Unidentiidae
| Unidentiidae | |
|---|---|
| Unidentia nihonrossija | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Mollusca |
| Class: | Gastropoda |
| Order: | Nudibranchia |
| Suborder: | Aeolidacea |
| Superfamily: | Unidentioidea |
| Family: | Unidentiidae Millen & Hermosillo, 2012[1] |
| Genera | |
|
See text | |
Unidentiidae is a taxonomic family of sea slugs, specifically aeolid nudibranchs, marine gastropod molluscs in the superfamily Unidentioidea.[2]
Classifcation status
[edit]Under Korshunova et al. (2025), Unidentiidae is placed under the superfamily Unidentioidea. Unidentiidae is a very unique family, representing "a bizarre combination of several traits" that can be found across the main Aeolidacean superfamilies, a phenomenon referred to as "mosaic" traits. It found some support that Unidentiidae was sister to Fionoidea, but not the highest support. Given that Unidentiidae never fit well within any superfamily, Unidentioidea was established therein to contain it. The additional genus Phetia was added to the family to contain the species previously known as Piseinotecus soussi, as there was strong support for it clustering with Unidentiid genera. Additionally, Korshunova et al. determined that the study that established P. soussi included a fully incorrect analysis of its reproductive system, which is what led to its erroneous placement in Piseinotecus in the first place. The rest of Piseinotecus and its family Piseinotecidae was declared superfamilia incertae sedis under Aeolidacea due to lack of data on the much rarer species therein[2].
Recently, Ekimova et al. (2026) instead "tentatively" suggests Piseinotecidae to be a senior synonym of Unidentiidae,[3] as previously established diagnostics[4] for Piseinotecidae appeared to agree fully with Unidentiidae. The study acknowledges hasty synonymy without molecular data is often a poor idea due to possibly unknown convergences, but at the same time considers maintaining separate families due to lack of molecular data to be an impractical precedent to set. Additionally, the study agrees it seems likely that Piseinotecus soussi does require its own genus separate from Piseinotecus, but chooses not to recognise Phetia as valid without more data from other Piseinotecus species[3].
Additionally, while Piseinotecidae (and thus, the synonimzed Unidentiidae) was placed under Fionoidea in Ekimova et al. 2026[3], all analysis was done at only a familial level and narrower, without any discussion of superfamilies.
Genera
[edit]Genera and species within the family Unidentiidae include[2]:
- Pacifia Korshunova, Martynov, Bakken, Evertsen, Fletcher, Mudianta, Saito, Lundin, Schrödl & Picton, 2017
- Phetia Korshunova, Fletcher & Martynov, 2025
- Unidentia Millen & Hermosillo, 2012
References
[edit]- ^ Millen S. & Hermosillo A. 2012. Three new species of aeolid nudibranchs (Opisthobranchia) from the Pacific coast of Mexico, Panama and the Indopacific, with a redescription and redesignation of a fourth species. The Veliger, 51(3): 145-164.
- ^ a b c Korshunova T.; Fletcher K.; Martynov A. (2025). The endless forms are the most differentiated—how taxonomic pseudo-optimization masked natural diversity and evolution: the nudibranch case Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. Volume 204, Issue 4, August 2025.
- ^ a b c Ekimova I., Carmona L., Mikhlina AL., Grishina D., Stanovova M.V., Schepetov D.M., Hoover C., de Souza-Canal J., Kuznetsov K.O., Valdés A.; (2026). Neither "lumpers" nor "splitters": A global revision of Flabellinidae s.l. nudibranchs (Gastropoda: Heterobranchia: Nudibranchia). PLoS One 21(5): e0347759.
- ^ Marcus E. Opisthobranchia from Brazil. Bol Fac Filos Ciênc Let Univ São Paulo Zool. 1955;207:89–261.
Further reading
[edit]- Korshunova T., Martynov A., Bakken T., Evertsen J., Fletcher K., Mudianta W.I., Saito H., Lundin K., Schrödl M., Picton B.; (2017). Polyphyly of the traditional family Flabellinidae affects a major group of Nudibranchia: aeolidacean taxonomic reassessment with descriptions of several new families, genera, and species (Mollusca, Gastropoda). ZooKeys 717: 1-139.