Galapagomystides verenae ( Blake and Hilbig 1990 ) Pearson & Rouse, 2022

Pearson, Kaila A. M. & Rouse, Greg W., 2022, Vampire Worms; A revision of Galapagomystides (Phyllodocidae, Annelida), with the description of three new species, Zootaxa 5128 (4), pp. 451-485 : 466-471

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5128.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:26CA4EF0-61A1-4B60-8C7F-99CA8B8F8700

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6499252

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/98241665-3C04-4B30-FF17-B923FBD6477B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Galapagomystides verenae ( Blake and Hilbig 1990 )
status

comb. nov.

Galapagomystides verenae ( Blake and Hilbig 1990) View in CoL new combination

Figures 11–14 View FIGURE 11 View FIGURE 12 View FIGURE 13 View FIGURE 14

Bergquist et al. (2007: 53, 62), ( Blake and Hilbig 1990:xx), Chapman et al. (2018: 572, 573), Desbruyères et al. (1997: 82), Desbruyères et al. 2006: 217), Kelly et al. (2007: 6), Lelièvre et al. (2017: 2633, 2637-2639), Milligan and Tunnicliffe (1994: 4781), Tsurumi and Tunnicliffe (2003: 617, 625), Tunnicliffe (1992: 340), Tunnicliffe et al. (1998: 367).

Material Examined. Paratype: SIO-BIC A13575 View Materials (transferred from USNM, used for SEM), Magic Mountain , Explorer Ridge, USA, ~ 1,810 m depth . Vouchers: SIO-BIC: A7991 (A–M)*, Axial Seamount ( CASM), Juan de Fuca Ridge, ~ 1,550 m depth ; SIO-BIC: A3263 (A–E)*, A8563(A-D)*, Guaymas Basin , Mexico, ~ 1,650 m depth ; SIO-BIC: A1496A*, A1496B*, A1477A*, A1312*, A1331*, A1918*, Mound 12, Costa Rica, 1,000 m depth ; SIO-BIC: A1830 (A–D)*, A8359*, A8379*, A10044*, Jaco Scar , Costa Rica, ~ 1,800 m depth ; SIO-BIC: A8466 *, A8353*, Parrita Seep , Costa Rica, ~ 1,400 –1,800 m depth GoogleMaps . For locality details see Table 1 View TABLE 1 . * indicates sequenced specimens.

Diagnosis. First segment not fused to prostomium. Trapezoidal prostomium that is dorsally “ V ” shaped posteriorly. Elongated dorsal cirri on segments 1, 2 and 3. Elongated ventral cirri on segment 2.

Description. Up to 25 mm long, 1 mm wide at segment 10 for ~60 segments. Body red longitudinal stripe in life, semi-translucent white/pink at parapodial lobes. Dorsal and ventral cirri, elongated cirri, pygidial cirri, prostomium and pygidium also white/pink ( Figs 11 View FIGURE 11 , 14 View FIGURE 14 ). Trapezoidal prostomium, “V” shaped posteriorly ( Figs 12A, C View FIGURE 12 , 13A View FIGURE 13 ); nuchal organs not visible. Anterior dorsal edge of prostomium with paired cylindrical antennae ~ 0.25 mm long ( Fig. 12B View FIGURE 12 ). Paired palps ventral to antennae, similar in shape, slightly shorter ( Fig. 12B View FIGURE 12 ). Segment one distinct from prostomium, following segments also clearly demarcated ( Fig. 12A, C View FIGURE 12 ). Pair of elongated dorsal cirri [tentacular cirri] on each of segments 1 (~ 0.4 mm long), 2 (~ 0.5 mm long), 3 (~ 0.4 mm long) ( Fig. 12A, C View FIGURE 12 ). All elongated dorsal cirri cirriform, tapering distally. Pair of elongated ventral cirri on segment 2 (~ 0.2 mm long) ( Fig. 11B View FIGURE 11 ). Bulbous, rounded dorsal cirri (~ 0.15 mm long) begin on segment 4 continuing posteriorly ( Fig. 12A, D View FIGURE 12 ). Dorsal cirri larger than ventral cirri. Conical, tapering ventral cirri (~ 0.1 mm long) begin on segment 3 continuing posteriorly ( Fig. 12B View FIGURE 12 ). Ventral cilia bands present ( Fig. 12B View FIGURE 12 ). Parapodia uniramous, notopodial chaetae absent; neuropodium with central fascicle containing ~5–8 compound chaetae; one simple emergent acicula ( Figs 11G View FIGURE 11 , 12F, G View FIGURE 12 ). Compound chaetal shaft cylindrical; thin, flattened pointed curled blade extended from curved joint ( Figs 11G View FIGURE 11 , 12F, G View FIGURE 12 ). Pygidium with one pair of cirriform pygidial cirri tapering distally (~ 0.2 mm long) ( Fig. 11B, D, F View FIGURE 11 ).

Variation. Material examined in this study largely matches the original description ( Blake and Hilbig 1990). The largest SIO-BIC specimen was 25 mm long (SIO-BIC A7991, Axial seamount vents, JDF), slightly shorter than the original description at 27 mm long ( Blake and Hilbig 1990). Galapagomystides verenae n. comb. specimens collected from Costa Rica and Guaymas had the similar lengths reported from the type locality.

Remarks. Blake and Hilbig (1990) argued that Galapagomystides verenae n. comb. was a member of Protomystides owing to the absence of fusion between the prostomium and segment 1, the position and orientation of the elongated dorsal and ventral cirri, and its lobed pygidial cirri. While these observations are correct, the phylogenetic position based on DNA means that it should be moved to Galapagomystides . Observations of living G. verenae n. comb. are reported for the first time and its red color is like other species of Galapagomystides ( Figs 11 View FIGURE 11 , 14 View FIGURE 14 ). Also, images of Galapagomystides verenae n. comb., on top of juvenile Escarpia spicata (Vestimentifera) tubes from Costa Rica seeps supports the hypothesis that these worms may be blood feeders ( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 ).

Unique features for G. verenae n. comb. include a trapezoidal prostomium that is dorsally “V” shaped posteriorly ( Figs 12A View FIGURE 12 and 13A View FIGURE 13 ), chaetal blade length and curl ( Figs 12G View FIGURE 12 and 13D View FIGURE 13 ), and the conical shape of ventral cirri ( Figs 12B View FIGURE 12 and 13C View FIGURE 13 ). The total range of G. verenae spans from ~ 9°N, to ~ 46°N, from the seeps of Guaymas Basin and Costa Rica margin to the hydrothermal vents of the Juan de Fuca Ridge. Galapagomystides verenae n. comb. is unique among Galapagomystides for being present at both seeps and vents and appears to have occupied vents from a seep ancestry ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ). Galapagomystides verenae n. comb. is morphologically most like G. patricki n. sp., with both species showing no fusion of anterior segments with the prostomium. However, in the phylogenetic analyses, G. verenae n. comb. was found to be the sister taxon to G. kathyae n. sp. ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ).

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

CASM

Chicago Academy of Sciences

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

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