Perinereis species, 1865

Conde-Vela, Víctor Manuel, 2022, Reinstatement of Perinereis bairdii (Webster, 1884) and description of P. websteri sp. nov. from Bermuda, including the reproductive morphology of two Atlantic Perinereis species (Annelida: Errantia: Phyllodocida), European Journal of Taxonomy 787 (1), pp. 104-145 : 137-138

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.787.1619

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6E595BC0-37AB-460E-B0EB-435576CDD207

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5841047

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03948791-CB02-2904-FF0E-FE9F9B56D44E

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Perinereis species
status

 

Key to Atlantic Perinereis species View in CoL (excluding the Mediterranean Sea) 1,4

1. A single bar-shaped paragnath on each area VI ................................................................................ 2

– Two or more bar-shaped paragnaths on each area VI ..................................................................... 12

2. Lacking paragnaths in area V ....... P. capensis ( Kinberg, 1865) View in CoL (Cape of Good Hope, South Africa)

– Having paragnaths in area V ............................................................................................................. 3

3. A single paragnath in area V ............................................................................................................. 4

– More than one paragnath in areas V ................................................................................................11

4. Tentacular cirri extending back up to chaetiger 4 (i.e., short tentacular cirri) .................................. 5

– Tentacular cirri extending back beyond chaetiger 6 (i.e., long tentacular cirri) ............................... 9

5. One or two paragnaths in area I ........................................................................................................ 6

– Three or more paragnaths in area I ................................................................................................... 8

6. Areas VII–VIII with a single broad band with several rows of paragnaths (> 100 paragnaths) ......... ............................................................................... P. falklandica (Ramsay, 1914) View in CoL ( Falkland Islands)

– Areas VII–VIII with 3–4 rows of paragnaths (about 19–43 paragnaths) ......................................... 7

7. Paragnath in area V aligned with bars in areas VI, forming a straight row; each bar in areas VI almost as long as wide as area VI (i.e., long bars) ................................ P. oliveirae ( Horst, 1889) ( Portugal) View in CoL

– Paragnath in area V displaced backward, not aligned with bars in areas VI; each bar in areas VI up to half as long as wide as area VI (i.e., short bars) ................ P. atlantica View in CoL ( São Vicente, Cape Verde)

8. Dorsal ligules 2.3× as long as median ligules and ventral ligules shorter than neuroacicular ligules in posterior chaetigers ........................................... P. ponteni Kinberg, 1865 View in CoL (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)

– Dorsal ligules 3.3× as long as median ligules and ventral ligules longer than neuroacicular ligules in posterior chaetigers .................................................................. P. bairdii ( Webster, 1884) ( Bermuda) View in CoL

9. Dorsal cirri subequal or shorter than distal lobes of dorsal ligules and ventral ligules longer than neuroacicular ligules in posterior chaetigers ...................................................................................... ................................................................... P. floridana ( Ehlers, 1868) View in CoL (Captiva Key, Florida, USA)

– Dorsal cirri longer than distal lobes of dorsal ligules and ventral ligules shorter than neuroacicular ligules in posterior chaetigers ......................................................................................................... 10

10. A single paragnath in area I; ventral cirri shorter than ventral ligules in posterior chaetigers ........... ................................................................ P. falsovariegata Monro, 1933a View in CoL (Preekstoel, South Africa)

– Three or more paragnaths in area I; ventral cirri longer than ventral ligules in posterior chaetigers. ............................................................................................................ P. websteri sp. nov. ( Bermuda)

11. Two bands of paragnaths in areas VII–VIII; dorsal ligules several times longer than median ligules in posterior chaetigers ..................................... P. anderssoni Kinberg, 1865 View in CoL (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)

– A single band of paragnaths in areas VII–VIII; both dorsal and median ligules subequal in posterior chaetigers ........................................... Perinereis taorica Langerhans, 1881 View in CoL (Canary Islands, Spain)

12. Nine to ten bar-shaped paragnaths on each area VI ............................................................................ ................................................... P. latipalpa (Schmarda, 1861) View in CoL (Cape of Good Hope, South Africa)

– Two bar-shaped paragnaths on each area VI .................................................................................. 13

13. Paragnaths absent in area V; posterior band of paragnaths in areas VII–VIII discontinuous ............. ................................... P. cariboea de León-González & Solís-Weiss, 1998 View in CoL (Quintana Roo, Mexico)

– Paragnaths absent in area V; posterior band of paragnaths in areas VII–VIII continuous ............. 14

14. Notopodial prechaetal lobes present at least in anterior chaetigers; rows in areas VII–VIII with paragnaths of distinct size ................................................ P. brevicirrata ( Treadwell, 1920) ( Brazil) View in CoL 2

– Notopodial prechaetal lobe absent; rows in areas VII–VIII with paragnaths of similar size ......... 15

15. Distal lobes of dorsal ligules subequal or shorter than medial ligules in posterior chaetigers; blades of neuropodial falcigers with rod-like tips .......................................................................................... ................................... P. rookeri de León-González & Goethel, 2013 View in CoL (Rookery Bay, Florida, USA)

– Distal lobes of dorsal ligules longer than medial ligules in posterior chaetigers; blades of neuropodial falcigers with falcate tips .......... P. mochimaensis Liñero-Arana, 1983 View in CoL (Mochima Bay, Venezuela) / .................................................. P. cariacoensis Liñero-Arana, 1983 View in CoL (Golfo de Cariaco, Venezuela) 3

1 Nereis marionii Audouin & Milne Edwards, 1833 View in CoL (type locality: Vendée, France) (synonyms: P. longipes de Saint-Joseph, 1898 View in CoL from Guettary, France, and Nereis crassipes de Quatrefages, 1866 View in CoL from Normandy, France) and N. aculeata Hansen, 1882 View in CoL (type locality: Brazil) are excluded from the key. Nereis marionii View in CoL differs in several pharyngeal and parapodial features from Perinereis species, such as having a continuous band of paragnaths in the oral ring, and the presence of notopodial prechaetal lobes and additional upper lobe in dorsal ligules ( Audouin & Milne-Edwards 1833; Fauvel 1923), so likely it belongs to a distinct genus. The original description of Nereis aculeata View in CoL is succinct ( Hansen 1882) and allows to identify it as a Perinereis View in CoL , but further study is needed to determine if it is a valid species.

2 Treadwell (1920: fig. 2) described a parapodium from chaetiger 10 (likely depicted upside down in his figure) with three notopodial ligules. The species needs further re-evaluation to ensure it is a Perinereis species.

3 As pointed out by de León-González & Goethel (2013), both species are very similar. Both species were proposed based on a single specimen each (even one of them incomplete), and differences in head and parapodial morphology between them are very subtle. Chances are that the transverse bar in area V is due to the partial merging of two or more conical paragnaths like in melted paragnaths, which have been observed in some specimens of P. websteri sp. nov. in additional paragnaths in areas VI. A revision of the type and additional material of both species is needed to clarify their validity.

4 References consulted: Horst (1889); Treadwell (1920); Monro (1933a); Hartman (1938b); Day (1967); Liñero-Arana (1983); de León-González & Solís-Weiss (1998); Núñez (2004); de León-González & Goethel (2013); Darbyshire (2014); Coutinho et al. (2015); Paiva et al. (2018); Villalobos-Guerrero (2019).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Phyllodocida

Family

Nereididae

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