Anobothrus Levinsen, 1884

Schüller, Myriam & Jirkov, Igor A., 2013, New Ampharetidae (Polychaeta) from the deep Southern Ocean and shallow Patagonian waters, Zootaxa 3692 (1), pp. 204-237 : 216

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3692.1.11

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A96187E4-6C35-4A64-BD39-4D29606653BF

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6152268

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/20155B09-EF13-BF54-FF17-FD41FE26DF3F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Anobothrus Levinsen, 1884
status

 

Anobothrus Levinsen, 1884 View in CoL

Type species: Ampharete gracilis Malmgren, 1866

Synonyms: Anobothrella Hartman, 1967: 155 –156, Melythasides Desbruyères, 1978: 232 –235, Sosanides Hartmann-Schröder, 1965: 243 –246.

Diagnosis: (emended) Prostomium trilobed, without glandular ridges. Buccal tentacles smooth or papillated. Chaetae in TS-2 present or absent. 3–4 pairs of smooth branchiae, anterior 3 pairs arranged in a transverse row without gap. A pair of nephridial papillae present behind innermost branchiae. 14–16 TCs starting from TS-3 or TS-4, 11–12 TUs, starting from TS-6. 4th, 5th or 6th to last notopodia shifted dorsally, connected by a glandular ridge. If dorsal shift of notopodia absent, posterior TUs prolonged. Circular whitish band present in one anterior TS. AUs 1 and 2 with neuropodia similar to thoracic neuropodia. Abdominal rudimentary notopodia absent.

Remarks: The genus Anobothrus is one of the most speciose ampharetid genera world-wide and the most speciose genus reported for the Southern Ocean and Patagonian waters. With addition of the three newly described species herein, there are eight species described for these regions to date. Reuscher et al. (2009) and Jirkov (2009) presented emended diagnoses for the genus in the same year, based either on discovery of new species or on thorough investigation of large collections of formerly described species. Although both emended diagnoses do not contradict each other, they address different characters in some parts, resulting in the need for the combined diagnosis presentedabove.

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF