Tubulanus riceae, Ritger & Norenburg, 2006

Ritger, Rebecca Kirk & Norenburg, Jon L., 2006, Tubulanus riceae new species (Nemertea: Anopla: Palaeonemertea: Tubulanidae), from South Florida, Belize and Panama, Journal of Natural History 40 (15 - 16), pp. 931-942 : 933-940

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930600833867

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B9778785-FFBB-F666-618B-FBC9FC31588F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tubulanus riceae
status

sp. nov.

Tubulanus riceae View in CoL , n. sp.

Figures 1–3 View Figure 1 View Figure 2 View Figure 3

Etymology

The specific epithet is a noun in the genitive singular and honors Dr. Mary E. Rice, first and long-term director of the Smithsonian Marine Station at Fort Pierce , Florida, for her extraordinary dedication to furthering the study of marine organisms .

Systematic account

Genus Tubulanus Renier, 1804 View in CoL : Diagnosis of the genus Tubulanus View in CoL from Gibson and Sundberg (1999) (italics excluded):

‘‘Length at the onset of sexual maturation 2–10 cm; coloured, usually with a conspicuous pattern; head furrows present; body wall musculature consisting of outer and inner circular and middle longitudinal layers; muscle crosses present between outer and inner circular muscles in some species; diagonal muscles present; cerebral sensory organs consisting of ciliated pits or ciliated canals in the epidermis; side organs present in foregut region in some species; cephalic region with nerve layer; two nerves in rhynchodaeal epithelium; proboscis nerves present; brain and lateral nerves situated between epidermal basement membrane and outer circular muscles; epidermal basement membrane usually thick; nervous system with neither neurochords nor neurochord cells; buccal nerves present and paired; intestine with shallow lateral diverticula; rhynchocoel wall with circular muscles only; proboscis musculature with outer longitudinal and inner circular layers; circular muscle layer in rear end of rhynchocoelic or in nephridial regions strongly developed; gland-like anterior part of excretory system entering lateral blood vessels; blood vascular system without mid-dorsal vessel; eyes absent; sexes separate.’’

Description

External features. External morphology of nine specimens was examined in detail. Gliding specimens ranged from 10 to 55 mm long and 0.2 to 0.4 mm wide. The blunt, spatulate head can change shape – usually flattening when disturbed – and is slightly wider than the overall body-width, as is common for Tubulanus species ( Figure 1 View Figure 1 ). Individuals secrete a thin, cellophane-like, transparent tube. The ground color is milky-tan with a serial pattern of dark brown annuli repeating at 2–3 mm increments, each annulus sandwiched by reflective white pigment bands. The cephalic and caudal tips are dark brown ( Figure 1 View Figure 1 ). Dorsally, two large, wide and softly defined stripes of white reflective granules (similar to granules found in Tubulanus rhabdotus ) extend from the pigment at the cephalic tip to the first annulus. These continue posteriorly as six to eight irregularly formed longitudinal white stripes broken up by the annuli, with only a single mid-dorsal stripe on the tail region. The annuli are more or less disrupted ventrally and there are no stripes on the ventral surface. The color and patterns are very characteristic and very different from other described species in this genus. In life, two small horizontal rows of dark brownish-black, ocelli-like structures are visible along the front margin of the head. The mouth interrupts the first anterior annulus. Gonads extend posteriorly from about the fourth or fifth annulus. The pre-gonadal region is a fourth to a third of the body length and is the most muscular portion of the body. A faint cephalic furrow encircles the body in front at the first annulus and remains visible after fixation. Distinct lateral sensory organs interrupt the third annulus ( Figure 1 View Figure 1 ).

Worms of this species tend to contract the posterior region into a knot or spiral, a common behavior among Tubulanus species. Fragmenting, when it occurs, is at the pigmented annuli, and consists of the body wall cinching and then pinching off fragments. Sexually mature females have a thin-walled gonadal region packed with individual oocytes appearing dark pinkish-orange in color. Sexually mature males have thin-walled testes with packets of sperm cells. Sexually mature specimens occur from at least March to September.

Body wall. Specimens fixed in formalin rapidly exhibit a dark band ( Figure 2A View Figure 2 ) around the body between the second and fourth annuli. This fixation band is most opaque anteriorly, with a relatively sharp anterior margin, and gradually fades toward the fourth annulus. Close examination shows a sharp transition, immediately in back of the third annulus, that divides the fixation band into posterior and anterior halves, although the color change is subtle. This can be seen in living and fixed specimens. The fixation band is a commonly reported feature of Tubulanus specimens and reflects a difference in cell type distribution ( Figure 3A, D View Figure 3 ) visible as a more subtle change in opacity in living animals. This darkening is retained and readily evident in histological sections, especially sagittal sections.

Epidermal thickness varies substantially along the body length and is, of course, affected by differential contraction during fixation. It is thickest in the cephalic region (up to about 45 mm), where it is conspicuously pseudostratified, with a very well-developed basal stratum of cell bodies filled with blue-staining mucus ( Figure 3A View Figure 3 ). These resemble the cephalic gland of other nemerteans. They open individually to the epidermal surface. This stratum thins posteriorly, giving way to a thickening apical stratum at approximately the second epidermal annulus ( Figure 3B View Figure 3 ). The cephalic apical stratum consists primarily of ciliated cells and serous or bacillary cells containing red-staining, widely spaced, small granules. They are replaced abruptly at the second annulus by a dense population of large, deeply red and coarsely granular secretory goblets of serous cells that extend through most of the height of the epidermis. These latter characterize the anterior half of the fixation band, extending to the third annulus ( Figure 3C View Figure 3 ). They are replaced in a sharp transition to the posterior half of the fixation band by distinctly more opaque brownish-red secretory goblets concentrated more basally in the epidermis ( Figure 3D View Figure 3 ). Red-staining, more loosely granular, secretory material is the dominant glandular element of the remaining epidermis throughout the intestinal region.

The brown pigment of the annuli, cephalic and caudal tips occurs throughout the thickness of the apical stratum of epidermis, but tends to be concentrated near the apical surface ( Figure 3D View Figure 3 ).

Dermis and connective tissue. A relatively thin dermal connective tissue, mostly less than 10% of epidermal thickness, reaches a maximum thickness of about 5 mm near the brain ( Figures 2C, H, O View Figure 2 and 3B View Figure 3 ). It is weakly basophilic throughout, except for a denser apical zone corresponding to the basement membrane. There are only traces of other extracellular matrix in the remainder of the body.

Apical organ. A shallow depression about 100 mm in diameter and immediately above the rhynchopore may represent an apical organ ( Figures 2K View Figure 2 and 3A View Figure 3 ). It is lined exclusively by cells with cilia somewhat longer than the general body ciliation.

Body musculature. The body-wall outer circular musculature (OCM) is evident only posterior to the brain, and is one or two fibers thick throughout the body, but may be up to three fibers in the foregut region ( Figure 2B, H, O View Figure 2 ). This overlies the longitudinal musculature (LM), which is five to seven fibers thick through most of its length and may be about nine fibers thick in the foregut region ( Figure 2B, H, O, P View Figure 2 ). There is a trace of inner circular (ICM) musculature only in the foregut region and it appears to be incomplete ventrally, with the fibers appearing to terminate in the LM as they bend underneath the foregut on either side ( Figure 2H View Figure 2 ). An oblique (diagonal) musculature of very widely spaced fibers can be seen between OCM and LM in frontal sections of the foregut region ( Figure 2D View Figure 2 ). The connections between the dorsal and rhynchocoelic nerves would make it difficult to detect a muscle cross between OCM and ICM, but we could not find convincing evidence for such a cross.

Dorsoventral, radial and transverse muscles are well-developed in the cephalic lobe anterior to the brain ( Figure 2C View Figure 2 ). Frontal sections show three or four transverse muscle bundles of approximately four fibers each.

Rhynchodeum. A discrete ring of ciliated cells forms the rhynchopore ( Figure 3A View Figure 3 ). The entire rhynchodeum is richly lined by mucoid cells, interspersed by inconspicuous cells bearing long cilia ( Figure 3A, B View Figure 3 ). This epithelium is about 30 mm thick anteriorly and thins toward the brain, with the mucoid cells becoming progressively more vacuolated. The transition to proboscis is marked by more acidophilic cells and squamous epithelium and a loss of ciliation ( Figure 3B View Figure 3 ). A thin connective tissue separates the epithelium from a thin circular musculature.

Rhynchocoel. The rhynchocoel appears to extend throughout the length of the body. The proboscis sheath comprises an epithelium and a longitudinal musculature, which is enclosed by the body-wall ICM ( Figure 2H, L View Figure 2 ). The LM is one fiber thick anteriorly and gradually becomes thicker in its main part.

Proboscis. In life, most of the proboscis lies more or less coiled in the region of the foregut and anterior intestine. The proboscis insertion is above the mouth and consists of only a few muscle fibers crossing into the body-wall LM ( Figure 3B View Figure 3 ). A proboscis nerve originates from each end of the ventral commissure and they are the most conspicuous elements of the proboscis insertion ( Figure 2E View Figure 2 ). The epithelium of the proboscis differentiates it into four regions. The anterior 10% of the proboscis has a pair of stout nerves ( Figure 2L View Figure 2 ) and bears a relatively flat epithelium with predominantly acidophilic serous cells ( Figure 3B View Figure 3 ). The epithelium of the succeeding approximate 25% of proboscis is differentiated as a pair of glandular ridges of tall columnar cells. The two proboscis nerves here are significantly expanded and the LM underlying the epithelium is thickened ( Figure 3C, D View Figure 3 ). Distal to this, another approximately 40% of the proboscis is highly coiled and consists of tall, weakly basophilic columnar glandular cells. These glandular cells bear clusters of rhabdite-like projections visible by scanning electron microscope (SEM) ( Figure 2M View Figure 2 ). The posterior 25% of the proboscis bears a flattened, thinner acidophilic epithelium. A bundle of LM retractor muscles extends from the end of the proboscis to the LM of the proboscis sheath.

Digestive system. The mouth is elongate and opens into a cavity lined by glandular cells, mostly blue-staining anteriorly and increasingly red-staining posteriorly ( Figure 3B, C View Figure 3 ). This is followed quickly by a long, straight pyloric tube with primarily ciliated epithelium, extending to slightly past the approximate midpoint of the fixation band ( Figure 3D View Figure 3 ). Diverticula are apparent only as the result of gonad development.

Circulatory system. The vascular system is a simple loop formed by a pair of lateral vessels anastomosing anteriorly as a large cephalic lacuna and posteriorly by a simple commissure, as in other Tubulanus . The lacuna extends far forward in the head ( Figure 2E, G, I View Figure 2 ). Dorsoventral muscle fibers partition the cephalic lacuna incompletely into two lateral halves, whereas more posteriorly, the rhynchodeum completely divides it ( Figure 2E View Figure 2 ). In the region of the proboscis insertion, about five widely spaced radial muscle bundles extend across the body from the OCM and incompletely split the paired lateral lacunae into upper and lower blood vessels dorsolateral to the mouth. The two ventral components anastomose via a ventral connective just behind the proboscis insertion. This may be a new feature for Tubulanus . The dorsal, main lateral vessels lie between LM and ICM and gradually become non-lacunar as they proceed posteriad alongside the foregut. The endothelium of the blood vessels is visible but no circular muscle fibers are evident.

Nervous system. The cerebral ganglia are between the basement membrane and the OCM ( Figure 2E, F View Figure 2 ). A neurilemma is not evident. The dermal connective tissue is much thicker in the region of the brain and lamellae of connective tissue push into and through the brain. A pair of neurocord cells appears to be present in this species ( Figure 2N View Figure 2 ). The dorsal commissure reaches 18 mm in thickness and gives rise to a mid-dorsal nerve. The ventral commissure is approximately 44 mm thick ( Figure 2E View Figure 2 ). The pair of proboscis nerves arises from the posterior surface of the ventral commissure where it meets the medial face of the ventral ganglia. A pair of buccal nerves comes off the mid-ventral region of the ventral ganglia, just anterior to the mouth, and lie alongside the mouth and anterior foregut region. Neither transverse connective between the buccal nerves (as in Tubulanus lutescens Cantell, 2001 ) nor neural plexus could be recognized. A pair of nerves approximately 9 mm in diameter extends forward along the ventral region of the rhynchodeum. The ventral ganglia extend posteriorly as the lateral nerve cords.

Sensory organs. The cerebral sensory organs are located just posterior to the ventral ganglia ( Figure 2F View Figure 2 ). They are simple ciliated pits, approximately 22 mm wide and 66 mm deep, consisting of a relatively straight canal portion with small reddish glandular cells surrounding the interior end and a densely ciliated cerebral organ pore that is about 150 mm anterior to the first annulus. The epidermal region surrounding the cerebral sensory organs does not appear to differ from nearby epidermis. There do not appear to be specialized glandular cells associated with the inner portion of the cerebral sensory organs.

Ocelli-like structures are located deep in the epidermis at the antero-lateral margin of the head ( Figure 2G View Figure 2 ). They are visible in life as an irregular horizontal grouping of two or three dark-brown pigment spots to either side of the rhynchopore. In section, some of these pigment spots are cup-shaped, with the opening directed outward ( Figure 2G View Figure 2 ). Although no nerve fibers are identifiable as leading to these putative ocelli, their location on the body and at the base of the epidermis, deeper than the anterior epidermal pigment, suggests that they may be ocelli.

The lateral sensory organs are located in the third annulus, in the middle of the fixation band, as is typical of Tubulanus ( Figure 1 View Figure 1 ). They are positioned close to the lateral nerve cord but there is no conspicuous connection ( Figure 2H View Figure 2 ). They are epidermal depressions consisting of thin, columnar ciliated cells with very small nuclei and with cilia longer than that of adjacent epidermis. Their association with the fixation band suggests that they may play a role in the formation of the cellophane-like tube commonly secreted by various Tubulanus species.

Excretory system. Nephridial canals are located mediad to the LM in the mid-intestinal region and adjacent to the lateral blood vessels ( Figure 2P View Figure 2 ), and run forward about 800 mm from an excretory pore positioned dorsolaterally near each lateral sensory organ ( Figure 2O View Figure 2 ). The terminal duct is about 17 mm in diameter. About 280 mm anterior from the pores, each main canal gives off a small canal that terminates in about five to seven cyrtocytes projecting into the lateral blood vessel, but presumably separated from the vascular fluid by the vascular endothelium ( Figure 2O View Figure 2 ). This is repeated six or seven times (in one specimen) at intervals of 50–100 mm .

Reproductive system. The new species is gonochoric, with gonads arranged pseudometamerically and linearly on each side of the intestine. Testes are paired, each pair forming an interdiverticular space alongside the intestine ( Figure 2I View Figure 2 ). There is a single maturing oocyte per ovary ( Figure 2J View Figure 2 ). Gonopores are located dorso-laterally along each side of the intestine.

Natural history

In Florida, worms of this species hide in crags of ‘‘worm reef’’ built by the polychaete Phragmatopoma lapidosa on intertidal coquina shell conglomerate, and especially among the holdfasts of the rhodophyte Gelidiella acerosa (Forsskål) growing on the worm reef. In Belize and Panama, the worms were found among epifauna and flora of sublittoral (3–5 m depth) coral rubble. These worms do not burrow, but build delicate ‘‘parchment’’ tubes, and do so readily in dishes. Tubulanus species exhibit a characteristic coiling or spiral contraction when disturbed, possibly facilitated by their body-wall oblique musculature.

LM

Secçáo de Botânica e Ecologia

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Nemertea

Class

Palaeonemertea

Order

Tubulaniformes

Family

Tubulanidae

Genus

Tubulanus

Loc

Tubulanus riceae

Ritger, Rebecca Kirk & Norenburg, Jon L. 2006
2006
Loc

Tubulanus

Renier 1804
1804
Loc

Tubulanus

Renier 1804
1804
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