Lumbrineridae sp. NHM_2146, 1828

Neal, Lenka, Abrahams, Emily, Wiklund, Helena, Rabone, Muriel, Bribiesca-Contreras, Guadalupe, Stewart, Eva C. D., Dahlgren, Thomas G. & Glover, Adrian G., 2023, Taxonomy, phylogeny, and biodiversity of Lumbrineridae (Annelida, Polychaeta) from the Central Pacific Clarion-Clipperton Zone, ZooKeys 1172, pp. 61-100 : 61

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1172.100483

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6BAEC3DE-E4B3-477B-948D-DC1E0ACA631B

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/32BA5656-2171-5446-A03F-2A1DB02B1E48

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Lumbrineridae sp. NHM_2146
status

 

Lumbrineridae sp. NHM_2146 View in CoL View at ENA

Fig. 2A-D View Figure 2

Material examined.

NHM_2146, NHM ANEA 2022.855, coll. 20 Mar. 2015, AB02, APEI6, EBS, 19.46457, -120.02542, 4026 m, https://data.nhm.ac.uk/object/2c8356c2-f64f-4a40-ac0b-292cfc5247b6.

Description.

This species is represented by a single sub-optimally preserved body fragment, 1.8 mm long and 0.4 mm wide for ~ 7 discernible chaetigers (Fig. 2A View Figure 2 ). Parapodia indistinct, globular parapodial lobe visible on some parapodia (Fig. 2B, C View Figure 2 ). Aciculae yellow. Chaetae characterised by winged limbate chaetae (Fig. 2C View Figure 2 ), pseudo-compound multidentate hooded hooks (Fig. 2C, D View Figure 2 ). No simple hooks visible on specimen, although posterior end is absent, and many chaetae are broken.

Genetic data.

This species falls in a strongly supported clade containing Augeneria species, suggesting it may belong to this genus (Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ). There are no matches for this species on GenBank.

Remarks.

Due to the suboptimal quality of the single available specimen, we cannot identify this taxon beyond family level using morphology. Prostomium and jaws cannot be observed. Chaetae are characterised by winged limbate chaetae and hooks that appears to be pseudo-compound and multidentate. No simple hooks visible on specimen, although posterior end is absent, and many chaetae are broken. Molecular data suggest this species may belong to genus Augeneria (Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ), but given the lack of morphological data, we cautiously assign this specimen to morphospecies Lumbrineridae sp. NHM_2146.

Distribution.

Central Pacific Ocean, Eastern CCZ, in the Area of Particular Environmental Interest, ‘APEI-6’ only (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ).