List of species records of enchytraeids (Enchytraeidae, Clitellata, Annelida) in China
Author
Chen, Juanjuan
The Key Laboratory of Aquatic Biodiversity and Conservation, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, China. & University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Author
Zhang, Junqian
0000-0001-8141-7622
The Key Laboratory of Aquatic Biodiversity and Conservation, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, China.
jq_zhang@ihb.ac.cn
Author
Xie, Zhicai
0000-0001-9658-4888
The Key Laboratory of Aquatic Biodiversity and Conservation, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, China.
zhcxie@ihb.ac.cn
text
Zootaxa
2025
2025-01-07
5566
1
61
96
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5566.1.3
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5566.1.3
1175-5326
4331BBCC-C390-4D09-BBFB-DEE0717303DB
?
Fridericia parathalassia
Schmelz, 2002
(T)
Fridericia bulbosa
Southern, 1907
;
Stephenson 1911
.
Fridericia parathalassia
Schmelz 2002
,
2003
;
Schmelz & Collado 2010
.
?
Fridericia parathalassia
Chen 2009
.
Distribution and habitat.
Germany
,
Ireland
,
Spain
,
Sweden
,
Iceland
,
England
,
France
,
Denmark
,
Bulgaria
(
Schmelz 2003
);
Russia
(
Degtyarev
et al.
2023
). Marine coastal habitats: sea cliffs, sand dunes, upper salt marsh, wrack beds, brackish water (
Schmelz 2003
).
Distribution in
China
.
Guizhou Province
(Chen 2009).
Remarks.
Chen (2009) described “
Fridericia parathalassia
” based on specimens collected from
Guizhou Province
, the descriptions are translated as follow: medium-sized worms, brownish-yellow when worms alive.
Length
9–12 mm
,
width
0.4–0.5 mm
(
in vivo
).
Segments
69–71.
Dorsal pore
beginning at VII. Chaetal formula 4 - 2–4: 4 - 2–4.
Epidermal gland cells
brownish, abundant in I–IV, 3–4 rows per segment; cells in other segments indistinct, one row per segment.
Clitellum
in XII–1/2XIII, girdle-shaped, well-developed, cells in dense rows.
Brain
ca. 100 μm long and 100–115 μm wide; slightly concave anteriorly, rounded or truncate posteriorly, sides converging anteriad. A pair of
oesophageal appendages
in IV–VI, with 3–4 branches in the terminal; lumen distinct and tapering to the end. 5 pairs of preclitellar
nephridia
from 6/7–10/11, postseptale almost as twice as anteseptale, efferent duct rising from postseptale and near the septum. Origin of
dorsal blood vessel
in XXIV–XXV, blood colourless.
Coelomocytes
abundant. Mucocytes 35–45 μm in diameter, the outline wave-shaped, without refractile vesicles. Lenticytes small, ca. 5 μm in diameter.
Chloragocytes
from VI.
Chylus cells
in XIII–XV, occupying 2 segments.
Subneural glands
present in XIII–XIV, between two bundles of ventral chaetae.
Seminal vesicle
small, occupying only one segment (XI).
Sperm funnel
pear-shaped, tapering to the end and connecting to sperm duct, ca. 165–200 μm long and 100–110 μm wide; collar almost as wide as funnel body. The head of
spermatozoa
long, the length more than the width of XII.
Sperm duct
long, ca. 5 μm in diameter, coiled irregular in XII.
Male copulatory organ
compact, ca. 150 μm long and 50 μm wide. One mature
egg
at a time.
Spermatheca
. Ectal duct long, longer than the width in V, ca. 5 μm wide; ectal duct gland absent. Ampulla onion-shaped, without diverticula, ca. 75–100 μm wide. Ental ducts connecting to oesophage separately in V/VI.
Morphologically,
Fridericia parathalassia
sensu Chen
agrees with original description in chaetae, oesophageal appendages, clitellum, subneural glands, long spermatozoa and spermathecae. But it differs significantly from the original description in body size (69–71 vs. 42–49), dorsal blood vessel (XXIV–XXV vs. XX–XXII), preclitellar nephridia (5 vs. 4 pairs) and spermathecal ectal glands (absent vs. present). Furthermore,
Fridericia parathalassia
always lives in marine coastal habitats, but Chen (2009) described “
Fridericia parathalassia
” based on specimens collected from
Guizhou Province
, which is far from the sea and does not match the known habitat requirements. The record of “
Fridericia parathalassia
” is probably a misidentification; further work is necessary to establish its true identity.