Marphysa bulla, Liu & Hutchings & Kupriyanova, 2018

Liu, Yubin, Hutchings, Pat & Kupriyanova, Elena, 2018, Two new species of Marphysa Quatrefages, 1865 (Polychaeta: Eunicida: Eunicidae) from northern coast of China and redescription for Marphysa orientalis Treadwell, 1936, Zootaxa 4377 (2), pp. 191-215 : 194-198

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4377.2.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B1EFF160-FD26-4A18-A274-4E605EEEEE2F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5662202

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BF203D7B-315C-3858-DEE3-4E2D4779E11A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Marphysa bulla
status

sp. nov.

Marphysa bulla View in CoL n. sp.

Figures 2 View FIGURE 2 , 3 View FIGURE 3

Material examined. Holotype: AM W.49124 ; paratypes: AM W.49125, width at chaetiger 10, 6.75 mm, length to chaetiger 10, 8.8 mm, complete with 321 chaetigers, gravid; AM W.49126, width at chaetiger 10, 6.25 mm, length to chaetiger 10, 10.35 mm, complete with 309 chaetigers; AM W.49127, width at chaetiger 10, 7.9 mm, length to chaetiger 10, 14.05 mm, complete with 385 chaetigers; MBMCAS285106, width at chaetiger 10, 7.05 mm, length to chaetiger 10, 11.3 mm, complete with 342 chaetigers. All specimens were collected intertidally from the Rongcheng coast (37.16°N, 122.41°E) in 2014, see Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 .

Description. Holotype complete, with 363 chaetigers, body iridescent. Animal reddish-brown when alive, preserved specimens beige. Maximum width at chaetiger 10, 7.9 mm, excluding parapodia; length to chaetiger 10, 7.9 mm.

Prostomium shorter than peristomium, margins dorsally flattened with conspicuous deep median sulcus ( Fig. 2A View FIGURE 2 ). Eyes absent. Medial antenna longest and thickest prostomial appendage, inserted more posteriorly than lateral antennae. Antennophores short, ring-shaped; antennal style tapering, wrinkled, longest antennal style reaching to chaetiger 3. Palps wrinkled, shorter than antennae. Antennae 1.3 times length of palps. Peristomial rings complete, well demarcated ( Fig. 2B View FIGURE 2 ). Mandibles with calcareous plates longer than sclerotized matrix ( Fig. 3F View FIGURE 3 ), same length as maxillae I plus carriers. Maxillary apparatus with four pairs and one single maxilla; MF= 1+1, 4+4, 6+0, 3+6, 1+1 ( Figs 2D View FIGURE 2 , 3E View FIGURE 3 ). Maxillary carriers 2.5 times shorter than MI, with triangular anterior region tapering posteriorly with pair of basal triangular wings. Maxillae I, forceps -like with swollen base with deep vertical falcal arch, with curved blunt tips without attachment lamellae, heavily chitinised, dark brown. Maxillae II, with four recurved triangular teeth pointing downwards, dark brown, ligament between MI and MII dark, rectangular. Maxillae III, short, curved, forming distal arc; with five blunt triangular teeth only in centre of posterior edge of maxillae, no attachment lamella, pale brown. Maxillae IV, with three and five teeth respectively, all smooth, similar sized triangular shaped, pale brown. Maxillae V, rectangular, single recurved tooth, pale cream ( Fig. 3E View FIGURE 3 ).

Parapodia varying along body. Anterior parapodia with prechaetal lobe shorter than chaetal lobe, postchaetal lobe also shorter than acicular lobe, but longer than prechaetal, all lobes rectangular with rounded margins. Median parapodia with small rectangular prechaetal lobe and post chaetal lobes, acicular lobe largest increasing in size from anterior to median parapodia, initially rectangular, and becoming more digitally shaped with rounded margins progressively from median parapodia onwards. Posterior parapodia with very poorly developed pre- and postacicular lobes decreasing in size from median to posterior parapodia. Dorsal cirrus shorter than chaetal lobes, elongate tapering, similar length along entire body. Ventral cirrus anteriorly shorter than chaetal lobes and dorsal cirrus, inflated leaf-shaped with small blunt tip, becoming increasingly more inflated along body and rectangular in shape. Ventral cirri with small globular papillae inserted on anterior margin close to acicular lobe, progressively base of ventral cirrus becoming more globular and rounded, on posterior parapodia base becoming more leafshaped with rounded margins ( Fig. 2C View FIGURE 2 ).

Branchiae pectinate, beginning from chaetiger 36 and continuing to chaetiger 328. In anterior branchiae number of branchial filaments 1–2, maximum number of branchial filaments 5 ( Fig. 2E View FIGURE 2 ) in median parapodia. Length of branchial filaments where best developed up to 3 times length of dorsal cirrus. Aciculae black with paler tips, ranging from 2–5 per parapodium (para 10 with 5; para 75 with 4; para 140 with 3; para 205 with 2; para 271 with 2; para 335 with 3). Subacicular hooks transparent/pale yellow, unidentate, present from mid-body parapodia (chaetiger 71) onwards, up to 3 per parapodium.

Neurochaetae in two distinct bundles, supra-acicular with limbate capillaries and pectinate chaetae, subacicular with compound spinigers and subacicular hooks. Compound spinigers with blades of two lengths within sub-acicular fascicle, blades of longer ones twice as long as length of shorter ones, with more extended smooth tips, all with smooth blades ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ). Number of compound spinigers within a parapodium 18–33 (para 10 with 9; para 75 with 15; para 140 with 16; para 205 with 8; para 254 with 9). Compound falcigers absent. Pectinate chaetae present along entire body ( Fig. 2J–L View FIGURE 2 ), but restricted to supra-acicular fascicle. Number of pectinate chaetae within a parapodium 2–15, with numbers increasing along body and number of types of chaetae also varying along body. Chaetiger 4 with one type, thin symmetrical isodont with about 13 or 17 teeth ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 Ba). Chaetiger 75 with one type, thin symmetrical isodont with either 13 or 17 teeth. Chaetiger 135 with three types: thin asymmetrical isodont with numerous teeth (~30–40) ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 Bc), thin symmetrical isodont with 14 teeth ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 Ba, 3Da) and thick asymmetrical anodont with 4 or 5 teeth ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 Bb, Cb). Chaetiger 313 with three types: thin asymmetrical isodont with varying numbers of teeth ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 Cc), thin asymmetrical isodont with varying numbers of teeth ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 Ca) and thick asymmetrical anodont with 3 or 4 teeth ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 Cb).

Six–21 simple capillary chaetae per parapodium arranged in 2 tiers of length present in supra-acicular fascicle, numbers of capillary chaetae similar throughout all parapodia. Pygidium with one pair of pygidial cirri, which equal length of last 15 chaetigers, weakly articulated, smooth glandular margins surrounding anus ( Fig. 2F View FIGURE 2 ).

Variation. Paratypes are with branchiae starting from chaetigers 29 to 33, and with 17–21 of the posteriormost chaetigers lacking branchiae. The ratio of the length between antennae and palps varies between 1.2 and 1.5.

Remarks. Marphysa bulla n. sp. belongs to Group B 2 sensu Fauchald (1970) because it has compound spinigers, but lacks falcigers, and branchiae are present along most of the body. The new species is characterised by the presence of a significantly swollen base of the ventral cirrus which changes along the body from leaf-shaped anteriorly to more rectangular posteriorly and then becoming leaf-shaped again posteriorly, but with terminal anterior rounded papillae inserted adjacent to acicular lobes ( Fig. 2C View FIGURE 2 ). The new species is also characterized by the presence of three types of pectinate chaetae (thin symmetrical isodont, with varying number of teeth, thin asymmetrical isodont with varying number of teeth and thick asymmetrical anodont with few teeth) and MxII with 4+4 teeth. Of the 15 species of Marphysa that belong to this group (Table 1), five species (M. borradailei Pillai, 1958, M. multipectinata Liu, Hutchings & Sun, 2017 , M. orientalis Treadwell, 1936 , M. tamurai Okuda, 1934 , and M. tribranchiata Liu, Hutchings & Sun, 2017 ) can be distinguished from M. bulla n. sp. by lacking pectinate chaetae in anterior parapodia. For two species M. furcellata Crossland, 1903 and M. teretiuscula Schmarda, 1861 , the chaetiger on which pectinate chaetae begin is unknown. Of the remaining seven species, M. fauchaldi Glasby & Hutchings, 2010 and M. graveleyi Southern, 1921 , have compound spinigers restricted to anterior and median segments. Marphysa bulla n. sp. has compound spinigers along the entire body like M. mullawa Hutchings & Karegeorgopoulis, 2003 , M. kristiani Zanol, da Silva & Hutchings, 2016 and M. macintoshi Crossland, 1903 as well as having branchiae present along the body almost to the pygidium. Marphysa kristiani has only two types of pectinate chaetae, and MxII has 7+7 teeth, whereas the new species has three types of pectinate chaetae and MxII has 4+4 teeth. Marphysa mullawa differs from the new species in having only two types of pectinate chaetae. The other species M. macintoshi has only asymmetrical pectinate chaetae and with MxII having 4+5 teeth, so it also can be distinguished from M. bulla n. sp which has MxII 4+4.

The new species M. bulla is characterized by the following characters: presence of branchiae almost to pygidium, only compound spinigers, unidentate subacicular hooks, three types of pectinate chaetae as well as significantly swollen bases of the ventral cirri, this latter character we suggest represents a potentially useful new character to distinguish species in this group, although it has not previously been used.

Etymology. The specific name bulla refers to the species with the lobe on the ventral cirrus, it is Latin for “knob”.

Habitat. Intertidal, in rock crevices.

Type locality. Rongcheng coast, north China (37.16°N, 122.41°E) GoogleMaps , see Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Eunicida

Family

Eunicidae

Genus

Marphysa

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