W, 10 m, 29 Jul. 2008 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16073); Maciel River, COTS 1 3 (PROSUL), 25°31'01.4"S 48°29'15.8"W, 14 m, 29 Jul. 2008 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16074); Maciel, Cotinga Channel, COTS 2 4 (PROSUL), 25°31'49.9"S 48°28'07.0"W, 10 m, Sept. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16076); Cotinga Channel, COTS 2 4 (PROSUL), 25°31'49.9"S 48°28'07.0"W, 10 m, Sept. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16077); Saco do Limoeiro, Mel Island, Paraná State, Brazil, 25°33’37.8”S 48°18’03.0”W, 28 Oct. 2010 (2 paratypes, ZUEC –16079). Continental shelf, Campos Basin, Brazil: Hab11 E02 R3, 22º6'55.6"S 40º38'58.3"W, 53 m, sand, 26 Feb. 2009 (ZUEC –16080); Hab13 H05 R1, 21º42'37.4"S 40º8'59.8"W, 147 m, 9 Mar. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16082); Hab11 C05 R2, 22º57'29.1"S 40º50'30.5"W, 143 m, 21 Feb. 2009 (2 paratypes, ZUEC –16083); Hab1 Arrasto 55, 20 Apr. 2010 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16084); Hab13 Foz9 R3, 22º11'32.1"S 40º55'24.1"W, 44 m, 13 Mar. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16085); Hab16 B05 R3, 23º12'8.5"S 40º59'35.6"W, 142 m, 2 Jul. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16086); São Vicente, 16 May 2003 (2 paratypes, ZUEC – 16087); Hab17 Foz24 R1, 21º50'21.0"S 40º31'37.3"W, 28 m, 23 Jul 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16088); Hab11 E2 R3, 22º1'45.7"S 40º38'58.3"W, 53 m, 26 Feb. 2009 (1 paratype, ZUEC –18089); Hab 13 Foz29 R01, 21°24'43.6"S, 40°25'18.6"W, 33 m, 3 Jul. 2009, (4 paratypes, ZMUC-POL-2365).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis. Whitish pigmentation present dorsally on segments 2 and 3 (first two dorsally visible segments) and cirrophores of dorsal tentacular cirri of segments 2 and 3. Dorsal cirri on anterior segments rounded, on median and posterior segments asymmetrically cordiform, longer than wide.</p>
            <p>Description. Holotype an incomplete female, with 43 segments, 7 mm long, 0.4 mm wide at median part of body including parapodia and excluding chaetae. Body long, dorso-ventrally flattened and tapered at posterior end. Prostomium cordiform, with rounded anterior edges and clearly longer than wide, with rounded outline (Fig. 10 A– B). Paired frontal, cylindrical antennae and palps of similar size. Antennae and palps half as long as prostomium. Median antenna at anterior margin of eyes, as long as prostomium (Fig. 10 A–B). One pair of large black eyes at posterior margin of prostomium. Undivided proboscis, with 6 longitudinal rows of tubercles, each tubercle with one micropapilla. Terminal ring of proboscis with oval papillae. First segment not visible dorsally. Four pairs of cylindrical tentacular cirri, biarticulate, arranged on first three segments. Tentacular cirri of first segment reaching segment 5. Dorsal and ventral tentacular cirri of segment 2 reaching segments 10 and 6, respectively. Dorsal tentacular cirri of segment 3 extend to segment 10. Neuropodia from second segment. Normal dorsal cirri symmetrical, with well-developed cirrophores without dorsal expansion, from segment 4. Dorsal cirri of anterior segments symmetrical and rounded, on median and posterior segments cordiform, asymmetrical, and longer than wide. Prechaetal lobes bilobate, symmetrical, and rounded. Postchaetal lobes rounded. Normal ventral cirri horizontally oriented in relation to lobes, from segment 3, on anterior segments asymmetrical and rounded, on median and posterior segments elongate cordiform (Fig. 11 A–C). Compound spinigerous chaetae from segment 2. Rostrum of chaetal shaft surrounded by denticles, article with serrated outer edge (Fig. 12 A). Pygidium with one pair of cylindrical, long cirri, reaching sixth posterior segment; pygidial papilla absent (Fig. 12 B).</p>
            <p>Coloration. Individuals with iridescent whitish pigmentation dorsally on segments 2 and 3 (the first two dorsally visible segments) and the cirrophores of the dorsal tentacular cirri of segments 2 and 3; other parts of the body are olive green (Fig. 10 A).</p>
            <p>Habitat. In subtidal unconsolidated estuarine and shelf bottoms, down to 142 m.</p>
            <p>Geographical distribution. Southwestern Atlantic Ocean, Brazil: Paranaguá Bay and margin of the continental shelf in Campos Basin.</p>
            <p>Etymology. The species name is derived from the Latin words macro (large) and ophthalmus (eye).</p>
            <p> Remarks.  Eumida macrophthalma sp. nov. differs from  E. dracodermica sp. nov. and  E. delicata sp. nov. in the shape of the prostomium, which is more rounded, and in the size of the eyes, which are proportionally larger. The three species also differ in the extension of the dorsal whitish pigmentation on the anterior segments: in all three this pigmentation is present on segment 2 (the first dorsally visibile segment); in  E. macrophthalma sp. nov. it is also present on segment 3 and the dorsal tentacular cirrophores; in  E. dracodermica sp. nov. it is also present on the posterior edge of the prostomium, the anterior edge of segment 3 and the dorsal tentacular cirrophores; in  E. delicata sp. nov. it is also present on the dorsal tentacular cirrophores of segment 2, but not those of segment 3.  E. macrophthalma sp. nov. and  E. sanguinea differ in the position of the median antenna and the shape of the dorsal cirrus. In  E. macrophthalma sp. nov. the median antenna is located on the region anterior to the eyes, whereas in  E. sanguinea it is located between the eyes (which are proportionally smaller).  Eumida macrophthalma resembles E. </p>
            <p> fuscoculata Eibye-Jacobsen, 1991 , known from Queensland, Western Australia and Tasmania, in having cordiform dorsal cirri on posterior segments, but differs from it in having rounded dorsal cirri on anterior segments (cordiform in  E. fuscoculata ). It also resembles  Eumida caspersi Hartmann-Schröder, 1965 , known from Hilo, Hawaii, in the the shape of the prostomium, size of the eyes, and shape of dorsal cirri on median segments but differs from it in having cordiform and asymmetrical dorsal cirri on posterior segments (lanceolate and symmetrical in  E. caspersi ). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A887D86D5BFFC2ABE5741AFA5E2B47	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Oliveira, Verônica Maria De;Eibye-Jacobsen, Danny;Lana, Paulo Da Cunha	Oliveira, Verônica Maria De, Eibye-Jacobsen, Danny, Lana, Paulo Da Cunha (2015): Description of three new species of Eumida Malmgren, 1865 (Phyllodocidae, Annelida) from Southern and Southeastern Brazil. Zootaxa 3957 (4): 425-440, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3957.4.4
03A887D86D5FFFC7ABE572BAFAA62987.text	03A887D86D5FFFC7ABE572BAFAA62987.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eumida delicata	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Eumida delicata sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Figs 13–15</p>
            <p>Holotype. São Francisco do Sul, Santa Catarina State, Brazil, 26°16'52.0' N 48°40'38.3''W, 1.0 m, associated with lantern nets for oyster cultivation, 22 Mar 2013 (ZUEC –16065).</p>
            <p>Paratypes. 9 paratypes, all from Brazil, length ranging from 9 to 29 mm and number of segments ranging from 43 to 90. São Francisco do Sul, Santa Catarina State, Brazil, 26°16'52.0' N 48°40'38.3''W, 3 May 2013 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16066); Porchat Island Club, São Vicente, São Paulo State, 23°58'44.4''S 46°22'03.7''W, 15 Jun. 2003 (4 paratypes, ZUEC –16067); same locality, 11 Jul. 2013 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16068); Araça, São Paulo State, 15 Jul. 2003 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16069); Guarujá, São Paulo State, 4 Oct. 2005 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16070); Guara, São Paulo State, 5 Mar. 2007 (1 paratype, ZUEC –16071).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis. Whitish pigmentation present dorsally on segment 2 (first visible segment) and cirrophores of dorsal tentacular cirri of segment 2. Dorsal cirri lanceolate, longer than wide, on median segments twice as long as wide, on posterior segments more slender.</p>
            <p>Description. Holotype a complete female with 90 segments, 29 mm in length, 1 mm wide at median part of the body including parapodia and excluding chaetae. Body long, dorso-ventrally flattened and tapered at posterior end. Prostomium cordiform, clearly longer than wide, with rounded outline (Fig. 13 A–B). Paired frontal, cylindrical antennae and palps of similar size. Antennae and palps half as long as prostomium. Median antenna located at anterior margin of eyes, reaching second segment (Fig. 13 A–B). One pair of large black eyes located at posterior margin of prostomium. Undivided proboscis, with 6 longitudinal rows of clusters of papillae (Fig. 13 C–E). Terminal ring of proboscis with 16 rounded papillae (Fig. 13 C). First segment not visible dorsally. Four pairs of cylindrical tentacular cirri, biarticulate, arranged on first three segments. Tentacular cirri of segment 1 reaching segment 4. Dorsal and ventral tentacular cirri of segment 2 reaching segments 5 and 7, respectively. Dorsal tentacular cirri of segment 3 extending to segment 6. Neuropodia from second segment. Normal dorsal cirri with well-developed cirrophores without dorsal expansion, from segment 4; symmetrical and lanceolate, twice as long as wide on median segments, on posterior segments more slender (Fig. 14 A–C). Prechaetal lobes bilobate, asymmetrical and rounded. Postchaetal lobes rounded. Normal ventral cirri horizontally oriented in relation to lobes, from segment 3, asymmetrical on anterior segments, oval on median segments and oval and elongated on posterior segments (Fig. 14 A–D). Compound spinigerous chaetae from segment 2. Rostrum of chaetal shaft surrounded by denticles, article with serrated outer edge (Fig. 15 A). Pygidium with one pair of long, slender, cylindrical anal cirri, reaching seventh posterior segment; pygidial papilla absent (Fig. 15 B).</p>
            <p>Colour. Living individuals with iridescent whitish pigmentation dorsally on segment 2 (the first dorsally visible segment) and the cirrophores of its dorsal tentacular cirri; other parts of the body olive to light green (Fig. 13 A–C).</p>
            <p>Habitat. Associated with lantern nets for oyster cultivation and intertidal and shallow subtidal consolidated bottoms.</p>
            <p>Geographical distribution. Santa Catarina State and São Paulo State, Brazil.</p>
            <p>Etymology. The species name is derived from the Latin word delicatus (delicate), referring to its delicate parapodial structures.</p>
            <p> Remarks. This species differs from  E. dracodermica sp. nov. in having lanceolate and elongate dorsal cirri along the entire body, whereas in the latter only those of posterior segments are lanceolate. The eyes are proportionally smaller in  E. delicata sp. nov. than in  E. macrophthalma sp. nov. The extension of the dorsal whitish pigmentation on the anterior segments in  E. delicata sp. nov. clearly differs from that of  E. dracodermica sp. nov. and  E. macrophthalma sp. nov. (see Remarks on the latter species). All three new species described here share the insertion of the median antenna anterior to the eyes, but differ in its length, relatively long in  E. delicata sp. nov. and  E. dracodermica sp. nov. and shorter in  E. macrophthalma sp. nov. It differs from  E. sanguinea in the position of the median antenna and in the shape of the dorsal cirri, especially on anterior segments.  E. delicata sp. nov. differs from  Eumida notata (Langerhans, 1880) , known from Madeira, in the shape of the prostomium and dorsal cirri, which are oval and cordiform, respectively, in the latter.  E. delicata sp. nov. shares dorsal lanceolate cirri and dorsal whitish pigmentation restricted to segment 2 with  Eumida ockelmanni Eibye-Jacobsen, 1987 , known from northern Europe (Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Great Britain, Faroe Islands), but differs from that species in its much larger size (  E. ockelmanni up to 7 mm long) and the absence of a median pygidial papilla. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A887D86D5FFFC7ABE572BAFAA62987	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Oliveira, Verônica Maria De;Eibye-Jacobsen, Danny;Lana, Paulo Da Cunha	Oliveira, Verônica Maria De, Eibye-Jacobsen, Danny, Lana, Paulo Da Cunha (2015): Description of three new species of Eumida Malmgren, 1865 (Phyllodocidae, Annelida) from Southern and Southeastern Brazil. Zootaxa 3957 (4): 425-440, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3957.4.4
