Antonbruunia sociabilis sp. nov. (Annelida: Antonbruunidae) associated with the chemosynthetic deep-sea bivalve Thyasira scotiae Oliver & Drewery, 2014, and a re-examination of the systematic affinities of Antonbruunidae
Author
Mackie, Andrew S. Y.
Author
Oliver, P. Graham
Author
Nygren, Arne
text
Zootaxa
2015
3995
1
journal volume
10.11646/zootaxa.3995.1.4
afa7c45c-d55e-4dd0-9595-9b5d4af9d55a
1175-5326
242712
1CB79CF3-04AA-48B8-91E7-4C40152A1FE3
Antonbruunia sociabilis
sp. nov.
Figs 1–4
Material examined.
NE Atlantic:
Scotland
, Hatton-Rockall Basin, FRV
Scotia
, cruise 0712S, Station
S12283
a,
57°57’N
15°33’W
,
1187-1200 m
, Jackson 460 Otter trawl,
23 June 2012
.
Antonbruunia
removed from among arborescent lateral body pouches of three
Thyasira scotiae
types
(NMW- Z.2012.074.4-5); eight, nine, and two specimens, last including
holotype
(NMW-Z.2012.074.6) and one
paratype
(NMW-Z.2012.074.7).
Remaining
types
. Four
paratypes
(NMW-Z.2012.074.8), one
paratype
(NMW-Z.2012.074.9 dissected), one
paratype
(NMW-Z.2012.074.10 SEM), six
paratypes
(NMW-Z.2012.074.11) and one
paratype
(NMW- Z.2012.074.12 SEM). Four specimens were selected for sequencing; one voucher (NMW-Z.2012.074.13) yielded the sequences registered with GenBank (
Table 1
).
Description.
Holotype
entire, maximum width
1.08 mm
(including parapodia),
18.5 mm
long for prostomium and 48 segments.
Paratypes
ranging from
0.56–1.28 mm
wide,
5.2–22.6 mm
long, and 32–52 segments.
FIGURE 1.
Antonbruunia sociabilis
sp. nov.
(A, B & D, Holotype NMW-Z.2012.074.6; C & E, Paratype NMW-Z.2012.074.9; F, Largest paratype NMW-Z.2012.074.8). A, anterior region, dorsal view; B, Anterior region, lateral view; C, parapod, chaetiger 16, anterior view; D, Posterior region; E, neuropodial chaeta, distal region, chaetiger 17; F, oocytes.
Body long and slender, dorsally arched and ventrally flat, lacking ventral groove. Head and anterior 5 segments narrow; segments thereafter rapidly increasing in size (
Fig. 1
A–B), reaching maximum in anterior third of body, rapidly decreasing in posterior region. Cuticle smooth and shiny on best preserved specimens. Pygidium lobulate, ventro-laterally with single pair of tapered pygidial cirri (
Figs 1
D, 2D).
Prostomium subtrapezoidal, with rounded anterior margin, lacking eyes (
Fig. 1
A). Pair of antero-ventral palps, somewhat conical, basally expanded and distally tapered. Pair of antero-dorsolateral antennae, of similar shape to palps, but broader and longer (
Fig. 2
A–B). Median antenna of similar size and shape to palps, arising mid-dorsally near posterior margin of prostomium (
Fig. 1
A,B). Nuchal organs elliptical ciliated grooves, positioned dorsolaterally between posterior prostomium and anterior margin of segment 1 (
Fig. 2
B).
Peristomium ventrally fused with prostomium and segment 1; delineation between prostomium and segment 1 only distinct dorsally and laterally. Mouth ventral, transverse, slit-like (
Fig. 2
A–B). Two pairs of tapered tentacular cirri on segment 1, superior cirri 1.5 to 2 times as long as inferiors; parapodia and chaetae lacking. Pharynx muscular, axial, short and narrow, occupying anterior three segments; proboscis short and bulbous when extruded (
Fig. 2
C), jaws lacking. Gut tubular, with markedly wider lumen from anterior to middle of chaetiger 3. Gut caecae from chaetiger 3 as pair of small lateral pouches; caecae increase in size over following 2–3 chaetigers, extending into parapodia. By chaetiger 6 or 7, distally tapered caecae reach into posterior parts of parapodia, just below dorsal cirri; caecae decrease in size in posterior half to third of body. Gut caecae revealed through methyl green staining; caecae appearing as opaque white unstained masses either side, extending laterally into the parapodia.
FIGURE 2.
Antonbruunia sociabilis
sp. nov.
(A, B & D, NMW-Z.2012.074.10; C, NMW-Z.2012.074.12). A, Anterior region, ventral view; B, Anterior region, antero-lateral view (no = nuchal organ); C, Anterior region, ventral view, showing protruded proboscis; D, Pygidium, ventral view.
Parapodia simple, short cuff-like, lacking any marked pre- or post-chaetal structures. Dorsal cirri above or slightly dorso-posterior to parapodia; cirri somewhat conical with broad bases and tapering cirriform tips of variable extension (
Figs 1
A–C & 3A–B). Ventral cirri positioned below or slightly posterior to neurochaetae. Ventral cirri of anterior and posterior parapodia short, conical with bluntly pointed tips (
Fig. 3
A,D). Those of median body larger, more rounded, or rounded with tiny sharply pointed tips (
Figs 1
C, 3C). Anterior parapodia supported by two parallel, robust and distally pointed neuroaciculae; increasing to three aciculae by about chaetiger 6 or 7. Single notoaciculae with sharply tapering tips arise separate from neuroaciculae (
Fig. 1
C). Each notoacicula directed forward into anterior part of parapod, tip ending anterior to and level with uppermost neurochaetae, well in advance of dorsal cirrus (
Fig. 1
B,C); in slide preparations notoacicula may seem closer to dorsal cirrus than reality. Neurochaetae numerous in anterior and mid body region, disposed in two bundles; superior bundle compact, inferior bundle broader with chaetae extending more dorsally around acicular lobe on posterior side (
Figs 1
B, 3E). Number of chaetae similar in each bundle, usually slightly more in inferior bundle; two bundles together totalling about 30–35 chaetae in anterior parapodia, but increasing to
45–50 in
parapodia of largest segments. Separation between superior and inferior bundles disappears in posterior parapodia, and number of chaetae decreases to less than five or six on posteriormost segments. Posteriormost 4–6 segments of smallest specimens have rudimentary parapodia and no chaetae. Neurochaetae slender, shafts smooth, each with strongly bent distal tooth and longer slender and delicate secondary spine, space between tooth and spine angular (
Figs 1
E, 3F); primary teeth all pointing dorsally (
Fig. 3
E).
Reproduction
. Largest specimens, longer than about
15 mm
clearly female with small (ca. 25 µm diameter) oocytes in parapodia and loose in coelom (
Fig. 1
F). Several specimens between approximately 11 and
15 mm
appear to be immature females. Sex of smaller specimens not determined.
Colour
. Preserved specimens white. Colour of live animals not known.
Methyl Green staining.
Glandular staining variable, most pronounced on the larger specimens. Band of speckles occurring behind the mouth and behind the ventral tentacular cirri. Ventrally, anterior 9 or 10 chaetigers with two widely separated, and interrupted, parallel lines of stain. These lines linked in posterior part of each chaetiger by broad transverse band, producing repetitive H-pattern of stain on anterior venter. The transverse band disappears on following chaetigers, and only two broken parallel lines remain.
Other staining associated with the parapodia. Ventral staining patch present at base, as vertical line on body just anterior to each parapod, and as vertical patch on its anterior face. Similar, but more sparse speckled areas on posterior face of parapod. Sparse speckles of stain evident on basal part of dorsal cirri and on body dorsal to parapodia; mid-dorsal region unstained. Pygidial lobes surrounding anus stained.
Morphometrics.
The morphological attributes measured (width, length, number of segments) for
A. sociabilis
sp. nov.
were strongly correlated: width and length (
Fig. 4
A), r = 0.957, p<0.0001, n = 14; segments and length (
Fig. 4
B), r = 0.894, p<0.0001, n = 17; segments and width (not figured), r = 0.806, p = 0.0002, n = 14.
Etymology.
The species name
sociabilis
(L.), disposed to companionship, relates to the tendency for numerous individuals of the new species to live together. Further, it does honour to Roger Bamber, the most sociable of men.
Remarks.
Hartman & Boss (1965)
and
Quiroga & Sellanes (2009)
referred to all
Antonbruunia
prostomial appendages as antennae. The two antero-ventral prostomial appendages are here considered to be palps, while the two larger antero-dorsolateral organs are the lateral antennae. This is consistent with their positions on the prostomium in literature associated with
Antonbruunidae
(
Fauchald 1977
;
Pleijel & Dahlgren 1998
;
Pleijel 2001c
;
Aguado
et al.
2013
) and putative related families,
Pilargidae
(
Pettibone 1966
;
Fitzhugh & Wolf 1990
;
Fauchald & Rouse 1997
;
Glasby 1993
, 2000;
Pleijel 2001b
) and
Nautiliniellidae
(
Pleijel 2001a
;
Fauchald & Rouse 1997
;
Aguado & Rouse 2011
;
Aguado
et al.
2013
). However, as
Glasby (1993)
pointed out, the true nature of the anteroventral appendages in
Antonbruunia
“must remain in doubt until better material is available to conduct histological study.”
Antonbruunia sociabilis
sp. nov.
is morphologically most similar to
A. viridis
. Segment 1, bearing the tentacular cirri, is well-defined dorsally and laterally as a distinct ring behind the prostomium. The palps and antennae are relatively slender tapering to narrow tips, median antennae and palps of similar size. Both have slender cirriform anal cirri.
In
A. gerdesi
,
the tentacular cirri are more anteriorly positioned below/lateral to the prostomium, and segment 1 is dorsally reduced and narrow. All the anterior appendages are more robust, and the median antenna is similar to the lateral antennae in size and shape. The anal cirri are very robust also. Its body form seems altogether wider (
Fig. 4
A), though some caution must be exercised here due to potential differences attributable to fixation treatments; A.
gerdesi
material was removed from its bivalve host and then fixed in 10% formalin prior to transfer in 70% ethanol, while
A. sociabilis
was preserved inside its host when the latter was preserved directly in 70% ethanol.
Antonbruunia viridis
was likewise removed live from its host, but fixing and preservation were not reported.
FIGURE 3.
Antonbruunia sociabilis
sp. nov.
(NMW-Z.2012.074.10). A, Chaetiger 1, antero-ventral view; B, Chaetiger 9, antero-ventral view; C, Chaetigers 20 and 21, antero-ventral view; D, Chaetigers 32 and 33, postero-ventral view; E, Parapodium, ventral cirrus and chaetae, chaetiger 9, anterior view; F, Chaetae, chaetiger 9, from upper posterior part of subacicular bundle.
FIGURE 4.
Morphometric relationships for
Antonbruunia sociabilis
sp. nov.
, and type material of
A. viridis
and
A. gerdesi
.
Antonbruunia gerdesi
and the new species differ from
A. viridis
in having broad-based conical, rather than slender and cirriform, dorsal cirri. These two species additionally may possess more angular neurochaetae (but see
Glasby 1993
: fig. 3b). The new species differs from
A. viridis
in having three, rather than two (Glasby figures only one), aciculae in median chaetigers. It differs from both
A. viridis
and
A. gerdesi
in having more rounded and less protruding ventral cirri in the mid-body region; these two with short pointed ventral cirri throughout. All three species differ in the number of chaetae present. The maximum number of neurochaetae per parapodium reported was 26–30 (
Hartman & Boss 1965
) for
A. viridis
;
Glasby (1993)
depicted 35. For
A. gerdesi
, the SEM images presented by
Quiroga & Sellanes (2009)
revealed at least 70 neurochaetae.
Antonbruunia sociabilis
is intermediate between these two, having up to 50 neurochaetae.
The three species are widely separated geographically, occur at different depths and have different host bivalves:
Antonbruunia viridis
(Western Indian Ocean,
68–82 m
, with
Lucina fosteri
),
A. gerdesi
(Southeastern Pacific Ocean,
795–846 m
, with
Calyptogena gallardoi
), and
A. sociabilis
(Northeastern Atlantic,
1187–1200 m
, with
Thyasira scotiae
). The first was reported to occur in male-female pairs in 80% of more than
100
L.
fosteri animals, one bivalve hosted three individuals. The Chilean species was less prevalent with only four of 35
C. gallardoi
animals hosting a single individual, although three occurred in another.
Calyptogena gallardoi
was unusual in additionally hosting the ‘nautiliniellid’ (now part of
Calamyzinae
in
Chrysopetalidae
, see
Aguado
et al.
2013
)
Shinkai robusta
Quiroga & Sellanes, 2009
(single individuals in two of 35 bivalves), but there was no cooccurrence with
A. gerdesi
.
Antonbruunia sociabilis
is remarkable in having up to nine individuals inhabiting
T. scotiae
(maximum recorded size 19.8x19.6x
12.56 mm
). It was not obvious whether the three smallest specimens of
A. sociabilis
were male or simply juvenile. The presence of 4–6 small posterior segments with rudimentary parapodia may be indicative of the latter.
It is unusual to have many symbionts living in one bivalve host. In the
Thyasiridae,
Blake (1990)
found only single examples of the calamyzin
Petrecca thyasira
inhabiting
Thyasira insignis
(Verrill & Bush, 1898)
from the deep Northwestern Atlantic (
3720 m
).
Miura
& Hashimoto (1996)
similarly found a single individual of
Thyasiridicola branchiatus
in
Conchocele disjuncta
Gabb, 1866
from Hatsushima cold seep,
Japan
(
1160 m
).
However,
Aguado & Rouse (2011)
recorded up to 25 individuals of
Laubierus alvini
within the larger (6.0–
10.4 cm
)
Mytilidae
Bathymodiolus
sp. from methane seeps off
Costa Rica
, Eastern Pacific Ocean (
1000–1800 m
).