Chrysopetalum occidentale Johnson, 1897

Cruz-Gómez, Christopher, 2021, A new genus and seven new species of chrysopetalids (Annelida, Chrysopetalidae) from the Tropical Eastern Pacific, Zootaxa 5068 (1), pp. 1-59 : 43

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5068.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F0D7412B-5968-4459-9BA4-F1A314BA8EC7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5706155

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/044C3804-714A-EF16-D7D3-FF3D24AF95AB

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Chrysopetalum occidentale Johnson, 1897
status

 

Chrysopetalum occidentale Johnson, 1897 View in CoL

Figs 22 View FIGURE 22 , 26 View FIGURE 26

Chrysopetalum occidentale Johnson, 1897: 161–162 View in CoL , Pl. 5, Figs 15–16 View FIGURE 15 View FIGURE 16 ; Pl. 6, Figs 17–19 View FIGURE 17 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 .

Type locality: San Pedro Harbor , California, U.S.A., at 4.5 m ( Johnson 1897) .

Material examined. twenty-seven specimens. Baja California Sur: ECOSUR-2116 , Terminal Lagoon, Bahía Concepción , on coarse sand, May 6, 1981 , coll. HL; ECOSUR-2111 , Morro Point , June 23, 1982 , coll. SSV; UANL 0049 View Materials , Requesón Beach, Bahía Concepción , July 19, 1985 , coll. ALG; UANL 0047 View Materials , 2 spec. Bahía Concepción , July 20, 1985 , coll. ALG; UMAR-Poly 943, 4 spec. Bahía Concepción , May 15, 1988 , coll. RBZ. Jalisco: ECO- SUR-2983, 2 spec. San Patricio Melaque, on rocks with sand, 1 m, December 1, 2004 , coll. BY & PSS. Guerrero: UMAR-Poly 944, 14 spec. Coral Beach, 17º40´36”N, 101º39´22”W, Ixtapa, on dead coral, 1. 5 m, September 19, 2007 GoogleMaps , coll. SGM et al.; UMAR-Poly 945, Azul Beach, Coyula, September 20, 2007 , coll. SGM et al. Oaxaca: ECOSUR-PXXX, La Entrega Beach, Huatulco, on stromatolite, 3 m, May 23, 2000 , coll. SSV et al.; UMAR-Poly 946, Panteón Beach, 15º39´50”N, 96º29´43”W, on sediment, 3 m, May 21, 2008 GoogleMaps .

Description. Based on the best-preserved specimen (ECOSUR-2111): complete with 44 segments. TL= 5.6 mm, TW= 1.3 mm. Body long, broad, tapered posteriorly ( Fig. 22A View FIGURE 22 ). Body pale whitish to pale yellow. Paleae fan bright yellow, slightly imbricated dorsally.

Prostomium visible between the first two segments. Lateral antennae short, inserted on the antero-ventral prostomial margin, median antenna shorter than lateral ones, inserted between the first pair of eyes. Eyes red-violet, two pairs. Nuchal organ, small, not covering the prostomium ( Fig. 20B View FIGURE 20 ). Palps long, cylindrical, visible in dorsal view. Mouth fold large, placed between segment 3 and 4. Pharynx eversible, not exposed, stylets thick.

Parapodium from segment 30, notochaetae in three main groups ( Fig. 22E View FIGURE 22 ). Notochaetae: lateral group inserted below notaciculum, 2–3 paleae, narrow and asymmetrical, with 2–3 internal ribs and 0–1 raised rib ( Fig. 22F View FIGURE 22 ); subunit 1, 1 palea, broad and asymmetrical, with 4–5 internal ribs ( Fig. 22G View FIGURE 22 ). Main group, 15–19 paleae; lateral-most paleae, broad and asymmetrical, with 5 internal ribs; mid-most paleae, symmetrical with 5–6 internal ribs; midlinemost paleae broad, asymmetrical, with 6 internal ribs ( Fig. 22H View FIGURE 22 ). Median group, 3–4 paleae, shorter, slender and asymmetrical, with 4–5 (6) internal ribs and 0–1 raised rib ( Fig. 22I–K View FIGURE 22 ). All paleal groups with margins finely serrated, and dorsal paleal surface ornamented with tiny tubercles.

Neuropodium conical, longer than notopodium. Neurochaetae: unit 1, 1–2 falcigers, blades straight and long, 7–8 times longer than wide ( Fig. 22L View FIGURE 22 ). Unit 2, 4–5 falcigers, blades straight and medium-sized, 6–7 times longer than wide ( Fig. 22M View FIGURE 22 ). Unit 3, 5–7 falcigers, blades straight and medium-sized, 6–7 times longer than wide ( Fig. 22N View FIGURE 22 ). Unit 4, 3–4 falcigers, blades straight and medium-sized, 5–6 times longer than wide ( Fig. 22O View FIGURE 22 ). Pygidium rounded with two anal cirri ( Fig. 22C View FIGURE 22 ). Oocyte size: 58.4–83.3 µm (n=5) ( Fig. 22D View FIGURE 22 ).

Habitat. Intertidal to subtidal (0.5–9.7 m). Specimens of C. occidentale were collected on sediment, rock, dead coral, and as epibiont on stromatolite. This species has been recorded as epibiont on bivalve, P. damicornis ( Linnaeus, 1758) , bryozoa, hydrozoa, tunicate, sponges, chaetopterids tubes, and as a member of the fouling community ( Rioja 1941; Hartman 1961; Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala 2018).

Distribution. From San Pedro Harbor, California to Galápagos Islands ( Johnson 1897; Monro 1933; Rioja 1941; Hartman 1961; Perkins 1985; Gómez et al. 1997; Dean et al. 2012; Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala 2018) ( Fig. 26 View FIGURE 26 ).

Remarks. Specimens revised herein agree with the description made by Perkins (1985), Aguado et al. (2003) and Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala (2018). Intraspecific differences were noted on northern specimens from Jalisco; these have large cirrophoral glands, which differs from the southern specimens from Oaxaca, whose glands are smaller. This condition is related to the maturity of the specimens (CW Pers. Comm. 2020).

PSS

Paleontology and Stratigraphic Section of the Geological Institute of the Mongolian Academy of Sciences

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Phyllodocida

Family

Chrysopetalidae

Genus

Chrysopetalum

Loc

Chrysopetalum occidentale Johnson, 1897

Cruz-Gómez, Christopher 2021
2021
Loc

Chrysopetalum occidentale

Johnson, H. P. 1897: 162
1897
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