Phragmatopoma caudata Krøyer, 1863
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5048.2.3 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CBD94592-5647-4F52-A8CF-4990DE8574D8 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5555035 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D0AE23-5161-FFDE-FF73-F9A0FC2315A9 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Phragmatopoma caudata Krøyer |
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Phragmatopoma caudata Krøyer View in CoL in Mörch, 1863
Figure 5A–I View FIGURE 5
Phragmatopoma caudata Krøyer View in CoL in Mörch, 1863: 442–444, pl. 11, figs. 27–30. Type locality: Caribbean Sea.
Phragmatopoma caudata View in CoL .— Chávez-López 2020: 307–309 View Cited Treatment , fig. 4.
Material examined. Veracruz. ECOSUR-P3195 , colony ( Mocambo beach, April 1, 1960, coll. E. Rioja) . ECO- SUR-P3196, one spec. ( La Mancha , September 23, 2004) . Florida . UF681 , one spec. ( Peanut Island , Palm Beach, 0–1 m, March 4, 2008, coll. Gustav Paulay) . UF683 , one spec. ( Peanut Island , Palm Beach, 0–1 m, March 4, 2008, coll. Gustav Paulay) . UF684 , colony ( Peanut Island , Palm Beach, 0–1 m, March 4, 2008, coll. Gustav Paulay) . Guadeloupe. UF3106 , colony ( Pointe de la Saline , 16°12’10.1”N 61°26’41.2”W, May 20, 2012, coll. Dirberg, Guillaume, Poupin & Joseph) GoogleMaps .
Description. Largest and best-preserved specimen (UF3106), mature female. Body pale yellow, 31 mm long, 2 mm wide, with three parathoracic segments, abdominal region broken with 17 segments, caudal peduncle lost.
Opercular crown and opercular stalk completely fused ( Fig. 5A–B View FIGURE 5 ). Opercular disc oblong, wider than longer, three rows of paleae, middle paleae completely covering inner ones; outer row with around 70 paleae, middle and inner rows each with 33 paleae. Outer paleae with a pair of heterodont teeth, medial plume long, acicular, and pectinate ( Fig. 5D–E View FIGURE 5 ). Middle paleae strongly geniculate, nape large, slightly decurrent; tip sharp, strongly curved ( Fig. 5F View FIGURE 5 ). Inner paleae strongly geniculate with straight peak and distal filaments ( Fig. 5G View FIGURE 5 ).
Opercular peduncle pale yellow with brown light stretch marks ( Fig. 5A–B View FIGURE 5 ). Tentacles light brown. Palps pale yellow. Median ridge short, ½ as long as opercular stalk ( Fig. 5C View FIGURE 5 ). Median organ absent. Building organ U-shaped with some dark spots.
Thorax without notochaetae. Chaetiger 1 with a pair of neuropodia bearing capillary chaetae. Chaetiger 2 with capillary neurochaetae and two pairs of small cirri and branchiae.
Parathorax with three segments, all with paired branchiae. Notopodia with lanceolate and capillary chaetae. Neurochaetae lanceolate thinner than notochaetae.
Abdominal segments pale yellow, all with a pair of branchiae. Neurochaetae verticillate. Notopodia with a series of uncini with eight transverse rows of teeth ( Fig. 5H View FIGURE 5 ). Caudal peduncle lost.
Abdominal parapodia with oocytes about 110 µm in diameter ( Fig. 5I View FIGURE 5 ).
Variation. Body 8–44 mm in total length, 0.5–2 mm wide, 11–27 abdominal segments, caudal peduncle 1 mm long. Opercular crown made of 45–70 outer paleae, 18–33 middle paleae, and 18–33 inner paleae. The color of middle paleae varied from light brown to dark brown.
Distribution. Florida to southern Brazil, including the Gulf of Mexico ( Kirtley, 1994, Chávez-López 2020).
Remarks. Phragmatopoma caudata Krøyer in Mörch, 1863 is the best-known sabellariid species on the western Atlantic coast. This species is characterized by outer paleae with medial long and pectinate plume. The examined material agrees with the description of Chávez-López (2020).
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.
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Phragmatopoma caudata Krøyer
Chávez-López, Yessica 2021 |