Anguillosyllis enneapoda, Maciolek, 2020
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4793.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:550F8461-03F6-4301-8791-605775D77467 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8D0BDCAC-9CCE-4726-A212-96B0DD303627 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:8D0BDCAC-9CCE-4726-A212-96B0DD303627 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Anguillosyllis enneapoda |
status |
sp. nov. |
Anguillosyllis enneapoda View in CoL n. sp.
Figures 27–28 View FIGURE 27 View FIGURE 28
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:8D0BDCAC-9CCE-4726-A212-96B0DD303627
Material examined. (40specimens from27stations) South China Sea,off Brunei. Coll.J.A.Blake: Sta. 12, 6Jun2011, 5°49′20.73816″N, 114°09′45.51185″E, 1469 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 147963 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. 15, 6 Jun 2011, 5°44′32.59263″N, 114°04′34.13854″E, 1721 m, 2 specimens ( MCZ147964 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. 16, 5 Jun2011, 5°43′02.93420″N, 114°04′33.77977″E, 1649 m, 2 specimens ( MCZ147965 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. 20, 5Jun 2011, 5°48′57.17939″N, 114°10′54.28492″E, 1435 m, 2specimens ( MCZ 147966 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. 25, 5 Jun 2011, 5°47′23.69441″N, 114°10′48.45326″E, 1402 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 147967 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. 29, 4 Jun 2011, 5°43′01.15997″N, 114°06′07.18190″E, 1537 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 147968 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. 32, 4 Jun 2011, 5°44′28.60071″N, 114°09′16.86792″E, 1415 m, 2 specimens ( MCZ 147969 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. 35, 3 Jun 2011, 5°47′37.12906″N, 114°14′10.75153″E, 1329 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148500 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. 47, 2 Jun 2011, 5°47′21.86444″N, 114°17′10.72194″E, 1242 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148501 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. WH_Jokit-SW, 5 Jun 2011, 5°46′27.76503″N, 114°07′33.98027″E, 1487 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148502 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps . Coll. P. Neubert: Sta. AN2, 27 Jun 2011, 5°25′43.52552″N, 113°47′34.41444″E, 1568 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148503 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. AN3, 28 Jun 2011, 5°28′16.43794″N, 113°49′34.34518″E, 1540 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148504 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. AN5, 27 Jun 2011, 5°26′51.39448″N, 113°46′41.57612″E, 1632 m, holotype ( MCZ 148506 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps , 6 paratypes ( MCZ 148505 About MCZ ) ; Sta. AN8, 27 Jun 2011, 5°27′56.15653″N, 113°45′42.93641″E, 1783 m, 2 specimens ( MCZ 148507 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. AN9, 28 Jun 2011, 5°30′30.14745″N, 113°47′38.56098″E, 1820 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148508 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. DA3, 3 Jul 2011, 5°25′15.03011″N, 113°29′30.52872″E, 1772 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148509 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. JA1, 30 Jun 2011, 5°28′22.57522″N, 113°36′38.54386″E, 1888 m, 2 specimens ( MCZ 148510 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. JA4, 30 Jun 2011, 5°30′54.36931″N, 113°37′21.11932″E, 1967 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148511 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. JA6, 30 Jun 2011, 5°31′02.11247″N, 113°36′27.60639″E, 1999 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148512 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. ME14, 26 Jun 2011, 5°25′20.73778″N, 113°39′02.48164″E, 1792 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148513 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. ME16, 26 Jun 2011, 5°24′24.44585″N, 113°35′28.03023″E, 1805 m, 2 specimens ( MCZ148514 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. SA3, 3 Jul 2011, 5°35′09.05425″N, 113°38′49.25754″E, 2117 m, 1 specimen (NJM); Sta. SE1, 28 Jun 2011, 5°33′07.24983″N, 113°46′11.03389″E, 1894 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148515 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. SE5, 28 Jun 2011, 5°35′44.35485″N, 113°47′09.29726″E, 1947 m, 1 spec- imen ( MCZ 148516 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. SE6, 28 Jun 2011, 5°35′12.78573″N, 113°44′06.06326″E, 2095 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148517 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. TA5, 2 Jul 2011, 5°27′50.62360″N, 113°26′34.31837″E, 2008 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148518 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. TU4, 25 Jun 2011, 5°12′34.01837″N, 113°42′17.60077″E, 1439 m, 1 specimen ( MCZ 148519 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps .
Description. Body with 9 setigers, colorless, more-or-less linear in shape ( Figs. 27A View FIGURE 27 , 28 View FIGURE 28 A–B); most specimens including holotype 1.0 mm long without anal cirri, 0.2 mm wide without parapodia, 0.5–0.6 mm wide with parapodia but excluding setae. Palps completely fused, narrowing to slightly rounded anterior tip, without medial notch ( Figs. 27A View FIGURE 27 , 28 View FIGURE 28 A–B); eyes lacking; prostomium oval with anterior border slightly dome-shaped, three club-shaped antennae in transverse row; peristomium well-defined, nearly as long as prostomium, with two small, oval tentacular cirri. Nuchal area oval lateral patches between prostomium and peristomium. Pharynx distally surrounded by 10–12 soft papillae, tooth absent. Proventricle in 2–3 setigers, barrel-shaped, tapered posteriorly ( Figs. 27A View FIGURE 27 , 28 View FIGURE 28 A–B); ca. 13–18 rows of muscle cells; post-ventricle with dorsal circlet of cells retaining MG stain ( Fig. 28C View FIGURE 28 ).
Parapodia uniramous, obliquely truncate, usually swollen along posterior edge anterior and posterior lobes lacking ( Figs. 27B View FIGURE 27 , 28 View FIGURE 28 C–D, F), dorsal lobe small; parapodia of setiger 1 shortest, becoming slightly longer over setigers 2–5, then slightly shorter through setiger 9. Elongated internal gland with deeply staining distal tip visible in parapodia of some but not all specimens ( Figs. 27 View FIGURE 27 B–C, 28D, F); some specimens with faintly staining cells along posterior edge of parapodium, likely associated with and obscuring long gland; small glands that stain deeply with MG on surface of parapodia and pygidium, these in a range of sizes from tiny to large ( Fig. 27C View FIGURE 27 ). Dorsal cirri long, thin, retained only on setiger 1, never observed on other setigers. Ventral parapodial cirri slim, slightly wider at base, inserted in middle of parapodium, not exceeding length of parapodium.
All setae compound with long heterogomph shafts, up to 2.5 times length of blade. Setiger 1 with ca. 10–16 setae per parapodium, setigers 2–3 with 14, setigers 4–9 with up to 10 setae; some setae emerging from distal tip of parapodium, remaining setae emerging from ventral face of parapodium between insertion of ventral cirrus and distal tip. Ventral-most blades shortest, 25–75 µm, serrated on proximal portion, serrations clearly visible at 1000x; longer blades up to 300 µm, with very long, fine, drawn-out tips, possibly serrated at base. Parapodia each with up to four aciculae, these with heavy, thick, pointed, or knobby tip, often appearing golden in color, not protruding from parapodia but forming anterior and posterior bumps at distal end.
Pygidium with two ventromedial thin, filiform cirri and two lateral oval cirri, with glandular areas as seen on parapodia ( Figs. 27A View FIGURE 27 , 28E View FIGURE 28 ).
Reproductive specimens with oocytes in setigers 6–9, measuring 50–60 µm in greatest diameter, some squeezing into and filling half of parapodium, others in coelom near parapodia.
Remarks. Anguillosyllis enneapoda n. sp. is most similar to Anguillosyllis inornata n. sp. from offshore California: both species have nine setigers, fused palps, and lack any development of anterior or posterior lobes on the parapodia. However, the pharynx of A. enneapoda n. sp. lacks the deep golden-brown color seen in Anguillosyllis inornata n. sp. Anguillosyllis enneapoda n. sp. has four aciculae per parapodium and these are golden in color and heavier compared with the two aciculae per parapodium of A. inornata n. sp. Some aciculae appear to have a bent or knobby tip, others are clearly straight and pointed but this depends on the angle of view. In some specimens only two or three aciculae could be seen, but in specimens where the tissue was torn or decomposed, four were clearly visible, two each in the anterior and posterior parts of each parapodium. The setal blades of A. enneapoda n. sp. are clearly and more deeply serrated rather than appearing plain or only minimally serrated at very high magnifications as in A. inornata n. sp. The remaining species with nine setigers and fused palps, A. pupa , has large posterior parapodial lobes, which A. enneapoda n. sp. lacks.
Two other species, A. blakei n. sp. and A. sepula n. sp., also have large tubular glands in the parapodia, but those two species have 10 setigers whereas A. enneapoda n. sp. has nine. In A. enneapoda n. sp., the distal tip of the internal parapodial glands has a large-diameter opening that stains deeply with MG whereas in A. blakei n. sp. there is a narrow, nipple-like tip on the gland.
In addition to the deeply staining external glands associated with the parapodia, there are glands in the pygidial segment of A. enneapoda n. sp. that also stain; these glands appear to have a rosette structure similar to that seen in other species such as A. aciculata n. sp. and A. hadra n. sp.
Etymology. From the Greek ennea, meaning nine and podos, meaning foot; in reference to the nine setigers of this species.
Records. South China Sea, off Brunei, 1242–2117 m.
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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