Naineris setosa ( Verrill, 1900 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.245827 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9345C596-8656-4B5C-AD8C-2FACF4E9240C |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3510548 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8F2387DD-064B-0953-FF31-FE3AFA41F847 |
treatment provided by |
GgServerImporter |
scientific name |
Naineris setosa ( Verrill, 1900 ) |
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Naineris setosa ( Verrill, 1900) View in CoL
Figure 44 View FIGURE 44
Aricia setosa Verrill, 1900: 651 View in CoL –653.
Anthostoma latacapitata Treadwell, 1901: 203 –205, figs. 61–65.
Naineris latacapitata: Treadwell 1939: 254 View in CoL , fig. 81.
Naineris setosa: Treadwell 1936: 55 View in CoL ; Hartman 1942: 61, figs. 116–118; Hartman 1951: 67 –70, pl. 17, figs. 1–6; Hartman 1957: 305, pl. 41, figs. 1–6; Rioja 1960: 303; Solis-Weiss & Fauchald 1989: 774 –778, fig.2; Blake & Giangrande 2011: 20 –26, figs.1–2; Khedhri et al. 2014: 83 –88, fig. 2; Dean & Blake, 2015: 194 View Cited Treatment , fig. 5C–G; Atzori et al. 2016: 2016: 1–6.
Material examined. Galápagos Islands, Isla Santa Cruz, Puerto Nunez, intertidal in rocks, Anton Bruun Cruise 12, Sta. 66-120 (1, USNM 60628 About USNM ).
Description. Galápagos Island specimen incomplete, lacking pygidium and last few posterior setigers; 50 mm long and 3 mm wide for 160 setigers. Color in alcohol: light tan.
Prostomium short, blunt, slightly rounded on anterior margin ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 A); eyespots arranged in two groups of small pigment spots; everted proboscis large, saclike, multilobed ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 A). Peristomium a single achaetous ring appearing irregular in shape, fused dorsally to posterior margin of prostomium ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 A).
Branchiae from setiger 5, continuing to posterior end; each branchia short at first, flattened, cirriform, tapering to pointed tip ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 B); branchiae increasing in length, with those of posterior abdominal segments longest and least erect. Paired dorsal sensory organs anterior and medial to branchial bases of anterior segments. Low dorsal crests present between anterior abdominal branchiae.
Thoracic notopodia broad, triangular, tapering to narrow tip ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 B); abdominal notopodia digitiform, with blunted tip ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 C). Posterior thoracic setigers with interramal swelling between neuropodia and notopodia ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 B); distinct interramal cirrus lacking in thoracic and abdominal regions. Thoracic neuropodia elongate, thickened lobes, with posterior margin forming postsetal lobe, dorsally pointed ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 B); abdominal neuropodia reduced to short, blunted postsetal lobe ( Fig.44 View FIGURE 44 ); ventral cirri lacking.
Thoracic neurosetae including dense fascicles of hundreds of capillaries arranged in 6–7 rows; capillaries of anteriormost row shorter, thicker, more strongly bent than those of subsequent rows; each capillary with minute teeth arranged in transverse rows on shaft ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 F); thoracic uncini absent. Abdominal neuropodia with few capillaries and 2–3 smooth, curved aciculae with narrow tip ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 D). Thoracic notopodia with 30–40 long, thin capillaries similar in structure to neurosetae; abdominal notosetae including capillaries and 1–2 furcate setae; each furcate seta with unequal tynes connected by webbing composed of fine needles; shaft with transverse rows of minute barbs ( Fig. 44 View FIGURE 44 E).
Remarks. A more detailed description of Naineris setosa together with a review of its biology and ecology was presented by Blake & Giangrande (2011) who reported on an invasive occurrence of the species from a fish aquaculture facility in Brindisi, Italy . Naineris setosa is well-known from tropical and subtropical habitats in Bermuda, Florida and Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean, and most recently from the Pacific coast of Costa Rica and Mexico ( Blake & Giangrande 2011; Dean & Blake 2015). The specimen reported here from the Galápagos Islands agrees very well with those from reported from the North American locations and thus the range extends well out into the Pacific.
Distribution. Atlantic Ocean, Bermuda; Florida; Mexico, Vera Cruz; Puerto Rico, Belize; eastern Pacific, Mexico, Acapulco, Costa Rica, Cocos Islands, Galápagos Islands; invasive in the Adriatic and Mediterranean Seas.
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
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.
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Naineris setosa ( Verrill, 1900 )
Blake, James A. 2017 |
Naineris latacapitata:
Treadwell 1939: 254 |
Naineris setosa:
Atzori 2016: 2016 |
Atzori 2016: 1 |
Dean 2015: 194 |
Khedhri 2014: 83 |
Blake 2011: 20 |
Solis-Weiss 1989: 774 |
Rioja 1960: 303 |
Hartman 1957: 305 |
Hartman 1951: 67 |
Hartman 1942: 61 |
Treadwell 1936: 55 |
Anthostoma latacapitata
Treadwell 1901: 203 |
Aricia setosa
Verrill 1900: 651 |