Lamispina miurai, Higashida & Jimi & Kajihara, 2020

Higashida, Yuki, Jimi, Naoto & Kajihara, Hiroshi, 2020, Lamispina miurai sp. nov. (Annelida: Flabelligeridae) from off Aomori, Japan, Species Diversity 25, pp. 329-342 : 331

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.12782/specdiv.25.329

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4254262C-E7DF-4522-BF00-5D289EE4201D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5738747

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2026B330-64F2-414C-A22F-96AED323B82B

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:2026B330-64F2-414C-A22F-96AED323B82B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Lamispina miurai
status

sp. nov.

Lamispina miurai View in CoL sp. nov.

[New Japanese name: Miura-sasanoha-habouki] ( Fig. 1 View Fig )

Diagnosis. Body surface without sand particles. Cephalic cage well developed, twice as long as body width (widest chaetiger). Anchylosed lamispine present in chaetiger 4 and succeeding posterior chaetigers, without accessory tooth, with tips curved and subdistally serrated.

Material examined. Holotype: NSMT-Pol H-814, 21 mm long, 3 mm wide (widest chaetiger), 42 chaetigers (incomplete), sex unknown, off Aomori, 226–228 m depth, 4 October 1988, collected by Prof. Tomoyuki Miura. Paratypes: ICHUM 5768, 2 specimens, 12–16 mm long, 1.5–2.0mm wide (widest chaetiger), 21–34 chaetigers (incomplete), sex unknown, collection data same as holotype.

Description of holotype. Body cylindrical, tapered in posterior region, yellowish after fixation ( Fig. 1A–C View Fig ). Body surface without sand particles ( Fig. 1A, B View Fig ). Body papillae long, thin, digitate, 1/4 times as long as parapodial papillae, arranged in 5–6 irregular transverse bands per segment; sediment particles attached on base. Gonopodial lobes absent. Gonopores absent.

Prostomium low cone; brown eyes present; caruncle developed; lateral and ventral lips expanded; dorsal lip not well developed ( Fig. 1C View Fig ). Palps broken. Branchiae broken; scars arranged in continuous dorsal series, eight in number ( Fig. 1C View Fig ). Nephridial lobes present.

Cephalic cage well developed, twice as long as body width (widest chaetiger). Chaetigers 1–3 comprising cephalic cage; chaetiger 1 with 9 notochaetae and 5–6 neurochaetae; chaetiger 2 with 4 notochaetae and 5–6 neurochaetae; chaetiger 3 with 4–5 notochaetae and 3–4 neurochaetae (some chaetae broken). Chaetal transition from cephalic cage to body chaetae abrupt ( Fig. 1A View Fig ).

Parapodia poorly developed. Noto- and neuropodial low lobes with 8–12 internal papillae and 7–10 postchaetal papillae; 8–9 chaetae per notopodia; 6–7 chaetae per neuropodia. Notochaetae multiarticulated capillaries, brownish, with approximately 65 articles; articles medium-sized basally, long medially and distally ( Fig. 1E, H, I View Fig ). Neurochaetae multiarticulated capillaries in chaetigers 1–3, brownish; anchylosed lamispines present in chaetiger 4 and succeeding posterior chaetigers, brownish, without accessory tooth, with approximately 80 articles same-sized, with tips curved and subdistally serrated ( Figs. 1D, F, G View Fig ).

Posterior end of body unknown.

Etymology. This species is named after Prof. Tomoyuki Miura who donated his specimens that contained the type specimens to ICHUM. The specific name is a noun in the genitive case.

Distribution. Only known from the type locality, off Aomori, Japan, 226–228 m in depth.

Remarks. Lamispina miurai sp. nov. resembles L. carrerai Salazar-Vallejo, 2014 , L. chilensis Salazar-Vallejo, 2014 , L. gymnopapillata ( Hartmann-Schröder, 1965) , L. horsti ( Haswell, 1892) , and L. kerguelarum ( Grube, 1877) in that their body is not covered by sand or large sediment particles ( Grube 1877; Haswell 1892; Hartmann-Schröder 1965; Salazar-Vallejo 2014). In L. miurai sp. nov., the tip of the lamispine is curved and subdistally serrated unlike in the other species. Besides that, L. miurai sp. nov. differs from L. horsti and L. kerguelarum by the structure of the cephalic cage, which is formed by chaetigers 1–3 in L. miurai sp. nov., but by chaetigers 1–2 in the latter two. In L. miurai sp. nov., the length of the cephalic cage is twice as long as the body width, while it is 3.5 times longer than wide in L. chilensis , and six times longer than wide in L. carrerai . In L. miurai sp. nov., the branchial scars are arranged in a continuous dorsal series; in L. gymnopapillata , however, they are arranged in two groups, with four bases forming a continuous row, other bases into two lateral groups, each comprised of two scars.

ICHUM

Invertebrate Collection of the Hokkaido University Museum

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