A new species of Marphysa Quatrefages, 1865 (Polychaeta: Eunicida: Eunicidae) from northern Australia and a review of similar taxa from the Indo-west Pacific, including the genus Nauphanta Kinberg, 1865
Author
Glasby, Christopher J.
Author
Hutchings, Pat A.
text
Zootaxa
2010
2352
29
45
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.193484
9a1435dd-b4a9-4055-9f47-3b992adc83e5
1175-5326
193484
Marphysa
Quatrefages, 1865
Common name: Bloodworm
Marphysa
Quatrefages, 1865
: 331
.
Nauphanta
Kinberg, 1865
: 564
. –
Fauchald, 1987
: 375
.
Diagnosis
(after
Fauchald
et al.
2003
). Anterior body segments cylindrical, usually becoming dorsoventrally flattened posteriorly; epidermis iridescent anterodorsally. Prostomium with deep or faint anteroventral notch which may give it a bilobed appearance; bearing five similar-looking appendages—three antennae and two (lateral) palps arranged in more or less curved line near posterior edge. Eyespots present or absent. Peristomium divided into two rings, anterior one longer than posterior one; peristomial cirri absent. Branchiae present over most of body or restricted to anterior half, pectinate or palmate arrangement. Chaetae include in superior position, limbate capillaries and pectinate chaetae which may be symmetrical or asymmetrical, and in inferior position, compound falcigers (may be absent), compound spinigers (rarely absent) and subacicular hooks. Jaw apparatus includes ventral mandibles and dorsally, maxillae comprising short, winged, or slender, carriers and four paired (and one unpaired) maxillary plates.
Remarks
.
Fauchald (1987)
resurrected the genus
Nauphanta
to accommodate two species lacking compound falcigers and compound spinigers, including
N. novaehollandiae
Kinberg, 1865
, originally from Sydney Harbour, and
Eunice mossambica
Peters, 1854
originally from
Mozambique
. He considered
Nauphanta
to differ from
Marphysa
in having a unique
type
of chaeta present only in posterior chaetigers, ‘fan chaetae’, or ‘asymmetrical pectinate chaetae’ as they are referred to here. However, our observations suggest that fan and pectinate chaetae are both in the same position in the neuropodium—on the anteromedial edge of the supra-acicular bundle of chaetae—so it is highly likely that the two
types
of chaetae are homologous. Further, present observations on
Marphysa fauchaldi
n. sp.
(
Table 1
) and those of
Crossland (1903: 140)
and
Treadwell (1922: 152)
indicate that asymmetrical pectinate chaetae are not restricted to posterior chaetigers but may occur also in more anterior chaetigers. In
Marphysa fauchaldi
n. sp.
, as in other species of the genus with asymmetrical pectinate chaetae (see
Table 2
), asymmetry becomes more pronounced in posterior pectinate chaetae. The presence of pectinate chaetae is best determined by use of SEM, but they are also readily visible under high powered light microscopy provided the parapodium is mounted anterior side up.
TABLE 1.
Morphometric data on the pectinate chaetae of
Marphysa fauchaldi
n. sp.
based on SEM micrographs of paratype (AM W35419).
Chaetiger region (number pectinate chaetae observed) |
No. teeth (excluding two lateral ones) |
Teeth—form |
Lateral teeth length: medial teeth length (mean ratio) |
Asymmetry (degree) |
Curvature (degree) |
Width distally: width at shaft (mean ratio) |
Additional long tooth, presence (p) or absence (a) |
1–15 (1) |
14 |
moderately acuminate |
? |
slight |
slight |
4.17 |
a |
13 (2) |
10–11 |
slightly acuminate |
2.14 |
slight |
slight |
? |
p |
21 (1) |
15 |
moderately acuminate |
2.26 |
slight |
moderate |
4.00 |
p (Fig. 3H) |
21(1) |
10 |
slightly acuminate |
2.42 |
mod |
mod |
? |
p |
41–70(1) |
~10 |
slightly acuminate |
2.56 |
mod |
mod |
? |
a |
101–130 (1) |
~19 |
moderately acuminate |
2.20 |
high |
high |
4.58 |
? |
131–160 (2) |
19–22 |
highly acuminate |
3.35 |
high |
high |
4.28 |
p |
161–190 (3) |
22–31 |
highly acuminate |
1.83–2.66 |
high |
high |
4.21 |
a |
221–250 (2) |
28–29 |
highly acuminate |
~3.22 |
high |
high |
5.4 |
a |
251–266 (1) |
29 |
highly acuminate |
~2.6 |
high |
high |
? |
a |
281, 282 (3) |
23–25 |
highly acuminate |
2.00– 2.60 |
high |
high |
4.43 |
p |
The only other differences between
Nauphanta
and most
Marphysa
are the absence of both compound falcigers and spinigers in the former. The absence of compound falcigers is probably an ontogenetic loss as species of
Marphysa
whose embryology and juvenile development has been investigated have this
type
of chaetae initially as juveniles, but they are replaced in adults (
Borradaile 1901
;
Southern 1921
;
Aiyar 1931
,
Pillai 1958
; pers. obs. CG). The absence of compound spinigers is likely to be paedomorphic because juveniles of several
Marphysa
species, for example
M. borradailei
(see
Pillai 1958
), lack compound spinigers but they develop later in adults. Therefore continued absence of this
type
of chaetae in adults can be viewed as a retained juvenile characteristic. The new species described here,
M. fauchaldi
n. sp.
, exhibits what might be called ‘partial paedomorphosis’ in which compound spinigers are absent in all parapodia except the anterior ones (see below). Therefore, the absences of both
types
of compound chaetae in
Nauphanta
are most likely attributable to development novelties restricted to this particular taxon (here considered to represent a single species), rather than synapomorphic characteristics of a group of species—thus we propose returning
Nauphanta
to junior synonymy with
Marphysa
.
Species included
. Two of the species of
Marphysa
described below (
M. mullawa
and
M. fauchaldi
n. sp.
) are closest in morphology to Group B2 of
Fauchald (1970)
, that is, having compound spinigers only and branchiae present to the end of the body. The only other species listed as Group B2
Marphysa
reported from
Australia
is
M. macintoshi
, originally described from
Zanzibar
. However, Group B2 is well represented in the tropical/subtropical Indo-Pacific waters by many other species including
M. gravelyi
Southern, 1921
(
type
locality, Chilka Lake,
India
),
M. orientalis
Treadwell, 1936
(
China
)
,
M. tamurai
Okuda, 1934
(
Japan
)
,
M. teretiuscula
(
Schmarda, 1861
)
(
Sri Lanka
) and
M. borradailei
Pillai 1958
(
Sri Lanka
).
Marphysa borradailei
was classified as Group C2 (only compound falcigers present) by Fauchald, presumably because falcigerous chaetae are mentioned in Pillai’s description (p. 104), but the chaetae illustrated by Pillai are clearly compound spinigers, albeit with short blades.
Marphysa sanguinea
(
Montagu, 1813
)
is also a Group B2 species, but Australian records of this species are all thought to be misidentifications, having been described as a new species,
M. mullawa
Hutchings & Karageorgopoulos, 2003
.
Day (1962)
regarded
Marphysa simplex
Crossland, 1903
and
M. furcellata
Crossland, 1903
to be junior synonyms of
M. macintoshi
Crossland, 1903
—all three species having
Zanzibar
as the
type
locality. The main difference between the three species—whether or not an anterior notch exists between the two globular buccal lips—was attributed by Day to intraspecific variation. Examination of the
types
of all three species together with the hundreds of specimens of
M. fauchaldi
n. sp.
, suggest that the form of the prostomium does not vary significantly between individuals, and this taken together with the other small, but significant, differences between the three species suggest that
M. simplex
and
M. furcellata
are each diagnosable, as indicated in the Key. However
Marphysa simplex
is considered here to be a junior synonym of
M. teretiuscula
(the possibility was considered likely by
Crossland (1903: 136))
as both species present the unusual condition of having a more or less circular (in cross section) body along the entire length of the worm, and antennae are all approximately the same length, being twice the length of the prostomium (see Key). Notwithstanding the relegation of
M. simplex
to junior synonymy, the name still remains a secondary homonym of
Marphysa simplex
Langerhans, 1884
(as
Amphiro simplex
) from Madeira.