Boccardia proboscidea Hartman, 1940

Abe, Hirokazu & Sato-Okoshi, Waka, 2021, Molecular identification and larval morphology of spionid polychaetes (Annelida, Spionidae) from northeastern Japan, ZooKeys 1015, pp. 1-86 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1015.54387

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F6BD9213-9DB7-4564-AA00-3C61B2F43B2D

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D7D65997-7274-5363-9140-B47B5BE54569

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Boccardia proboscidea Hartman, 1940
status

 

Boccardia proboscidea Hartman, 1940 Fig. 7A, B View Figure 7

Larval morphology.

Slender and fusiform in overall shape, widest in middle of body. Prostomium rounded and slightly notched anteriorly. Three pairs of eyes present, most median pair rounded, lateral pairs double-eyes. Body entirely faint green in color. A prominent row of dorsal melanophores occurs medially from chaetiger III, lateral black pigment spots present on chaetigers VII and VIII in late larvae (Fig. 7B View Figure 7 ). Pygidium has dorsal gap, pigmented with weak dark color. Internally, vestibule light brown, gut either yellow or brown. Gastrotrochs on chaetigers V and VII.

Remarks.

Adults of this species were non-boring and collected from mud deposits in crevices of shells of living Crassostrea gigas (Thunberg, 1793) (recently assigned to Magallana : see Backeljau 2018) oysters in Sasuhama in May 2011 and February 2016. Adult morphology agrees with the description of B. proboscidea by Sato-Okoshi (2000). The 18S and 16S rRNA gene sequences obtained in the present study match (18S: 1748/1748, 16S: 435/435 bp) that of B. proboscidea from USA (KJ546254) reported by Radashevsky et al. (2014) (Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ). Therefore, this species was referred to B. proboscidea . The larvae and adults were confirmed to match (18S: 1768/1768, 16S: 472/472 bp) using molecular data (Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ).

Planktonic larvae of this species were rare, and only one 15-chaetiger larva (Fig. 7B View Figure 7 ) was collected in Sasuhama in May 2011. Another 9-chaetiger larvae, which accidentally hatched from its egg capsule in an adult tube during the process of extraction of the adult specimens (Fig. 7A View Figure 7 ), was also collected on the same date. Boccardia proboscidea has been reported to have poecilogonous development ( Gibson 1997; Oyarzun et al. 2011). However, Sato-Okoshi (2000) reported that Japanese populations only show lecithotrophic development, with no (or a very short) planktonic stage after hatching. The larval morphology of this species agrees with the description of that of B. proboscidea documented in Hartman (1941), Woodwick (1977), Blake and Kudenov (1981), Gibson (1997), Gibson and Smith (2004), Kamel et al. (2010), and Oyarzun and Brante (2015). The dorsal pigment pattern of these larvae resembles that of the larvae of B. tricuspa (Hartman, 1939) described by Carrasco (1976, as B. proboscidea ; fide Blake and Kudenov 1978), B. natrix ( Söderström, 1920) described by Söderström (1920, as Polydora natrix ), and B. columbiana Berkeley, 1927 described by Blake and Arnofsky (1999) and Blake (2006) in having a single row of mid-dorsal melanophores. However, the dorsal pigment pattern of the larvae of B. tricuspa differs from that of B. proboscidea in having branching dorsal melanophores on chaetiger I and in lacking small black lateral pigment spots on chaetigers VII and VIII. The larvae of B. natrix also lack small black lateral pigment spots on chaetigers VII and VIII. Boccardia columbiana has extensively branching mid-dorsal melanophores from chaetiger II onward, whereas mid-dorsal melanophores are less branching and start from chaetiger III in B. proboscidea .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Spionida

Family

Spionidae

Genus

Boccardia