Nereis shinkai ( Shimabukuro et al., 2017)

Bergamo 1, Gilberto, Carrerette 1, Orlemir, Shimabukuro 1, Mauricio, Santos, Cinthya S. G. & Sumida 1, Paulo Y. G., 2024, Revealing a new eyeless Nereis (Nereididae: Annelida) clade from deep-sea organic falls, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 201 (201), pp. 1-31 : 24-25

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad122

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11355995

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/642787B7-FF85-FF81-4823-6582FB7A1CCF

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Nereis shinkai ( Shimabukuro et al., 2017)
status

comb. nov.

Nereis shinkai ( Shimabukuro et al., 2017) View in CoL comb. nov.

( Figs 14 View Figure 14 , 15 View Figure 15 )

Neanthes shinkai Shimabukuro, Santos, Alfaro-Lucas, Fujiwara % Sumida, 2017.

Material examined: Paratype 3 (ColBIO-DS 00004), incomplete, 28 cht, 30.7 mm long, 6.6 mm wide. Three specimens coll. 25 May 2015, continental margin off São Paulo state, Santos Basin, Brazil, 28°01ʹ42.24″S, 43°31ʹ46.8″W, 3358 m depth; GoogleMaps specimen complete, but fractioned, 55 cht, 44.6 mm long, 3.6 mm wide (MZUSP5355); GoogleMaps specimen incomplete, 10 cht, 9 mm long, 2.5 mm wide (ColBIO-DS 00199); GoogleMaps juvenile specimen incomplete, 16 cht, 6.2 mm long, 0.8 mm wide (MZUSP5356) GoogleMaps .

New report: Three specimens (two adults and one juvenile) found at the ‘SP3300’ site ( Table 1 View Table 1 ; Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ) belong to the species Nereis shinkai , confirmed by both morphological and molecular data ( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ). Still, there are some morphological variations between specimens from the ‘Shinkai’ site (original description) and the ‘SP3300’ site (present study) that are presented in the following Variation section. The geographical proximity between the two collection sites supports the specimens belonging to the same species, and both sites are influenced by the same water mass, the Antarctic Bottom Water, but this new report is important by the extension of the depth range of the species, with the ‘Shinkai’ site at 4204 m and the ‘SP3300’ site at 3358 m.

Variation: Specimens from this study present posterodorsal tentacular cirri reaching chaetiger 5 ( Fig. 14A, B View Figure 14 ), whereas in the original description, specimens of Nereis shinkai presented tentacular cirri reaching chaetiger 2. The other prostomial and peristomial features are identical, including the position and length of palps and antennae ( Fig. 14A, B, D View Figure 14 ). The jaws are identical, and the paragnaths present a similar distribution and number, as shown in Table 4 View Table 4 , with the exception of areas VII and VIII, which present 13 paragnaths in an irregular row in the original description and ~70 paragnaths concentrated in the groove in specimens from the ‘SP3300’ site. Part of this difference can be related to the loss of the fragile paragnaths in specimens from the original description. Uniramous parapodia of the species from the ‘SP3300’ site presented ligules slightly rounded ( Fig. 15A View Figure 15 ), a feature not reported in the original description, but morphological features of biramous parapodia are similar for all specimens ( Fig. 15B–E View Figure 15 ). Specimens from the ‘SP3300’ site present heterogomph falcigers with both short ( Fig. 15K View Figure 15 ) and long blades ( Fig. 15F View Figure 15 ) and, although not specified in the original description, both types of blades were found on heterogomph falcigers of the paratype 3 of Nereis shinkai (ColBio-DS 00004). Heterogomph falcigers from Nereis shinkai collected at the ‘SP3300’ site are also of two types, with long ( Fig. 15H View Figure 15 ) and short blades ( Fig. 15I View Figure 15 ), whereas on specimens from the ‘Shinkai’ site there are only long-bladed heterogomph falcigers. But the most outstanding variation between specimens from these different locations is the presence of homogomph falcigers ( Fig. 15H, J View Figure 15 ) on specimens from the ‘SP3300’ site, whereas they are absent on specimens from the original description. Lastly, the pygidium of specimens from the ‘SP3300’ site presents a pair of cirri reaching the last 22 chaetigers ( Fig. 14C View Figure 14 ), whereas pygidial cirri of specimens from the original description reach the last 10–15 chaetigers.

The observed juvenile from the ‘SP3300’ site presents palpophores more slender than in adults and with the same length of palpostyles; palps and antennae directed frontally and notopodial lobes two-fifths longer than notopodial ligules in all parapodia.

Remarks: The species previously described as Neanthes shinkai Shimabukuro et al., 2017 is nested within the Nereis clade according to the phylogenetic reconstruction using both COI and 16S genes ( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ), more specifically identical to specimens from the ‘SP3300’ site from this study and within the eyeless Nereis clade from organic falls. In the original description, the species was assigned morphologically to Neanthes owing to the lack of homogomph falcigers, an important feature differing in Nereis and Neanthes , but specimens of Nereis shinkai from the ‘SP3300’ site present homogomph falcigers in the posterior notopodia. This morphological feature, together with the molecular and phylogenetic analyses, supports the reassignment of the species as Nereis shinkai but raises an issue of variation in the presence of homogomph falcigers within the same species, which will be discussed in the Discussion section.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Phyllodocida

Family

Nereididae

Genus

Nereis

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