Laonice (Laonice) siamica, Sikorski & Pavlova & Martin & Gil, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5277.3.3 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9CD81684-7297-4E55-A5BF-114D0AD73C63 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7896054 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/545BCAEE-01D8-454F-960D-86B54F9025DA |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:545BCAEE-01D8-454F-960D-86B54F9025DA |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Laonice (Laonice) siamica |
status |
sp. nov. |
Laonice (Laonice) siamica View in CoL sp. nov.
Figs 2A–I View FIGURE 2 , 6 View FIGURE 6 .
LSID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:545BCAEE-01D8-454F-960D-86B54F9025DA
Holotype. MNCN16.01 About MNCN /19128, Gulf of Siam, off Thailand, st. 5, 07°36.018′N, 102°50.543′E, 64 m depth, 92.2% of silt and clay (<63 µm) and 7.6% of fine sand (63–250 µm) with shell fragments, 28 July 1998. GoogleMaps
Description. Holotype 0.7 mm wide, 20 mm long for 104 chaetigers (one anterior fragment of 60 chaetigers and one posterior with 44).
Prostomium fused with peristomium at fronto-lateral margin ( Fig. 2A, C View FIGURE 2 ), anteriorly rounded, extending posteriorly to beginning of chaetiger 41 as a low narrow caruncle, accompanied by nuchal organs as lateral ciliary bands. Occipital antenna thin, erect, half length of notopodial postchaetal lamellae of chaetiger 1. One pair of small, distinct, faded brownish eyespots in front of attachment of occipital antenna.
Branchiae from chaetiger 2; first pair half as long as notopodial postchaetal lamellae, then increasing their length but still shorter until chaetiger 4 ( Fig. 2A, E View FIGURE 2 ), of equal length on chaetiger 5, and twice longer after chaetiger 10 ( Fig. 2F View FIGURE 2 ); then branchiae gradually shortening from chaetiger 38 ( Fig. 2B, G View FIGURE 2 ), being absent after chaetiger 50 (last branchiate chaetiger).
Notopodial postchaetal lamellae leaflike, almost triangular, with narrow acute tips through all body ( Fig. 2A–C, E–G View FIGURE 2 ), but particularly pronounced on the four anteriormost chaetigers ( Fig. 2A, E View FIGURE 2 ), gradually shortening to half the length of anterior ones on last branchiate chaetigers, becoming narrow triangles on posteriormost chaetigers ( Fig. 2G View FIGURE 2 ). Anterior postbranchiate chaetigers with notopodial postchaetal lamella extending slightly dorsally, not reaching middle dorsum ( Fig. 2B View FIGURE 2 ). Neuropodial postchaetal lamellae almost trapezoidal anteriorly ( Fig. 2E View FIGURE 2 ), then triangular, with acute tips through all body ( Fig. 2F–G View FIGURE 2 ).
Dorsal transverse crests absent.
Lateral inter-neuropodial pouches from chaetiger 5–6, irregularly present from chaetiger 50 to posteriormost chaetigers.
Capillaries of anterior chaetigers arranged in two vertical rows. Neuropodial hooks from chaetiger 39, up to 6–8 per fascicle, bidentate in lateral view, tridentate in frontal view, with one pair of small apical teeth side by side above main fang ( Fig. 2H–I View FIGURE 2 ). Notopodial hooks absent. Sabre chaetae from chaetiger 14, one per fascicle.
Pygidium with ten lobes forming a ring around the anus: four bilaterally symmetrical pairs bearing one thin threadlike anal cirrus, and one ventral pair closely set, pointed and lacking cirri ( Fig. 2D View FIGURE 2 ).
Pigmentation absent.
Methyl Green staining. As oval spots on upper parts of notopodial postchaetal lamellae of chaetigers 4–8 ( Fig. 2C View FIGURE 2 ).
Type locality. Gulf of Siam, off Thailand (07°36.018′N, 102°50.543′E), 64 m depth GoogleMaps .
Etymology. The specific epithet siamica derives from the toponymic name of the inlet where the type was collected, the Gulf of Siam.
Distribution. Gulf of Siam (Pacific Ocean) ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ).
Remarks. Laonice siamica sp. nov. can be referred to L. ( Laonice ) as defined by Sikorski et al. (2017), as it has the prostomium completely fused with the peristomium. It is closely related to the L. cirrata complex [ L. brevicornis (with both L. aperata and L. petersenae included), L. quadridentata , L. cricketae and, probably, L. bassensis , L. shamrockensis , L. asaccata , L. pinnulata and L. plumisetosa ]. However, the gradual reduction of the posterior branchiae is quite unique of L. siamica sp. nov. While measuring only 0.7 mm wide, the holotype of L. siamica sp. nov. has nuchal organs extending to chaetiger 41 and up to 50 pairs of branchiae, which only occurs in specimens of L. cirrata measuring> 2.2 mm wide. Nuchal organs of L. shamrockensis , L. asaccata , L. pinnulata and L. plumisetosa are much shorter and do not extend over chaetiger 7 (41 in L. siamica sp. nov.). In L. brevicornis and L. cricketae nuchal organs are shorter as well: up to chaetiger 26 in L. brevicornis (with last branchiae on chaetiger 36) and up to chaetiger 20 in L. cricketae (with last branchiae on chaetiger 39 and lateral inter-neuropodial pouches only from chaetiger 40, instead of chaetiger 7 in L. siamica sp. nov.). Nuchal organs, as in the case of the species described above, are also remarkably shorter in L. quadridentata (up to chaetiger 18) and L. bassensis (up to chaetiger 7).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.