Revision of Piromis Kinberg, 1867 and Pycnoderma Grube, 1877 (Polychaeta: Flabelligeridae)
Author
Salazar-Vallejo, Sergio I.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2819
1
50
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.277211
02822034-b581-4195-a509-5ee435369d0e
1175-5326
277211
Piromis capulata
(
Moore, 1909
)
n. comb.
Figure 4
Trophonia capulata
Moore, 1909a
:284
–286, Pl. 9, Figs. 60–61;
Stasek, 1966
:12
;
Loi, 1980
:138
.
Pherusa capulata
:
Hartman, 1969
:295
–296,
Figs. 1–2
;
Fauchald, 1972
:414
;
Blake, 2000
:1314
, Fig. 1.5.
Piromis roberti
:
Spies, 1975
:188
, 191, 192, Pl. 3,
Fig. 5
(
non
Hartman, 1951
).
Piromis capulata
:
Spies, 1975
:188
, 191, 192, Pl. 4,
Figs. 12–13
, Pl. 5,
Figs. 15–16
; Pl. 7, Figs. 23, 25, 26 (informal n. comb.).
Type
material. Eastern Pacific Ocean.
Holotype
(CAS-19721) collected in San Diego Bay, San Diego, California, intertidal,
Dec. 1902
, E.C. Starks, coll.
Additional material. Eastern Pacific Ocean.
Two anterior fragments (LACM-AHF-2510), R/V
Velero III
, Sta. 1030 (27°39ʹ0 5ʺ N, 114°54ʹ47ʺ W to 27°39ʹ12ʺ N, 114°54ʹ12ʺ W), off Turtle Bay, Baja California,
México
, 26–31 fathoms, gray sand, mud,
18 Jan. 1940
(dorsal tubercles in chaetigers 2–6). One specimen (ECOSUR-7/ 1987), complete, Punta Las Rosas, Todos Santos Bay, Ensenada, Baja California, in eelgrass (
Phyllospadix scouleri
Hooker
) root masses, low intertidal,
30 Jul. 1987
,
SISV
, coll. (anterior end exposed, pale). One specimen (ECO- SUR-12/1981), complete, Bahia San Quintín, Baja California,
4 Dec. 1981
., L.E. Calderon, coll. Five specimens (ECOSUR-15/1985), Laguna Ojo de Liebre, Baja California Sur, in Catarina scallops (
Argopecten circularis
(Sowerby))
bottoms,
15 Apr. 1985
, E. Baqueiro, coll. Five specimens (
USNM
[unnumbered]), dried out,
Catalina Harbor & Monterey
(sic), 26-32-45C, 1874, H.H. Dall, coll. Fifteen anterior fragments (
USNM
40484), off Balboa, San Diego, California,
Nov. 1932
, G.E. McGinitie, coll. (paired dorsal lobes in chaetigers 2–8; size-dependent).
Description.
Holotype
(CAS-19721) complete, some parapodia previously removed, anterior end ventrally dissected; body cylindrical, long, tapering posteriorly (
Fig. 4
A); tunic papillated, with small sediment particles adhered over most of the body, especially dorsally, posterior region without sediment. Long capitate papillae arranged in longitudinal rows, two dorsally, four ventrally, over the first 5–6 chaetigers, forming low, eroded dorsal tubercles in the
holotype
(
Fig. 4
B, C); better preserved in other specimens (
Fig. 4
D), from chaetiger 2.
Holotype
111 mm
long,
4.5 mm
wide, cephalic cage
9 mm
long, 134 chaetigers.
Anterior end not exposed, hardly seen through the dissection cut; features based on a non-type specimen (ECOSUR). Prostomium dark, elevated; eyes large, black. Caruncle well developed, separating branchial filaments into two lateral groups (
Fig. 4
E); median keel pale, lateral ridges pale, with two black longitudinal bands. Palps large, corrugated; palp bases darker than surrounding areas. Dorsal and lateral lips thin, slightly darker than surrounding areas; ventral lip reduced. Branchiae cirriform, arising on a tongue-like protuberance, separated in two lateral groups, each group with filaments arranged in transversal rows, each row with 6–8 filaments, with about 50 filaments per group. Longest branchial filaments about as half as long as palps. Nephridial lobes not seen.
Cephalic cage chaetae less than 1/20 body length, or twice as long as body width. Chaetigers 1–3 involved in the cephalic cage; chaetae arranged in short rows, dorsolateral in chaetiger 1, lateral in chaetigers 2–3. Chaetiger 1 with 10 notochaetae and 8 neurochaetae, chaetigers 2–3 with 8 notochaetae and 6 neurochaetae per bundle. Anterior dorsal margin of chaetiger 1 with a median trifid lobe projected anteriorly (damaged). Anterior chaetigers with long papillae forming anteriorly directed, elongate conical lobes. Chaetigers 1–3 of similar length. Chaetal transition from cephalic cage to segmental chaetae abrupt; bidentate compound neurohooks from chaetiger 4, shorter from chaetiger 6. Gonopodial lobes present in chaetigers 5–6, larger in the former (
Fig. 4
F).
FIGURE 4
.
Piromis capulata
(Moore, 1909)
n. comb.
A. Holotype (CAS-19721), complete in lateral view. B. Same, anterior end, lateral view. C. Same, anterior end, dorsal view, notice the eroded areas. D. Non-type specimen (USNM-40484), anterior end, dorsal view. E. Same, anterior end, palps and most branchiae detached (BS: branchial scars, LL: lateral lip). F. Same, right neuropodium showing the gonopodial lobe with an asterisk in the base. G. Holotype, notochaetal regions, basal, median, distal. H. Same, median neuropodia with an insert showing the tips. Scale bars: A: 5 mm, B: 2.3 mm, C: 1.5 mm, D–E: 2 mm, F: 325 µm, G: 100 µm, H: 50 µm.
Parapodia poorly developed, except for few anterior ones (1–9); chaetae emerging from body wall. Parapodia lateral, median neuropodia ventrolateral. Notopodia better developed in chaetigers 1–9, with long postchaetal papillae making elongate conical lobes, decreasing posteriorly. Median noto- and neuropodia with two short, capitate papillae and four postchaetal longer ones.
Median notochaetae arranged in short transverse row, 7–8 per bundle, 1/3 as long as body width; all notochaetae multiarticulated capillaries with articles short basally, becoming long medially, then slightly shorter distally (
Fig. 4
G). Neurochaetae multiarticulated capillaries in chaetigers 1–3; long bidentate compound neurohooks in chaetigers 4–5 becoming shorter in chaetiger 6, arranged in a J-shape with eight per neuropodium (
Fig. 4
H), neurochaetae becoming thinner, longer in posterior chaetigers.
Posterior region almost with few sediment particles; pygidium conical, anus dorsoterminal, without cirri.
Remarks.
Piromis capulata
(
Moore, 1909
)
n. comb.
resembles
P. robertsi
(
Hartman, 1951
)
from the Gulf of
Mexico
, and
P. fauchaldi
n. sp.
from the Gulf of California, since all have notopodial lobes. They differ because in
P. capulata
there are dorsal tubercles in addition to the notopodial lobes, and there are only fine sediment particles on the tunic while the other two species lack dorsal tubercles and their tunics include larger sediment grains.
Further, there might be some confused records for the Northeastern Pacific Ocean. The records of
P. ro b e r t i
or
P. capulata
by
Spies (1975)
, and of
P. eruca
by
Hobson & Banse (1981)
, are possibly conspecific and might belong to an undescribed species, which has large dorsal lappets over several anterior chaetigers. Further, the records by
Hartman (1969)
and
Blake (2000)
of
Pherusa capulata
suggest that their materials had four pairs of branchiae and bifid neurohooks, which would not fit the specific features of
P. capulata
. On the other hand, the informal new combination that was introduced by
Spies (1975:189, ff)
was adequate and it is herein confirmed.
Distribution.
From San Diego, California to Ojo de Liebre (Scammon’s) lagoon in Baja California, in intertidal and shallow sandy bottoms. The records of
Piromis eruca
for the western border between the
United States
and
Canada
(
Hobson & Banse 1981
:59,
Fig. 11
j–l) differ by having series of two foliose dorsal lobes instead of only the bare tip of larger papillae. They do not belong to the Mediterranean species, and might be an undescribed species. The same might apply to the record by
Blake (2000:13)
, since his specimen was collected in
91 m
depth, and there is no indication of the posterior neurohooks, which separate
Piromis
from
Trophoniella
.