Flabesymbios roberti, Salazar-Vallejo, 2012

Salazar-Vallejo, Sergio I., 2012, Revision of Flabelligera Sars, 1829 (Polychaeta: Flabelligeridae) 3203, Zootaxa 3203 (1), pp. 1-64 : 55-56

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3203.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8C476837-FFD3-FFD6-FF79-FB39FE48F99C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Flabesymbios roberti
status

sp. nov.

Flabesymbios roberti View in CoL n. sp.

Figure 24 View FIGURE 24

Flabelligera commensalis: Light 1978:682–683 View in CoL (partim); Spies 1973:466–470, Pl. 1–9 (non Moore); Spies 1975:188–193, Pl. 1, Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 , Pl. 2, Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 , Pl. 4, Figs. 9–10 View FIGURE 9 View FIGURE 10 , Pl. 6, Figs. 19–21 View FIGURE 19 View FIGURE 20 View FIGURE 21 , Pl. 7, Fig. 22 View FIGURE 22 (non Moore); Spies 1977:324–345, Pls. 1–6 (non Moore).

Type material. Eastern Pacific Ocean. Holotype ( LACM-AHF- 2548), Fourth of July Cove (33°26'53" N, 118°29'55" W), Santa Catalina Island, California on Centrostephanus coronatus , 11 Mar. 1950, 1 fathom. One paratype ( CAS- 2639), off NW end of San Clemente Island, California, on C. coronatus , 27 Oct. 1975, 9 fathoms, D. Powell, coll. Three paratypes ( LACM-AHF- 2549), collected in Casino Point (33°20'57" N, 118°19'27" W), Avalon, Catalina Island, California, on Centrostephanus sp , 22 Jun. 2000, 25 fathoms, E.D. Erikson coll.

Description. Holotype (LACM-AHF-1935) mature female, broken into two pieces, some body wall portions damaged ( Fig. 24A View FIGURE 24 ); dark brown dorsally and laterally, dark gray ventrally; without dark bands in chaetiger 1. Body fusiform, swollen, not compressed, tapering posteriorly, posterior region regenerating; 46 mm long, 5 mm wide, cephalic cage 1.5 mm long, 58 chaetigers (broken at chaetiger 35, last 12 chaetigers regenerating). Tunic thin, body surface densely and finely papillated, free from sediment ( Fig. 24B, C View FIGURE 24 ). Dorsal and lateral papillae fusiform with long thick peduncle.

No cephalic hood. Head exposed ( Fig. 24D View FIGURE 24 ). Prostomium low cone, four reddish eyes arranged on corners of a square. Caruncle well developed, separating branchial groups, projecting beyond branchial plate, gray along midline, darker distally, lateral ridges pale. Palps thick, tips black; palp bases low, rounded.

Branchiae separated into two lateral groups, each with about 60 filaments, shorter and thinner than palps, branchiae smaller laterally towards the mouth. Nephridial lobes placed laterally on branchial plate, each with single, thick filament, one longer than other, dark gray, as branchiae.

Cephalic cage chaetae about 3/100 body length or half as long as body width, only chaetiger 1 involved in the cephalic cage, covered by long, black, filiform clavate papillae ( Fig. 24B, C View FIGURE 24 ), middorsally and midventrally discontinuous, about 40 noto- and 30 neurochaetae per bundle. Anterior dorsal margin of chaetiger 1 papillated. Anterior chaetigers without especially long papillae. Chaetigers 1–3 decreasing in size posteriorly. Chaetal transition from cephalic cage to body chaetae abrupt; neurohooks present from chaetiger 2. Gonopodial lobes not seen.

Parapodia reduced; notopodia dorsolateral, neuropodia ventrolateral up to about chaetiger 5, then ventrally displaced. Median notopodia separated from each other, over the body corners. Median neuropodia ventral. Notopodia projecting short lobes, about as wide as each segment, with many long, filiform clavate papillae covering chaetae, forming a bushy lobe but without touching next notopodium, except in heavily contracted regions. Neuropodia low conical lobes with smaller, filiform clavate papillae, barely projecting beyond surrounding papillae. Noto- and neuropodia widely separated.

Median notochaetae arranged in short, longitudinal rows, chaetae diverging as in a fan, all multiarticulated capillaries, pale cinnamon, about 1/10 body width, 7–8 per bundle, with long articles ( Fig. 24E View FIGURE 24 ). Neurochaetae multiarticulated capillaries in chaetiger 1; from chaetiger 2 large multiarticulated neurohooks, one per ramus (rarely 2). Handle articulation basally placed, with single long article. Other articles anchylosed, small, continued to bending region ( Fig. 24F View FIGURE 24 ). Crest slightly wider than handle, dark brown along body, with darker distal half; width:length ratio 1:4.

Posterior end slightly tapered, pygidium with anus dorsal, slightly damaged, without anal cirri.

Variation. Paratype (CAS-2639) complete male, distorted by evisceration of gonads and by swelling of the anterior end, but body not compressed; 22 mm long, 1.5 mm wide, cephalic cage 1 mm long, 54 chaetigers. Testes pink orange, pale, irregular lobes, if aligned, may be as long as at least 2/3 body length. Other paratypes (LACM- AHF) in good condition, two complete (13–18 mm long, 2 mm wide, cephalic cage 1 mm long, 49–59 chaetigers) and one anterior fragment (11 mm long, 2 mm wide, cephalic cage 1 mm long, 37 chaetigers); all with body swollen, not compressed though neuropodia displaced midventrally, dorsal and notopodial papillae black, at least in distal bulb; both complete specimens with anus terminal; one with anus open, showing a midventral ridge and 10 subtriangular marginal papillae along internal margin.

Remarks. Flabesymbios roberti n. sp. is closely allied to F. commensalis but they differ in body pigmentation and sea urchin host. Thus, F. roberti n. sp. has a rather homogenous dark pigmentation and lives on Centrostephanus , whereas F. commensalis has a dorsal darker longitudinal band but a pale venter and lives on Strongylocentrotus .

Etymology. This species is named after Robert B. Spies, who made significant contributions to our knowledge on flabelligerids, and who studied this species (as F. commensalis ) with painstaking detail, such that it might be one of the best known flabelligerids in terms of circulatory system, anterior end morphology, ciliary current patterns, and reproductive biology.

Type locality. Santa Catalina Island , California .

Distribution. Only known from off shore islands in Southern California, on Centrostephanus coronatus , in subtidal rocky bottoms.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Terebellida

Family

Flabelligeridae

Genus

Flabesymbios

Loc

Flabesymbios roberti

Salazar-Vallejo, Sergio I. 2012
2012
Loc

Flabelligera commensalis: Light 1978:682–683

Light, W. J. 1978: 683
Spies, R. B. 1977: 324
Spies, R. B. 1975: 188
Spies, R. B. 1973: 466
1978
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