New polychaete (Annelida) records and a new species from Hong Kong: the families Polynoidae, Sigalionidae, Chrysopetalidae, Pilargiidae, Nereididae, Opheliidae, Ampharetidae and Terebellidae
Author
Muir, Alexander I.
Author
Bamber, Roger N.
text
Journal of Natural History
2008
2008-03-31
42
9 - 12
797
814
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930701850455
journal article
10.1080/00222930701850455
1464-5262
5224913
Neanthes caudata
(Delle Chiaje, 1827)
Material
One anterior fragment, Fang Tsang Chau (Conic Island) Cave station A.
This anterior fragment of 40 chaetigers has yellow pigment on the prostomium, the tentaculophores and the right palp. There are grey dots on the tentacles, antennae, parapodia and dorsolaterally on the anterior body, which is otherwise unpigmented. Long thin nephridial papillae are present. The anterior pair of eyes are far apart and near the posterior margin of the prostomium.
Paragnaths are present on both maxillary rings: I5an axially aligned group of 16; II5about 22;
III
5an axially aligned group of about 30; IV529–30;
V
–VIII5a wide continuous band of paragnaths of all sizes.
The notopodial chaetae on this anterior fragment are homogomph spinigers. The neuropodial chaetae are one homogomph spiniger and one heterogomph falciger above the acicula and one heterogomph falciger and one homogomph spiniger below the acicula on each neuropodium.
According to the identification key of
Fauchald (1977)
, this specimen is either in
Nereis
or
Neanthes
, but cannot be identified further as it is not known what chaetae were present posteriorly.
Neanthes
and
Nereis
are both large genera (50 and 134 species respectively, according to
Fauchald [1977]
, but more species have been described since) which have not been revised, and there is no key to all the species. None of the 33 relevant taxa in
Huang (2001)
recorded from Chinese waters has as many paragnaths in areas I and
III
as this fragment displays.
Paxton and Chou (2000)
collate polychaete names from literature concerning all the countries surrounding the South
China
Sea, including four species of
Neanthes
not listed by
Huang (2001)
. Of these,
Neanthes arenaceodentata
(Moore, 1903)
, previously reported by
Gallardo (1967)
from off
Vietnam
, has a similar paragnath complement to the present specimen.
Nereis arenaceodentata
Moore, 1903
, was described in detail as
Nereis (Neanthes) arenaceodentata
by
Pettibone (1963)
, who did not mention the yellow pigment and grey dots seen on this fragment, and depicted the eyes as forming a near-rectangle on the head (rather than the anterior pair being wide apart and quite posteriorly positioned).
Nereis (Neanthes) arenaceodentata
has since been synonymised with
Neanthes caudata
by
Imajima (1972)
and
Sun and Yang (2004)
, and the present fragment resembles Imajima’s description. The species
Neanthes caudata
is now, therefore, reported from both sides of the temperate North Atlantic, the Mediterranean, southern California,
Mexico
,
Japan
,
Korea
,
China
,
Hong Kong
,
Vietnam
, the
Philippines
,
Australia
,
New Zealand
,
India
and
South Africa
. This is a rather wide distribution and the species is probably in need of revision.
Imajima (1972)
also suggests that the name may have to be replaced by
Neanthes acuminata
(Ehlers, 1868)
.