Thelepus

Londoño-Mesa, Mario H. & Carrera-Parra, Luis F., 2005, Terebellidae (Polychaeta) from the Mexican Caribbean with description of four new species, Zootaxa 1057, pp. 1-44 : 10

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.170120

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6267110

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B587EF-7C74-311C-FEF3-A6F2FC03C121

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Thelepus
status

 

Thelepus View in CoL sp.

Figures 3 View FIGURE 3 A–E

Material examined: Mexican Caribbean: ECOSUR TERE­28 (1) Chinchorro Bank (18°35’51.0’’N 87°20’20.5’’W), 3 Oct. 1983. (1) Cozumel Island (20°23’45.1’’N 86°51’53.5’’W), 5 Jun. 1995. Central­America: UMML (1) R/V “Pillsbury” cruise 6802, sta. P613, Gulf of Honduras (15°58’N 88°20’W), 19 Mar. 1967, 39 m.

Description: Specimen incomplete, with 40 segments, 25.5 mm long; thorax 4 mm wide. Thorax dorsally swollen after segment 6, with midventral grooved from segment 15 until the end of the fragment. Tentacles missing. Tentacular membrane with very small dark eyespots, arranged in two rows, more concentrated laterally. Upper lip with short rounded free edge. Lower lip, thin and projecting outward ( Figures 2 View FIGURE 2 A–B). Lateral lappets absent. Three pairs of branchiae, starting from segment 2, filaments digitate, spiralled ( Figure 2 View FIGURE 2 B). First pair with 3 filaments, second with 4, third with 5–6 filaments. Nephridial papillae not evident. Glandular tissue surrounding notopodia 4–6; with 15 ventral shields, rectangular, short, tapering from segment 17, with a deep midventral groove. Thorax with 34 notopodia, starting from segment 3. Notochaetae bilimbate, of two sizes ( Figures 2 View FIGURE 2 C); long chaetae straight, with equal­sized limbs, short chaetae curved, with asymmetric limbs. Neuropodia from segment 5, become shorter posteriorly; from segment 27, reduced to a swollen lobe with short row of uncini. Thoracic and abdominal uncini with dental formula MF:2:3 ( Figures 2 View FIGURE 2 D–E); subrostrum long, deep, without subrostral process; anterior process projected forward, as a button; with long and curved basis; without posterior process; occipitium starting from a shallow depression; capitium with first row with two teeth above main fang, and second row with three teeth, the central larger than lateral teeth.

Remarks: These specimens differ from T. haitiensis and T. setosus in the number of branchial filaments, number of ventral shields and number of notopodia, being considerably higher in those species. Furthermore, the uncinal formula is different to T. haitiensis (MF:2) and similar to T. setosus (MF:2–3:2). These specimens represent an undescribed species, but the condition of the material precludes its description.

Distribution: Mexican Caribbean and Gulf of Honduras.

UMML

University of Miami Marine Laboratory

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