Treptopale Perkins, 1985

Watson, Charlotte & Faulwetter, Sarah, 2017, Stylet jaws of Chrysopetalidae (Annelida), Journal of Natural History 51 (47 - 48), pp. 2863-2924 : 2892

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2017.1395919

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E91002-871A-1371-FE79-FE18FEB8F96D

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Felipe

scientific name

Treptopale Perkins, 1985
status

 

Genus Treptopale Perkins, 1985 View in CoL

( Figure 17a–f View Figure 17 ; Tables 1, 2)

Type species: Treptopale rudolphi Perkins, 1985

Material examined

One specimen Treptopale homalos Watson, 2010 : NTM W . 22892, Great Barrier Reef, Queensland, South West Pacific (mCT-00085); 1 specimen Treptopale paromolos Watson, 2010 : NTM W .23701, Darwin, Northern Territory, Arafura Sea (mCT-00403).

Distribution

Treptopale is a pan-tropical taxon found between 24°N and 33°S.

Habitat

Treptopale species are relatively common on mainland fringing and offshore coral reefs throughout the Indo-Pacific. A review of species from northern Australia found a partitioning of the coral reef habitat, with Treptopale homalos inhabiting cleaner rubble habitats often associated with Halimeda J.V. Lamouroux, 1812 and coralline algae and Treptopale paromolos occurring in rubble from silty reefs, muddier sands, Halimeda and seagrasses: depth range low water mark to ~ 40 m ( Watson 2010). A newly described Treptopale species from the Mediterranean occurs in a shell matrix habitat dominated by turfing green algae (Watson and Chatzigeorgiou, Forthcoming).

General morphology

Treptopale species comprise elongate, slender individuals that possess pale golden to silvery coloured, symmetrical-shaped main paleae and a median paleae fascicle that form flattened fans that entirely cover the dorsum ( Figure 17a View Figure 17 ). Sensory structures include a prostomium, fused with the anterior segments, two pairs of complex eyes, oval palps, glandular nuchal fold and lateral organs ( Watson 2010).

Pharynx and jaws

Treptopale species possess a short, broad proboscis and a short, broad pharynx which appears to narrow slightly at the posterior end. The pharynx appears undifferentiated and a calcified muscular ring is present. Caeca are not discernible on CT scans ( Figure 17b–d View Figure 17 ). A pair of relatively small, elongate, slender jaws sits deep in the pharynx and occupies over half its length ( Figure 17c, d View Figure 17 ). Stylets possess a slight swelling present on their inner margins at the point where the jaws diverge anteriorly outwards; the posterior elongate sections of the stylets sit close to one another but do not interlink ( Figure 17e, f View Figure 17 ).

NTM

Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences

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