identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
039F87F5704C231AAEDAFAF2CAB1FC92.text	039F87F5704C231AAEDAFAF2CAB1FC92.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tenagodus barbadensis Bieler 2004	<div><p>TENAGODUS BARBADENSIS SP. NOV.</p> <p>Type material: Holotype (Fig. 6): 35.8 mm overall shell length, 3.6 mm inner apertural diameter, about 7 teleoconch whorls, FMNH 301239. Paratypes (ranging in overall length 13.8–48.9 mm): 15 shells, 15 fragments (incl. SEM specimens, Figs 14, 23-25), FMNH 301290; 10 shells, HBOM 065: 00000; 10 shells, AMNH 308079. Type locality: off Speightstown, Barbados (13∞14.82¢N, 59∞39.82¢W), 101 m; collected by suction device, submersible Johnson-Sea-Link II, dive 1732, with R/ V Seward Johnson; previously embedded in unidentified sponge (not Spongosorites).</p> <p>Description</p> <p>Shell (teleoconch) (Figs 6, 14). Very loosely coiled, with most known specimens between 20 and 45 mm in total length and with inner apertural diameter of 3– 4 mm (4.6 mm in largest fragment collected). Juvenile shells with little sculpture except growth marks, but developing numerous fine spiral striae of increasing strength on subsequent whorls; after 5–6 whorls only some of these striae developing into 4–6 rows of spines, the others continuing as finer riblets interspersed between them. Spines strongest on underside of coils, and nearly absent in what would be the umbilicus in a regularly coiled shell. Spines curved and fluted tube-like, with open side facing aperture. Earliest whorls often internally closed off by concave calcareous septa (Fig. 14). Early part of open shell slit (corresponding to region of posterior mantle cavity in the living animal) narrowed by lateral ingrowths, but not forming series of regular, complete holes (Fig. 6); the most recent (body whorl) slit barely restricted, with undulating to near-even margins (Fig. 6). Slit of earlier whorls (corresponding to region of digestive gland and gonad) filled-in with shell material. Fresh specimens with glossy shell surface. Shell light tan, often blotchily darker on earlier whorls.</p> <p>Protoconch (Figs 23–25; n = 2 for measurements). Fragile and readily decollating (only 2 retrieved), 303– 337 Mm high and 298–320 Mm wide, most of its bulk represented by a large embryonic shell (PC-I) 228– 235 Mm in diameter; larval shell (PC-II) of only 1/3 whorl. Sculpture consisting of very small pustules on upper part of whorl, followed below by finely granulated spiral striae (which appear as rows of fused pustules); aperture strongly sinuous, deeply embayed on upper whorl surface at point of contact with teleoconch slit area. Embryonic shell whitish brown, larval shell light tan.</p> <p>Operculum and anatomy: unknown.</p> <p>Habits and habitat</p> <p>Only known from single locality, as empty shells embedded in situ in unidentified sponge (not Spongosorites), from 101 m depth.</p> <p>Geographical distribution</p> <p>Only known from off Barbados.</p> <p>Comparison</p> <p>The teleoconch morphology is very similar to that of T. squamatus, with rows of fluted shell spines. From the limited material at hand it appears that T. barbadensis has more and better-defined spiral striae between the spine-bearing ribs than T. squamatus. Its shell slit does not show the regular pattern of restriction to well-defined holes as present in comparatively smooth-shelled T. modestus. It remains to be seen whether the collected specimens of T. barbadensis are fully grown or whether this species also reaches much larger shell sizes. The key characters that set this new species apart are in the protoconch. Its sculpture is much finer, with less distinction of the area of pustules and the rows of striae than seen in the two other western Atlantic species (compare Figs 19, 22, 24). As in the latter, the protoconch is roughly as wide as it is tall, but it shows different allometry. The embryonic shell is much larger (in fact, it is larger than the entire protoconch of T. modestus), and there is a much shorter section of the larval shell (PC-II): T. modestus grows an entire whorl following the embryonic shell, T. squamatus about one-and-a-quarter, but T. barbadensis develops only a third of a whorl (compare Figs 20, 22, 25). Note that eroded teleoconch fragments of this species are hardly distinguishable from those of T. squamatus and collections might contain shells of both under the latter name.</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039F87F5704C231AAEDAFAF2CAB1FC92	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.		Plazi	Bieler, Rüdiger	Bieler, Rüdiger (2004): Sanitation with sponge and plunger: western Atlantic slit-wormsnails (Mollusca: Caenogastropoda: Siliquariidae). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 140 (3): 307-333, DOI: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2003.00104.x, URL: https://academic.oup.com/zoolinnean/article-lookup/doi/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2003.00104.x
039F87F57055230DAE0DFC2FCDFBFC8D.text	039F87F57055230DAE0DFC2FCDFBFC8D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tenagodus modestus (Dall 1881)	<div><p>TENAGODUS MODESTUS (DALL, 1881): SELECTED</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED</p> <p>BERMUDA: 1 shell, Argus Bank 55 m, FMNH 13675; 2 shells, Challenger Bank, MCZ 228069. USA: FLOR- IDA (Atlantic Ocean): fragments of alcohol-preserved sponge colony with embedded and isolated specimens (Figs 41, 42; Demospongiae: Choristida: Thrombidae: Thrombus sp.); off Key Largo, Elbow Reef (25∞07.79¢N, 80∞14.32¢W), 56 m, 06-VI-1979, by R/V Johnson/ submersible Johnson-Sea-Link-I dive 688, HBOM 065: 00767 (sponge), HBOM 065: 02026 (with isolated specimens, intact protoconch), HBOM 065:T0021, T0022 (photographic documentation), DMNH A00625, DMNH 181857, FMNH 296715, 296716 (with SEM samples), 296717 (histological slides); 1 shell, 0.5 miles off Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, 50–100 ft [15–30 m], DMNH 40578. FLORIDA (Gulf of Mexico): alcohol-preserved sample of thrombid (?) sponge with embedded siliquariids, about 48 nm NW of Dry Tortugas, Gulf of Mexico, Florida Shelf (25∞06.91¢N, 83∞37.05¢W), 43 m, bottom with gravel, sand, Halimeda algae, 16-VII-1992; R/V Johnson, 15 ft trawl, HBOM 65-002-93, FMNH 296711; 2 alcoholpreserved samples in sponge, 92 miles W of Sanibel Island Light, Lee County (26∞24¢N, 83∞43¢W), 73 m, R/ V Herman Cortez Sta. M 1965, FSBC I 957, FSBC I 1196; 1 shell, due W of Tampa, 91 m, DMNH 38096; 1 shell, off Tarpon Springs, 30 m, DMNH 84284; 1 shell, W Gulf, 60 m, DMNH 175374; 2 shells, W of Egmont Pass, 55–110 m, DMNH 105493; 3 shells from large ‘sponge mass’ collected with ‘some fifty or sixty other specimens’, 75 miles SW of Egmont Key, DMNH 105931; 2 shells, off Pensacola, 64 m, ANSP 193119. TEXAS: 8 shells, 107 miles SE of Galveston (27∞54.5¢N, 93∞35.2¢W), 18 m, MCZ 199223. BAHAMAS: 5 shells, Lucaya, Grand Bahama Island (26∞29¢45≤N, 78∞37¢15≤W) ANSP 372431, 373596, 411178; 2 shells, Tamarind, Grand Bahama Island (26∞30¢45≤N, 78∞36¢00≤W), ANSP 374748, 374585. 2 shells, off Black Rock, W side of Abaco Island, submersible Johnson- Sea-Link I, dive 1906, R/V Seward Johnson, 182 m, FMNH 296694. CUBA: several shells, off Havana, USFC R/V Albatross 1884–1885 stations 2164, 2332, 2333, 2348, 285– 386 m, USNM 94177, 193557, 193563, 225007; 7 shells, off Havana, USFC R/V Blake 1877– 78, 415 m, MCZ 7420; 1 shell, off Havana, USFC R/V Blake 1877– 78, 823 m, MCZ 7422; 3 shells, off Bahia Honda, USFC R/V Blake 1877– 78, 402 m, MCZ 7419 (paralectotypes as above); 10 shells, 4 miles from Havana, USFC R/V Blake 1877– 78, 1472 m, MCZ 7417, 7418 (the latter illustrated by Agassiz, 1888; see above). PUERTO RICO: 1 shell, Ramey Air Force Base (beach), DMNH 110235. Many shells, Johnson- Smithsonian Deep Sea Expedition, station 16, 69 m (18∞29¢40≤-31¢00≤N, 66∞08¢30≤-10¢15≤W), USNM 430166. LEEWARD ISLANDS: VIRGIN ISLANDS: Saint Croix: 1 shell, USFC R/V Blake 1879, 929 m, MCZ 7425; 3 shells, USFC R/V Blake 1879, 210 m, MCZ 7426. ANTIGUA: many shells, Smithsonian University of Iowa Expedition 1918, station 115, 219 m, USNM 500079. 4 shells, NMFS R/V Oregon, station 5070, 91– 110 m (17∞06¢30≤N, 62∞39¢W), USNM 811132. WIND- WARD ISLANDS: DOMINICA: many large shells, NMFS R/V Oregon station 5920, 30 miles NE of Roseau, 69 m (15∞37¢N, 61∞22¢W), USNM 811136; 2 shells, USFC R/V Blake station 177, 65 m, USNM 87243; 3 shells, USFC R/V Blake 1879, 216 m, MCZ 7427. MARTINIQUE: 3 shells, NMFS R/V Oregon station 5000, 73 m (14∞53¢N, 61∞06¢W), USNM 811130; 4 shells, USFC R/V Blake 1877– 78, 311 m, MCZ 7428. ST. VINCENT: 7 shells, USFC R/V Blake 1879 station 231, 105 m, USNM 87241. THE GRENADINES: USFC R/ V Blake 1879, 298 m, MCZ 7429. Grenada: 1 shell, USFC R/V Blake 1879, 402 m, MCZ 7430. BARBA- DOS: many shells, Smithsonian-University of Iowa Expedition 1918 various stations (e.g. 24, 44, 67, 78, 85), 64–183 m, USNM 500049, 500052, 500056, 500067, 500071, and others; several specimens in sponge, off Barbados, USFC R/V Blake 1879, 172 m, MCZ 7423; 1 shell, USFC R/V Blake 1879, 183 m, MCZ 7424; several specimens in sponge, off Barbados, R/V Blake 1879 station 278, 126 m, MCZ 259091; 1 shell, St. James, Holetown, 13∞10¢52≤N, 59∞38¢30≤W, ANSP 353540; 19 shells, off Speightstown, 101 m (13∞14.82¢N, 59∞39.82¢W; 17-IV-89), submersible Johnson-Sea-Link II, dive 1732, R/V Seward Johnson, FMNH 296712, HBOM 065: 0000; 2 shells, off Speightstown, 74 m (13∞14.80¢N, 59∞39.50¢W), submersible Johnson-Sea-Link II dive 1736, R/V Seward Johnson,(FMNH 296710. TRINIDAD: 12 shells, off Monos Island, 21 m, collected in Thrombus sponge, USNM 86776. VENEZUELA: 4 shells, trawled off Morrocoy, Golfo Triste, 46–55 m (10∞40-53¢N, 68∞00- 10¢W), FMNH 296714. COLOMBIA: 7 shells, NMFS R/V Oregon station 4904, 50 miles SW of Cartagena, 146–183 m (10∞00¢N, 76∞05¢W), USNM 811129. PAN- AMA: 1 shell, NMFS R/V Oregon station 5737, 15 miles E of Punta San Blas (9∞37¢N, 79∞03¢W), 66 m, USNM 811135. BRAZIL: 19 shells and fragments, Martin Vaz Islands, off SE Brazil, R/V ‘Marion-Dufresne’ (Bouchet, Leal &amp; Metivier 05/1987) MD55 station DC55 (20∞32¢S, 28∞52¢W), 780–795 m, ex J. Leal, DMNH 184929, FMNH 29713.</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039F87F57055230DAE0DFC2FCDFBFC8D	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.		Plazi	Bieler, Rüdiger	Bieler, Rüdiger (2004): Sanitation with sponge and plunger: western Atlantic slit-wormsnails (Mollusca: Caenogastropoda: Siliquariidae). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 140 (3): 307-333, DOI: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2003.00104.x, URL: https://academic.oup.com/zoolinnean/article-lookup/doi/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2003.00104.x
039F87F5705A230FAE1DFCA8CAF2FEB9.text	039F87F5705A230FAE1DFCA8CAF2FEB9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tenagodus squamatus (de Blainville 1827)	<div><p>TENAGODUS SQUAMATUS (DE BLAINVILLE, 1827):</p> <p>SELECTED SPECIMENS EXAMINED</p> <p>Some teleoconch fragments in collections might belong to the very similar Tenagodus barbadensis sp. nov.</p> <p>BERMUDA: 2 shells and fragment, 2.5 miles off Castle Roads, St. David’s Island, 110 m, taken alive from sponge, FMNH 296697 (Fig. 4). USA: FLORIDA (Atlantic Ocean: 6 shells, NMFS R/V Silver Bay station 3252, 50 miles SE of Melbourne, 37 m (27∞50¢30≤N, 80∞07¢W), USNM 811144; 1 shell, off Palm Beach, 30–40 fms [55–73 m], ANSP 188796; 9 fragments, R/V Eolis station 76, off Fowey Light, 73 m, USNM 435006, 435007; 1 shell, NMFS R/V Silver Bay station 2445, Florida Straits, 100 miles S of Miami, 252 m (24∞08¢N, 80∞08¢W), USNM 811141; SE of Dry Tortugas, 91–213 m, FMNH 194581. FLORIDA (Gulf of Mexico: 1 cluster embedded in (?thrombid) sponge, loose shell fragments, c. 48 nautical miles NW of Dry Tortugas, 73 m (25∞06.91¢N, 83∞37.05¢W), HBOM 065: 0000; 5 shells, same station, FMNH 301289; 2 clusters embedded in sponge, R/V Hernan Cortes Sta. M 1965, 92 miles W of Sanibel Island Light, Lee County, 73 m (26∞24¢N, 83∞43¢W), FSBC I957, I1196; 1 shell, 70 miles SW of Egmont Key, 51– 58 m, from sponge mass, USNM 606956; 11 shells (with black sponge remains), 95 miles W of Egmont Key, 27∞34¢N, 84∞15¢W, 73 m, ANSP 396091; 1 shell (with operculum), Egmont Key, Tampa Bay, MCZ 207246; 1 shell, W of Sanibel Island /Naples area, Bureau of Land Management no. 210, 77 m (26∞16.1¢N, 83∞46.3¢W, FMNH 296698. LOUISIANA: 1 shell, NMFS R/V Silver Bay station 331, 125 miles SE New Orleans, 91 m (29∞15¢N, 88∞19¢W), USNM 801714 [alc.]; 3 shells, NMFS R/V Oregon station 4597, 175 miles SW of New Orleans, 13 m (29∞28¢N, 093∞30¢W), USNM 801713 [alc.]; 2 shells, approx. 140 miles SSE of Calcasieu Lake, 137 m, MCZ 260307. MEXICO: 1 shell, 1 fragment, Tuxpam, Veracruz, MCZ 194995. BAHAMAS: 8 specimens in fist-sized part of yellow sponge colony (Spongosorites sp.), Goulding Cay, off New Province Island (24∞59.74¢N, 77∞33.17¢W, 6-XI-90, S. Pomponi &amp; P. Santos), 182 m, rock slope, 13.2∞C bottom temperature, submersible Johnson-Sea-Link-I, dive 2840, R/V Seward Johnson, FMNH 296700 (observed and sketched alive; Figs 39, 40), HBOM 065: 0000, with histological sections and radulae, FMNH 296701, and isolated shells, FMNH 296702; 7 alcohol-preserved specimens (5 of which incomplete) previously embedded in colony of halichondriid sponge Spongosorites ruetzleri (Soest &amp; Stentoft, 1988), 3 km off Sweetings Cay, Grand Bahama Island (26∞34.15¢N, 77∞54.17¢W; 14-XI-87), 165 m, 30 degree slope, sand and rubble substrate, 18∞C bottom temperature, submersible Johnson-Sea- Link-II dive 1530, R/V Seaward Johnson (see also Pomponi et al., 1991: 151), FMNH 296703, with histological sections FMNH 296704; shell and animal fragments, from colony of halichondriid sponge Spongosorites ruetzleri, off Sweetings Cay, Grand Bahama Island (26∞33.70¢N, 77∞53.91¢W; 13-XI- 87 157 m, slope, sand and rubble substrate, 18∞C bottom temperature, submersible Johnson-Sea-Link-II, dive 1528, R/V Seaward Johnson, FMNH 296705 (sponge sample HBOM 003: 00115, see also Pomponi et al., 1991: 151); fragments (used for SEM), off Nassau Harbour (25∞06.47¢N, 77∞20.67¢W), 461 m, 15-III- 1987, R/V Johnson/submersible Johnson-Sea-Link-I dive 1960, collected with halichondriid sponge Spongisorites ruetzleri (Soest &amp; Stentoft, 1988), FMNH 296709 [sponge sample, HBOM 003: 00112; see also Pomponi et al., 1991: 151]; shell and animal fragments (used for SEM), off Freeport Harbour, Freeport, Grand Bahama Island (26∞30.78¢N, 78∞48.22¢W), 218 m, 22-III-1987, R/V Johnson/submersible Johnson-Sea-Link-I dive 1975, collected with halichondriid sponge Spongisorites ruetzleri (van Soest &amp; Stentoft, 1988), FMNH 296708 [sponge sample, HBOM 003: 00114; see also Pomponi et al., 1991: 151]; 1 shell, off St. James, ZMK; 1 shell, NMFS R/V Silver Bay station 3494, S of Long Island, 183–366 m (23∞36¢N, 75∞25¢W), USNM 811147; 2 shells, Conception Island (23∞52¢N, 75∞09¢W), ANSP 392187. 60+ shells, Lucaya, Grand Bahama Island (26∞29¢45≤N, 78∞37¢15≤W), ANSP 367834, 367835, 411176, 411177; 11 shells, Indian Key, Grand Bahama Island (26∞42¢45≤N, 78∞39¢15≤W), ANSP 367026; 40+ shells, Grand Bahama Island (26∞31¢00≤N, 78∞46¢30.5≤W), ANSP 373886; 5 juvenile shells and fragments, Salt Cay, 6 mi NE of Nassau, New Providence Island,</p> <p>FMNH 280710. CUBA: several shells, USFC R/ V Albatross 1885 stations 2321, 2323, 2326, 2332, off Havana, 210–355 m, USNM 94052, 181258, 193558, 193562; also MCZ 7416, 7421; 2 shell clusters in sponge, Harvard-Havana Expedition ‘ Atlantis’ 1939 sta. 3303 (23∞05¢N, 82∞33¢W), MCZ 302516. JAMAICA: 1 shell, NMFS R/V Oregon station 3559, 250 miles SW of Kingston, 16∞37¢N, 80∞15¢W), USNM 811120. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: 4 shells, NMFS R/V Silver Bay station 5147, 51– 55 m (19∞57¢N, 71∞52¢30≤W), USNM 811148. PUERTO RICO: 14 fragments, partly with sponge, near Mayaguez, CAS 47265; 2 fragments, Rincon, CAS 42398; 1 shell, ZMK. LEEWARD ISLANDS: VIRGIN ISLANDS: Saint Vincent: 3 incomplete alcohol-preserved specimens from sponge Spongosorites sp., York Bay, St. Vincent (13∞09.65¢N, 61∞16.52¢W; 31-III-89), 89 m, sand slope, Johnson-Sea-Link-II dive 1702, R/V Seward Johnson, FMNH 296692 and shell fragments FMNH 296699, HBOM 065: 0000. SAINT CROIX: 1 shell, USFC R/V Blake 1879, 69 m, MCZ 7413; 1 shell, NMFS R/V Oregon station 6715, 100 miles E of SAINT THOMAS, 201–238 m (18∞36¢N, 63∞27¢W), USNM 811139. Tortola: 1 shell, ZMK. SAINT BARTHÉLEMY: 4 shells, ZMK. ANGUILLA: type material of T. anguillae, as above. WINDWARD ISLANDS: MARTINIQUE: USFC R/V Blake 1879, 176 m, MCZ 7414. ST. LUCIA: R/V Oregon II station 24273, 69– 80 m (14∞04.4¢N, 61∞02.3¢W), HBOM 65: 1761; NMFS R/V Oregon station 5059, 24– 29 m (14∞02¢30≤N, 61∞01¢W), USNM 811131. BARBADOS: 1 shell, off Speightstown, 74 m (13∞14.80¢N, 59∞39.50¢W), submersible Johnson-Sea- Link-II, dive 1736, R/ V Seward Johnson (FMNH 296690); many shells, Smithsonian – University of Iowa Expedition 1918 various stations (e.g. 3, 51, 79), 46–146 m, USNM 500017, 500018, 500021, and many others; 5 shells, USFC R/V Blake 1879 station 278, 126 m, MCZ 259090; 1 shell, Hassler Expedition 183 m, MCZ 258952; 1 shells, off St. James, ZMK. TRINIDAD: 1 shell, Chaguaramas Bay, USNM 518474. NICARAGUA: 1 shell, NMFS R/V Oregon station 4832, 150 miles E of coast, 219–238 m, USNM ex 811126; many shells, NMFS R/V Oregon, 219–238 m (14∞15¢30≤N, 80∞27¢06≤W), USNM 811127. HON- DURAS: 1 shell, Swan Islands, MCZ 302513. VENE- ZUELA: Preserved specimens in sponge and 2 shells, Golfo Triste, off Morrocoy (10∞40-53¢N, 68∞00-10¢W), 46–55 m, FMNH 296706; specimens in 3 sponge fragments (2 alcohol preserved), Golfo Triste as above, about 60 m, 1992, FMNH 296691; 4 sponge fragments with embedded snails, Golfo Triste, off Morrocoy, about 60 m, 1992 (10∞40-53¢N, 68∞00-10¢W), FMNH 296691 (dry), FMNH 296693 (alcohol preserved). BRAZIL: 2 shells, NMFS R/V Oregon station 4227, 100 miles N of Sao Luis, 73 m (1∞24¢S, 43∞11¢W), USNM 811125; R/V Marion-Dufresne</p> <p>(Bouchet, Leal &amp; Metivier 05/1987; dredge DC 81), off Espiríto Santo State (19∞00¢S, 37∞48¢W), 120–135 m depth [J. Leal, photographs seen only; one photograph published by Leal (1989: 8, fig. 9]; 6 shells and fragments, R/V ‘ Marion-Dufresne’ (Bouchet, Leal &amp; Metivier 05/1987) MD55 station DC 82, 85–105 m (18∞56¢S, 37∞52¢W), ex J. Leal, FMNH 296707, DMNH 228024.</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039F87F5705A230FAE1DFCA8CAF2FEB9	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.		Plazi	Bieler, Rüdiger	Bieler, Rüdiger (2004): Sanitation with sponge and plunger: western Atlantic slit-wormsnails (Mollusca: Caenogastropoda: Siliquariidae). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 140 (3): 307-333, DOI: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2003.00104.x, URL: https://academic.oup.com/zoolinnean/article-lookup/doi/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2003.00104.x
