Opheliidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from the western Pacific islands, including five new species
Author
Magalhães, Wagner F.
Author
Rizzo, Alexandra E.
Author
Bailey-Brock, Julie H.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-02-13
4555
2
209
235
journal article
27548
10.11646/zootaxa.4555.2.3
2373752d-6333-4f9d-9476-6f2e163a67da
1175-5326
2624293
A7CF86E1-C763-4082-B1C2-9B8B66428142
Armandia
cf.
paraintermedia
Parapar & Moreira, 2015
Figure 7
(A–D)
Armandia paraintermedia
Parapar & Moreira, 2015
: 590
–595, figs 10–12.
Material examined.
Tutuila,
American Samoa
: Sta. 11, Pala Lagoon,
14°19'20.6" S
,
170°42'44.9" W
, intertidal,
Sept/20/2014
, coll. W. Magalhães and K. Thurston (2 spms, BPBM-R3885);
Sta. 12, Pala Lagoon across correction facility,
14°19'6.5" S
,
170°42'57.9" W
, intertidal, muddy bottom,
Sept/20/2014
, coll.
W. Magalhães
and
K. Thurston
(1 spm,
BPBM-R3886
)
.
Diagnosis.
Parapodia biramous, with parapodial prechaetal lobe, ventral lobe and minute dorsal cirrus. Anal tube funnel shaped, slightly longer than wide with 12–13 transversal striations; up to five pairs of marginal papillae of similar length, digitiform; an internal, unpaired ventral anal cirrus, short, crenulated; a pair of digitate basal papillae.
Description.
Specimens
3–9 mm
long,
0.2–0.3 mm
wide for 27–28 chaetigers. Body slender, slightly tapering towards anterior and posterior ends. Prostomium conical, excluding palpode, longer than wide; palpode as long as 1/ 3 prostomial length, clavate, distal end with dorsal depression, spoon-shaped (
Fig. 7A, B
, detail). A pair of black eyes deeply and ventrally embedded in prostomium and a third, 1.5x larger than paired ones, on dorsal side, also embedded in prostomium (
Fig. 7B
). A pair of nuchal organs present; pharynx eversible, globose and entirely covered with short cilia; oral tentacles absent (
Fig. 7B
). Branchiae present from chaetiger 2 (always absent in last three chaetigers); from anterior to mid-body, branchiae long and not meeting dorsally (
Fig. 7A
); from mid- to posterior end, branchiae decrease in length; branchiae without pigmentation.
Parapodia biramous, with parapodial prechaetal lobe, minute dorsal cirrus and ventral lobe; chaetiger 1 with quadrangular parapodial prechaetal lobe and short ventral lobe; from chaetiger 2 to posterior end, prechaetal lobe become more rounded and ventral lobe digitate and more distinct from parapodial bundle. Dorsal cirrus minute, digitate and difficult to observe. Simple capillary chaetae in two bundles; notochaetae about three times longer than neurochaetae; notochaetae 3–5 anteriorly reducing to 2–3 posteriorly; notochaetae slightly longer than branchiae when branchiae is best developed and longer than branchiae posteriorly. Neurochaetae 3–5 capillaries anteriorly reducing to 3–4 or less posteriorly. Lateral eyespots anterior to parapodia 7 on 11 chaetigers (chaetigers 7–17), black and large, usually bean-shaped; eyespots of chaetiger 7, 16, and 17 of about a third the size of others, rounded.
Anal tube funnel shaped, slightly longer than wide, as long as last 2–3 chaetigers and with 12–13 transversal striations; anal tubes preserved tapering or rectangle-shaped (
Fig. 7C, D
). Posterior border provided with up to five pairs of marginal papillae of similar length, digitiform, shorter than length of anal tube; an internal, unpaired ventral anal cirrus, short, crenulated, seen through tube wall and inserted half way anal tube; a pair of basal papillae longer than marginal ones and digitate.
Remarks.
The three specimens from
American Samoa
agree partially with the description of
A. paraintermedia
Parapar & Moreira, 2015
by the shape of the anal tube and presence of minute parapodial dorsal cirrus. Differences were noted such as the size of the dorsal eyes in comparison to the right and left eyes (smaller in
type
material of
A. paraintermedia
and larger in the
American Samoa
specimens), size of the first pair of lateral eyes (smaller than subsequent ones in
American Samoa
specimens and same size as subsequent ones in
type
material of
A. paraintermedia
) and lack of a distinct incision on the prechaetal lobes seen in
A. paraintermedia
.
Distribution.
This species is known from Lizard Island,
Australia
and newly recorded to intertidal muddy bottoms in
American Samoa
.