Six genetically distinct clades of Palola (Eunicidae, Annelida) from Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Author
Schulze, Anja
text
Zootaxa
2015
4019
1
695
706
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4019.1.23
8b944dd9-5df6-4987-928f-5660b69b6d90
1175-5326
237471
EF65580E-2B09-47EC-9A97-C3504B5D8520
Palola
Lizard
Island Clade 4
(
Fig. 3
C, D)
Material examined.
AM W.44403, MI QLD 2371, sequenced; AM W.44653, MI QLD 2413, sequenced and photographed; AM W.44324, MI QLD 2375; AM W.44642, MI QLD 2413.
Description.
Specimens thin and threadlike. Anterior fragments of the two sequenced specimens closely examined (
Fig. 3
C, D). Fragments
9–13 mm
long and
1 mm
wide, with 35 and 75 chaetigers, respectively. No branchiae or ventral eyespots present. Mandibles protruding from mouth and relatively thin with a smooth, unserrated anterior margin (
Fig. 3
D). Maxillae not examined. Head and body with faint, relatively uniform brown pigment dorsally on prostomium, peristomium and anterior chaetigers. Antennae, palps, peristomial and parapodial cirri without pigment. Antennae and palps wrinkled, tapering and with pointy tip. Median antenna reaching chaetiger 2 or 3, lateral antennae to chaetiger 1 or 2 and palps to first or second peristomial ring. Tapering peristomial cirri reaching forward to about ¾ of the anterior peristomial ring. Eyes dark, round with a ventral notch and nestled between lateral antennae and palps. Acicula brown. Other chaetae not examined.
Remarks.
Palola
Lizard
Island Clade 4 falls into species group A. As mentioned above, clades 3 and 4 are morphologically very similar to each other but can be distinguished by the relative lengths of their antennae.