Leodamas dendrocirris ( Day, 1977 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4860.4.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:876F1085-5296-4340-A951-41420C011917 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4414190 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A787FE-3B47-0868-ABBF-FF04FC9646A5 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Leodamas dendrocirris ( Day, 1977 ) |
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Leodamas dendrocirris ( Day, 1977) View in CoL
Figure 12 View FIGURE 12
Scoloplos (Leodamas) dendrocirris Day, 1977: 230–231 View in CoL , fig. 2f–i.
Material examined. New South Wales: 1.6 km east of Malabar , 33°58’15”S, 151°17’ E; 04.12.1973, coll. Australian Museum Shelf Benthic Survey, depth 66 m, AM W.7344, Holotype; same, place, AM W.6481, Paratype, 1 specimen GoogleMaps ; same locality, 30.01.1974, AM W.6477, 1 specimen GoogleMaps ; east of North Head, Port Jackson , 33°48’46”S, 151°20’59”E, 24.07.1989, coll. Fisheries Research Institute ( NSW), depth 60 m, sand, AM W.24303, 1 specimen GoogleMaps . Queensland: Lucinda, Sugar Loading Jetty Outer , 18°32’ S, 146°20’ E, 01.06.1999, coll. CRC Marine Research, benthic grab, AM W.30586, 1 specimen GoogleMaps .
Type locality. East of Malabar , New South Wales .
Description. All specimens studied posteriorly incomplete. Large worms, thoracic width 1.4–4.5 mm. Thorax flattened and widened, abdomen cylindrical ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ). Prostomium short and wide, bluntly conical ( Fig. 12A, B View FIGURE 12 ). Thoracic chaetigers numbering 14–18. Branchiae from chaetiger 5, triangular in anterior abdomen, then rapidly becoming elongate with tapering tips; in abdomen longer than notopodial lobes ( Fig. 12A, B, D, F, H View FIGURE 12 ). Thoracic notopodial postchaetal lobes branched, with 2–5 digitiform lobes ( Fig. 12A, C View FIGURE 12 ); in larger specimens beginning from first chaetiger, in smaller from chaetiger 3. Abdominal notopodial lobes branched forming two lobes in anterior abdomen, then becoming uniramous ( Fig. 12D View FIGURE 12 , F–H). Thoracic neuropodial postchaetal lobes mammiform, with a single papilla ( Fig. 12B, C, E View FIGURE 12 ). No subpodal or stomach papillae. Abdominal neuropodial lobes with cirriform outer lobes and reduced inner lobe ( Fig. 12C View FIGURE 12 , F–H). All parapodia with crenulated capillaries; thoracic neuropodia also bearing 3–5 rows of curved uncini, smooth or with fine serration and distal longitudinal groove on convex side; in anterior row uncini thicker, finely serrated and bent, in posterior row slenderer, almost straight ( Fig. 12C, E View FIGURE 12 ). Capillary chaetae located in anterior and posterior rows in thoracic neuropodia, forming superior and inferior tufts ( Fig. 12B, C, E View FIGURE 12 ). Both abdominal notopodia and neuropodia bearing stout aciculae; straight and slightly emergent in notopodia, with curved tips and strongly emergent in neuropodia ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 F–H). Forked chaetae present in abdominal notopodia.
Distribution. Australia, Queensland, New South Wales.
Habitat. Subtidal, sand.
Remarks: Leodamas dendrocirris was described from Australia (New South Wales) and has not been recorded elsewhere since. The present study expands the distribution of L. dendrocirris to Queensland. Leodamas dendrocirris is similar to Leodamas verax Kinberg, 1866 from South America, owing to the branched notopodial lobes and shape of the thoracic neuropodial uncini, but differs owing to a smaller number of thoracic chaetigers (14–18 vs. 22–24 in L. verax ), branched notopodial lobes (2–5 vs. 1–4 branches in L. verax ), and presence of capillary chaetae in the thoracic neuropodia (absent in L. verax ). The presence of acicula in the abdominal notopodia is mentioned in the original description of L. dendrocirris and confirmed in the present study, but erroneously stated as absent by Blake (2017) and Sun et al. (2018). Leodamas tribulosus Ehlers, 1897 and Leodamas perissobranchiatus Blake, 2017 from South America, and Leodamas sinensis Sun et al., 2018 from China are similar to L. dendrocirris in having neuropodial lobes with developed papilla and neuropodial uncini with a distal notch or groove on the convex side. However, they differ from L. dendrocirris in having simple notopodial lobes. Additionally, in L. tribulosus the grooves on the neuropodial uncini are deeper and terminate in bifid tips, and the abdominal notopodial aciculae are absent, while L. perissobranchiatus has branched branchiae.
AM |
Australian Museum |
NSW |
Royal Botanic Gardens, National Herbarium of New South Wales |
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Leodamas dendrocirris ( Day, 1977 )
Zhadan, Anna 2020 |
Scoloplos (Leodamas) dendrocirris
Day, J. H. 1977: 231 |