New species of Scalibregmatidae (Annelida, Polychaeta) from the East Antarctic Peninsula including a description of the ecology and post-larval development of species of Scalibregma and Oligobregma
Author
Blake, James A.
text
Zootaxa
2015
4033
1
57
93
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4033.1.3
5ed7ad78-1c25-4690-98d7-df6929e4b01d
1175-5326
289810
9C0A63B6-5532-484D-BBD7-EDD5250D4ABA
Genus
Scalibregma
Rathke, 1843
Type
Species
:
Scalibregma inflatum
Rathke, 1843
.
Synonym:
Oligobranchus
Sars, 1846
.
Fide
Hartman 1959
.
Diagnosis.
Body elongate, arenicoliform. Prostomium T-shaped with lateral horns. Peristomium achaetous, surrounding prostomium dorsally and forming upper and lower lips of mouth ventrally. Parapodia of posterior segments with dorsal and ventral cirri; interramal
papilla
present; postsetal lamellae absent. Branchiae present in anterior segments. Setae include capillaries, lyrate setae, and sometimes inconspicuous blunt, pointed, or bifurcated spinous setae anterior to capillaries of setigers 1 or 1‒2, representing homologues of lyrate setae; large conspicuous acicular spines absent. Pygidium with long anal cirri.
Remarks.
Until recently,
Scalibregma inflatum
was considered to be cosmopolitan in its distribution.
Mackie (1991)
, however, demonstrated sufficient variability in European populations to define an additional, closely related species,
S. celticum
Mackie, 1991
. Among other observations,
Mackie (1991)
discovered that short slender spines were present anterior to the capillaries of a few anterior noto- and neuropodia anterior to the setigers where lyrate setae occurred. Prior to this study
Scalibregma
had been defined as lacking any
type
of spinous seta. The spinous setae discovered by Mackie were not the large, curved acicular spines that have been reported for species of
Asclerocheilus
,
Oligobregma
,
Parasclerocheilus
Sclerobregma
,
and
Sclerocheilus
but were instead inconspicuous companions of the capillaries. For
S. inflatum
Mackie (1991)
found that some of these setae were forked or split on their tips. This observation plus their position in the setal fascicles suggested that they were homologous to the lyrate setae of following segments. Mackie further suggested that the larger recurved spines of other genera were homologous with capillaries.
Mackie (1991)
redescribed
Scalibregma inflatum
based on specimens from the
type
locality in
Norway
as well as from
Sweden
,
Scotland
,
Wales
, and
Ireland
. The second species,
S. celticum
, was from
Scotland
,
Wales
, and
France
and differed in that the small spinous setae of setigers 1‒2 were blunt-tipped instead of bifurcate. Additionally, eyes were present instead of absent and there were differences in the form of the peristomium, size and distribution of the epidermal pads above the notopodia, and in the number and arrangement of the pygidial cirri.
S. celticum
was subsequently reported from the Mediterranean by
Çinar (2005)
and
Lomiri
et al.
(2012)
.
Mackie (1991)
also re-examined
Sclerobregma stenocerum
Bertelsen & Weston, 1980
, from shelf depths along the southeastern
United States
and found that the anterior acicular spines reported for the species by
Bertelsen & Weston (1980)
were of the small, inconspicuous kind found in
Scalibregma
species instead of the large, curved acicular spines found on other species of the
Sclerobregma
.
S. stenocerum
was therefore transferred by
Mackie (1991)
to
Scalibregma
. Mackie also examined the
holotype
of
S. branchiatum
Hartman, 1965
, the type-species of
Sclerobregma
from deep water in the western North Atlantic and found short spinous setae anterior to the larger acicular spines of setigers 1 and 2. A similar situation exists in
Cryptosclerocheilus baffinensis
Blake, 1972
, described from deep water in Baffin Bay. This species was reported to have slender, blunt-tipped spines in the noto- and neuropodia of setiger 2; these were replaced by furcate setae from setiger 3 (
Blake 1972
). A re-examination of prepared slides of these spines confirms that these are the same
type
of seta reported by
Mackie (1991)
for the three species of
Scalibregma
examined by him.
Following the lead of
Mackie (1991)
,
Blake (2000)
examined specimens from California previously identified as
Scalibregma inflatum
and described a new species,
S. californicum
Blake, 2000
. He also suggested that specimens from the
U.S.
Atlantic coast included at least one new species in addition to
S. stenocerum
. Most recently,
Bakken
et al.
(2014)
described
S. hanseni
Bakken, Oug & Kongsrud, 2014
from deep water off
Norway
. These authors also focused on the short, spinous setae anterior to normal capillaries in setigers 1‒2 and found similar spines in
Pseudoscalibregma parvum
(
Hansen, 1879
)
. In my own work, numerous species of
Scalibregmatidae
have been examined and these short spinous setae, considered homologous to the lyrate setae, have been found in other genera including some with large curved acicular spines. I now believe that most species of
Scalibregmatidae
having lyrate setae will be found to have the same
type
of short spinous setae in segments anterior to where the lyrate setae begin.
To date, specimens of
Scalibregma
from
Antarctic
waters have been identified in several faunal and ecological accounts as
S. inflatum
(see reference list below). The only original illustrations of
Scalibregma
from
Antarctica
appear to be by
Knox &
Cameron
(1998)
of the anterior end and a branchiate parapodium from a specimen collected from the Ross Sea in
578 m
.