A new species of Ampharete (Annelida: Ampharetidae) from the West Shetland shelf (NE Atlantic Ocean), with two updated keys to the species of the genus in North Atlantic waters
Author
Parapar, Julio
CE188F30-C9B0-44B1-8098-402D2A2F9BA5
Departamento de Bioloxía, Universidade da Coruña, Rúa da Fraga 10, 15008 A Coruña, Galicia, Spain.
julio.parapar@udc.es
Author
Moreira, Juan
B1E38B9B-7751-46E0-BEFD-7C77F7BBBEF0
Departamento de Biología (Zoología), Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 28049 Madrid, Spain. & Centro de Investigación en Biodiversidad y Cambio Global (CIBC-UAM), Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 28049 Madrid, Spain.
juan.moreira@uam.es
Author
Barnich, Ruth
F1E3AEB7-0C77-41BB-8A6C-F8B429F17DA1
Thomson Unicomarine Ltd., Compass House, Surrey Research Park, Guildford, GU 2 7 AG, United Kingdom.
ruth.barnich@thomsonec.com
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2019
2019-06-13
531
1
16
journal article
10.5852/ejt.2019.531
8f6191ee-caf2-4bf3-b896-67f43728d68f
2118-9773
3248632
18989B50-2B1A-4881-AF12-30D65EB30D7C
Ampharete oculicirrata
sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
BE4BEBF8-5E0B-4E75-9B7E-1EA9380B199B
Figs 1–7
;
Table 1
Diagnosis
MEASUREMENTS. Small-sized species of up to
10 mm
in length and 1.0 mm in width.
PROSTOMIUM AND PYGIDIUM. Provided each with a pair of dark eyes.
BRANCHIAE. Arranged in two groups separated by a short gap.
PALEAE. Thin and slender with filiform tips, 5–7 on each side; slightly longer and wider than regular thoracic notochaetae.
THORAX AND ABDOMEN. Twelve thoracic uncinigers and 11 abdominal uncinigers without dorsal neuropodial cirrus (first two of thoracic shape).
PYGIDIUM. Lobulated with two long lateral cirri.
Etymology
The epithet
oculicirrata
from the Latin ‘
oculi
’, meaning ‘eyes’, and ‘
cirrata
’, meaning ‘in cirrus’ refers to the conspicuously pigmented eyespots laterally on the long pygidial cirri.
Material examined
Holotype
SCOTLAND
• holotype;
West Shetland shelf, west of the Orkneys
; station number
1517
S WSS 13 S103;
59.40° N
,
5.92° W
;
130 m
depth
;
2 Nov. 2017
; EtOH preserved;
NMS.Z.2019.8.1
.
Paratypes
SCOTLAND
•
Eighty-one specimens
; same area as for holotype but from different sampling localities; either preserved in EtOH, in the same way as the holotype, or prepared for SEM (
MNCN 16.01/18482
)
•
2 ♀♀
with oocytes; collection data of each sampling station and museum registration numbers for each group of paratypes are detailed in
Table 1
;
MNCN 16.01/18475
,
MNCN 16.01
/18481
.
Description of
holotype
(SEM images from
paratypes
MNCN 16.01/18482)
MEASUREMENTS. Complete specimen of
7.5 mm
length and
0.5 mm
width in thorax.
PROSTOMIUM. Trilobed; rather narrow and protruding median lobe delimited by deep lateral grooves; a pair of nuchal organs as circular ciliated spots located at the base of the median prostomial lobe; prostomial glandular ridges absent (
Figs 1C
,
2A
,
4
A–B).
EYES. Two small black, circular eyespots located posteriorly on median prostomial lobe next to the lateral grooves (
Fig. 1A, C
).
Fig. 1.
Ampharete oculicirrata
sp. nov.
, holotype NMS.Z.2019.8.1 (A–B, D–E), paratype MNCN 16.01/18476 (C, F).
A
. Complete specimen, dorsolateral view, and detail of several thoracic and abdominal parapodia.
B
. Anterior end, lateral view.
C
. Anterior end, dorsal view.
D–E
. Posterior end, dorsal and ventral view.
F
. Posterior end, lateral view. Abbreviations: AU = abdominal unciniger; bl = buccal lip; br = branchia; brph = branchiophore; bt = buccal tentacle; btp = buccal tentacle pinna; eye(i) = pygidial eye; eye(p) = prostomial eye; pal = paleae; plc = pygidial lateral cirrus; pp = pygidial papillae; pros(ll) = prostomium (lateral lobe); pros(ml) = prostomium (median lobe); TN = thoracic notopodium; TU = thoracic unciniger. Scale bars: A = 1 mm; B–C = 200 µm; D–F = 100 µm.
PERISTOMIUM. Forming a well-developed buccal lip (
Figs 1B
,
5B
,
7A
).
BUCCAL TENTACLES. Without groove, with two ventrolateral rows of long and slender pinnae (longer than tentacle diameter); tips of pinnae covered by cilia (
Fig. 7B
).
BRANCHIAE. Four pairs located in fused segments II+III and arranged in two groups with a short median gap, about one branchia wide (
Figs 1A, C
,
4B
); branchiophores fused at base (
Figs 1C
,
2
A–B); branchiae of same width throughout, but slightly tapering at distal end, about 3 times as long as the prostomium and
3⁄5
as long as the thorax (
Figs 1A
,
4
A–B), reaching about TC6 and provided with parallel ciliated rings from base to distal end (
Fig. 4B
). Anterior three pairs of branchiae arranged in transverse row, fourth pair posterior to anterior row, between second outermost and innermost branchiae (
Fig. 1A, C
). Fused segments II+III (SG2+3) provided with 5–6 long, thin and slender chaetae (paleae), slightly longer than following regular notochaetae (
Figs 1
A–C, 2A–B, 4A–B).
THORAX. Longer and wider than abdomen (
Fig. 1A
). Fourteen thoracic segments with notopodia and capillary chaetae (SG4 to SG17); last 12 segments also with neuropodial tori bearing single row of uncini. Nephridial papillae not observed. Thoracic notopodia as simple lobes from SG4 and up to three times longer than wide; first notopodium somewhat reduced (
Figs 1
A–C, 2A–B). Notochaetae as simple spinulose capillaries, tapering to slender tips; arranged in two rows, capillaries from anterior row much thinner and shorter than those of posterior row (
Fig. 2C
). Thoracic neuropodia from SG6; anterior ones usually oval-shaped, about three times higher than wide (
Figs 1B
,
2A, D
); gradually decreasing in size, becoming more rounded in posterior part of thorax (
Fig. 3B
). Cirri and papillae in thoracic parapodia absent. Thoracic uncini with about ten teeth in two vertical rows above rostrum (
Fig. 2D
). Well-developed ventral shields present to TU10, weakly developed in TU11 and absent in TU12 (
Fig. 5A
). Elevated or modified notopodia absent.
Fig. 2.
Ampharete oculicirrata
sp. nov.
, paratype MNCN 16.01/18482_spec. 1.
A
. Anterior end, lateral view.
B
. Paleae and first two thoracic chaetigers, lateral view.
C
. Thoracic notopodium and chaetae, anterior view.
D
. Uncini of second thoracic unciniger (thoracic chaetiger 4). Abbreviations: brph = branchiophore; nuo = nuchal organ; pal = paleae; pros(ml) = prostomium (median lobe); TN = thoracic notopodium; TU = thoracic unciniger. Scale bars: A = 200 µm; B = 100 µm; C = 20 µm; D = 15 µm.
Fig. 3.
Ampharete oculicirrata
sp. nov.
, paratype MNCN 16.01/18482_spec. 1.
A
. First three abdominal uncinigers, lateral view.
B
. Thoracic unciniger 11.
C
. Abdominal unciniger 1.
D
. Abdominal unciniger 2.
E
. Abdominal unciniger 3.
F
. Posterior end, from AU7 to pygidium. Abbreviations: AU = abdominal unciniger; plc = pygidial lateral cirrus. Scale bars: A, F = 100 µm; B–D = 10 µm; E = 15 µm.
ABDOMEN. Shorter and thinner than thorax. Eleven uncinigers, anterior two (AU1–2) with neuropodia of thoracic
type
(‘intermediate uncinigers’) (
Figs 1A
,
3
C–D, 5A); remaining nine abdominal uncinigers (AU3–11) with enlarged neuropodial ‘pinnules’, without dorsal neuropodial cirrus (
Figs 1A
,
3E, F
,
5A
,
7
C–D). Glandular pads above pinnules not observed in intermediate or abdominal uncinigers. Abdominal uncini of AU1–2 similar to thoracic ones (
Fig. 3
B–D); following ones of typical abdominal shape, with about eight teeth in two vertical rows above rostrum (
Fig. 6
).
Fig. 4.
Ampharete oculicirrata
sp. nov.
, paratype MNCN 16.01/18482_spec. 2.
A
. Incomplete specimen, dorsal view.
B
.Anterior end, dorsal view and detail of prostomium and nuchal organ; large arrow pointing to gap between groups of branchiae; framed enlarged areas: prostomium (bottom left) and branchial ciliation (bottom right). Abbreviations: br = branchia; nuo = nuchal organ; pal = paleae; pros(ml) = prostomium (median lobe). Scale bars = 200 µm.
Fig. 5.
Ampharete oculicirrata
sp. nov.
, paratype MNCN 16.01/18482_spec. 3.
A
. Transitional area between thorax and abdomen, ventral view.
B
. Peristomium, ventral view.
C
. Paleae and first three thoracic chaetigers, ventral view. Abbreviations: AU = abdominal unciniger; bl = buccal lip; br = branchia; pal = paleae; per = peristomium; pros(ll) = prostomium (lateral lobe); pros(ml) = prostomium (median lobe); SG = segment; TC = thoracic chaetiger; TN = thoracic notopodium; TU = thoracic unciniger; vs = ventral shield. Scale bars: A = 200 µm; B–C = 100 µm.
PYGIDIUM. Crenulated due to the presence of low pygidial papillae; with a pair of long lateral cirri (
Figs 1D, F
,
3F
,
7D
), each with a pygidial eye located in the proximal third of the cirrus; eyes consisting of two dark pigmented spots (
Fig. 1D, F
). Fixed specimens creamy white in colour.
STAINING. Head (prostomial tip especially) and ventral thoracic shields dyed by methyl blue.
TUBE. Unknown.
Variations
Complete specimens measure 4.0–10.0 mm in length and 0.5–1.0 mm in width, although most complete specimens are about 4.0–5.0 mm long. One specimen (MNCN 16.01/18482) observed with the ventral pharyngeal organ protruded (
Fig. 7A
). The buccal lip may appear smooth or rough depending on the state of contraction of the buccal opening (
Figs 5B
vs 7A). The gap between groups of branchiae is difficult to see in many specimens, but it is obvious in the
holotype
(
Fig. 1C
) and several
paratypes
. Some
paratypes
have pygidial eyes consisting only of a single pigmented spot (
Fig. 1F
). Two females (MNCN 16.01/18475, 7 mm long and MNCN 16.01/18481, 10 mm long) bear oocytes in the coelomic cavity.
Fig. 6.
Ampharete oculicirrata
sp. nov.
,
paratype
MNCN 16.01/18482_spec. 3.
A
. Abdominal unciniger 7, posterior view.
B
. Detail of abdominal uncini, frontal and lateral view. Scale bars: A =
150 µm
; B =
5 µm
.
Distribution and ecology
Ampharete oculicirrata
sp. nov.
was found in many localities on the West
Shetland
shelf in offshore sand and gravel habitats at depths of between 113 and
138 m
(see also
Table 1
).