Euphrosinopsis halli, Neal & Wiklund & Gunton & Rabone & Bribiesca-Contreras & Dahlgren & Glover, 2022

Neal, Lenka, Wiklund, Helena, Gunton, Laetitia M., Rabone, Muriel, Bribiesca-Contreras, Guadalupe, Dahlgren, Thomas G. & Glover, Adrian G., 2022, Abyssal fauna of polymetallic nodule exploration areas, eastern Clarion-Clipperton Zone, central Pacific Ocean: Amphinomidae and Euphrosinidae (Annelida, Amphinomida), ZooKeys 1137, pp. 33-74 : 33

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1137.86150

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9407DC6E-B6B0-46AF-A9C7-F8DDCF542457

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/83A9C528-4FBE-4836-82DC-C31BDA5C2B09

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:83A9C528-4FBE-4836-82DC-C31BDA5C2B09

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Euphrosinopsis halli
status

sp. nov.

Euphrosinopsis halli sp. nov.

Figs 15C View Figure 15 , 20A-E View Figure 20 , 21 A-E View Figure 21

Material examined.

NHM_0779, NHMUK ANEA 2022.641, coll. 20/02/2015, EBS, 12.53717, -116.60417, 4425 m, UK-1, http://data.nhm.ac.uk/object/1a683870-d904-4c2c-bf1a-a34ead0a42fc; NHM_4339 (holotype), NHMUK ANEA 2022.642, coll. 11/03/2020, box core, 12.17997, -117.065277, 4117 m, UK-1, http://data.nhm.ac.uk/object/670dfd34-338d-4edc-8856-b0a9a728efc9; NHM_6018 (paratype), NHMUK ANEA 2022.643; coll. 13/11/2020, box core, 10.35780, -117.15931, 4284 m, NORI-D, http://data.nhm.ac.uk/object/ab26e2ea-ab87-4013-8106-e817c0485cc9.

Diagnosis.

Holotype (NHMUK ANEA.2022.642) complete (except for tissue sampled for DNA), 1.3 mm long and 0.75 mm wide without chaetae for 11 chaetigers. Paratype (NHMUK ANEA.2022.643) complete (except for tissue sampled for DNA), 1.5 mm long and 0.75 mm wide for 12 chaetigers. Body short, oval, flattened, pale yellow in alcohol (Fig. 20A View Figure 20 ). Prostomium longer than wide, with 5 prostomial appendages (Fig. 15C View Figure 15 ). Pair of short slender palps; pair of slender lateral antenna; median antenna of caruncle with long thick ceratophore and slender cirrus of similar length to caruncle (Figs 15C View Figure 15 , 20B View Figure 20 ). Caruncle as oval lobe reaching to chaetiger 2, mostly free of body wall, with median keel and two pairs of lateral ridges, median keel slightly thicker than the lateral ones (Fig. 20B View Figure 20 ). Single pair of large, spherical eyes, deeply embedded, lateral to median antenna and caruncle (Figs 15C View Figure 15 , 20A View Figure 20 ).

Parapodia biramous, two rami well separated. With parapodial appendages observed dorso-ventrally as follow (Figs 15F View Figure 15 , 20C View Figure 20 ): long slender dorsal cirrus, often curved into S-shape in middle chaetigers; single cirriform branchia attached laterally to dorsal cirrus; lateral cirrus similar to branchia in form, but more robust; slender cirriform ventral cirrus.

Chaetae fragile, prone to breakage, of two main types: 1. Numerous, bifurcate chaetae arranged in approximately three rows in notopodia; their shafts of various length and thickness (Fig. 21A View Figure 21 ); development of filelike teeth on shafts ranging from smooth (Fig. 21C View Figure 21 ) to well developed (Fig. 21D, E View Figure 21 ); their prongs variable in length with short furcate chaetae in anterior tier having the ratio of short to long prong ranging from 1:2-2.5 (where possible to establish), the prong ratio of longest chaetae in the mid tear ranging from 1:3.5-4 (where possible to establish); prongs mainly smooth or with extremely faint serration only visible under high magnification (Fig. 21B View Figure 21 ). 2. Ringent chaetae (sensu Kudenov 1993) present in notopodia only, few in numbers (ca. 5 per notopodium), composed of two curved prongs of unequal length and thickness, both with indistinct serration, the long prong distally with slender elongated tip, short prong broad and distally rounded (Fig. 20D, E View Figure 20 ). Neurochaetae similar less numerous, thinner, and shorter than notochaetae, all bifurcate, prongs appearing smooth, often broken off. Pygidium with pair of cirri resembling cylindrical tube feet.

Molecular information.

Specimen NHMUK ANEA.2022.641, was sequenced for 16S and 18S while paratype NHMUK ANEA.2022.643 and holotype NHMUK ANEA.2022.642 were sequenced for 16S only (Table 1 View Table 1 ). There were no identical sequences for 16S on GenBank. The relationships between Euphrosinella and Euphrosinopsis in the phylogenetic tree is unresolved (Fig. 5B View Figure 5 ). As COI sequencing was not successful in this study, all euphrosinid species are represented by only 16S and 18S, and in the case of the species from GenBank, only 16S.

Remarks.

CCZ species agrees well with the genus Euphrosinopsis in having five prostomial appendages, caruncle partially free from the body wall and the presence of large, deeply embedded eyes lateral to median antenna and caruncle. However, this species shows differences from all known species in this genus, suggesting it belongs to a new species. The presence of single, small, unbranched cirriform branchia per parapodium suggest affiliation with E. crassiseta and E. horsti , which share the same character. However, the new species differs from E. crassiseta in possessing the ringent chaetae and lacking the coarse serration on neurochaetae. The most similar species, E. horsti can be easily separated by having anal cirri fused instead of typical cylindrical tube feet as in the new species. For comparison with another new Euphrosinopsis species also described in this study see the remarks section for E. ahearni sp. nov.

Distribution.

Central Pacific Ocean, Eastern CCZ, the exploration areas UK-1 and NORI-D (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ).

Etymology.

This species is named for Preben Hall, the captain onboard the ship Maersk Launcher that was used in NORI-D expeditions in 2020 and 2021.