Limnodrilus sulphurensis n. sp., from a sulfur cave in Colorado, USA, with notes on the morphologically similar L. profundicola (Clitellata, Naididae, Tubificinae)
Author
Fend, Steven V.
Author
Liu, Yingkui
Author
Steinmann, David
Author
Giere, Olav
Author
Barton, Hazel A.
Author
Luiszer, Fred
Author
Erséus, Christer
text
Zootaxa
2016
4066
4
451
468
journal article
51173
10.11646/zootaxa.4066.4.6
644db33c-001e-4067-92e0-a5fbf7b384cd
1175-5326
261849
87790552-1DFF-41DF-B6C4-5BD43D19E998
Limnodrilus profundicola
(
Verrill, 1871
)
(
Figure 4
)
Tubifex profundicola
Verrill, 1871
, in
Smith & Verrill 1871
: 451
.
Limnodrilus helveticus
Piguet, 1913
: 134
–136, Fig. 8;
Chekanovskaya 1962
: 316
–317, Fig. 153A; Sokol’skaya 1972 (1983 translation): 11.
Limnodrilus profundicola
(Verrill)
.
Brinkhurst 1965
: 130
–131,
Fig. 4
K–M;
Kennedy 1969
: 54
–58, Figs. 5, 8,
Tables 1
–3;
Brinkhurst 1971
: 470
, Fig. 8.4D,E;
Ohtaka 1992
: 34
–35,
Fig. 3
,
Steinlechner 1987
: 57
–63,
Figs. 2–4
;
Timm 1998
: 37
, Figs. 68, 69; van
Haaren & Soors 2013
: 180
–181, Figs. 235–237;
Cui
et al.
2015
: 526
–527, Fig. 7.
?
Limnodrilus alpestris
Eisen, 1879
: 10
;
Eisen 1886
: 896
–897, Pl. XII Fig. 11, Pl. XVII Fig. 11, Pl. XIX Fig. 18.
?
Limnodrilus monticola
:
Eisen, 1879
: 18
;
Eisen 1886
: 896
, Pl. XI, Fig. 10.
Material examined.
Museum specimens
.
USNM
32598,
Tubifex profundicola
,
holotype
, 1 slide from Lake Superior.
USNM
32597, Green Lake, Wisconsin, 1921, collected by Juday, whole mount, "referred to as
?
L. helveticus
in notebooks made by F. Smith" (
Brinkhurst 1965
).
USNM
32590,
Limnodrilus monticola
,
syntypes
,
3 specimens
from Sierra Nevada, California, 1876).
USNM
32592,
Limnodrilus alpestris
,
syntypes
,
3 specimens
from Sierra Nevada, California, 1876. All listed
USNM
material was examined by
Brinkhurst (1965)
and identified as
Limnodrilus profundicola
.
New material.
USA
, Lake Michigan, near
Holland
, Ottawa Co., Michigan, depth
6 to 25 m
,
Jun-1977, 2
whole mounts. Lake Michigan, nearshore habitat in the southern basin, various dates, collected by T. Nalepa, 6 dissected and 10 whole mounts.
Estonia
, Lake Peipsi,
6-Jun-1989
, collected by T. Timm, 2 dissected, 3 whole mounts. Pärnu River,
28-Jul-1960
, collected by T. Timm, 11 whole mounts.
Russia
, Arkhangelsk Region, Pinega River,
22-Jul- 1973
, collected by T. Timm, 2 whole mounts. Kamchatka Peninsula, Lake Kuril’skoe,
27-Aug-1997
, depth
3.5 m
, collected by T.L. Vvdenskaya, 2 dissected, 1 whole mount.
Japan
, near Hyasaki, Lake Biwa,
90 m
depth,
1-Dec- 1998
, collected by. A. Ohtaka, 2 dissected, 2 whole mounts.
Descriptive notes.
Museum specimens
: The
holotype
,
USNM
32598, has mostly dissolved since Brinkhurst’s (1965) redescription, with no penis sheath or chaetae visible.
USNM
32597 probably represents a different species, as the penis sheaths are about
500 mm
long, curved, with length/width ratio over 8.
USNM
32590 and 32592 could not be confirmed, as penis sheaths were not visible.
FIGURE 4.
Limnodrilus profundicola
.
A–D.
Atrium and penis sheath:
A
, from Lake Biwa, Japan;
B
, from Lake Michigan, USA;
C
, from Lake Peipsi, Estonia;
D
, from Lake Kuril’skoe, Kamchatka.
E.
Spermatheca, from Lake Peipsi, Estonia.
F.
Spermatheca, from Lake Michigan, USA.
G.
A ventral chaetal bundle in VI, from Pärnu River, Estonia.
H.
Three ventral chaetae in VIII, from Lake Michigan, USA.
I.
Ventral chaetae in VII, Pärnu River, Estonia.
J.
Ventral chaetae in IV, Lake Michigan.
K.
Head of penis sheath, Lake Michigan, USA.
New material
: Chaetae are bifid with teeth slightly curved and approximately equal, or the upper tooth slightly longer in anterior segments (
Fig. 4
G–J). As in most naidid species, chaetae are more numerous and slightly larger in bundles of anterior segments, and there are at most 1 or 2 "replacement" chaetae. Number of chaetae per bundle
4–9 in
anterior segments,
2–3 in
posterior segments.
Chloragogen tissue is not particularly dark in any of the
profundicola
specimens. It densely covers the gut beginning in VI, although it may be visible dorsally in V.
Length and proportions of penis sheaths are consistent with published values (
Fig. 4
A–D,
Table 1
). The head is always round and symmetrical, well-defined and orthogonal to the straight or slightly curved shaft, and usually somewhat curved back (
Fig. 4
A–D,K). Musculature is weak or not apparent in the penial sac, and does not show the strong spiral pattern seen in some other
Limnodrilus
species. Atria appear relatively short for the genus (
Fig. 4
A–D,
Table 1
).
The spermathecal ducts appear quite variable in general form. Still, the structure consists of an irregular sac covered with a thick layer of mostly circular muscles, which narrows to a variably expanded duct before joining the ampulla (
Fig. 4
E,F). The irregular ectal part ranges from globose to narrow within populations, and in some specimens it is similar to the corresponding part in the
L. sulphurensis
material (
cf
.
Fig. 2
G).
Remarks
: The original
L. profundicola
description (Verrill, in
Smith & Verrill 1871
), based on material from Lake Superior, gives no details on reproductive characters used to distinguish
Limnodrilus
species. As the
holotype
and most other museum specimens examined no longer appear useful, diagnostic characters given in more recent accounts are difficult to verify independently. Furthermore, measurements given in Brinkhurst’s (1965) North American key and 1971 redescription may reflect those derived from
Britain
and continental Europe (
Kennedy 1969
), rather than topotypic or even Nearctic populations. The characters given by
Brinkhurst (1971)
refer to the form of the chaetae ("upper tooth at most a little longer than lower") and then to the proportions of the penis sheaths. Approximate measurements of penis sheaths in
Fig. 4
K–M in
Brinkhurst (1965)
indicate total lengths about 270 µm (for
profundicola
, presumably based on the
holotype
), 340 µm for
profundicola
(as
monticola
), and 240 µm for
profundicola
(as
helveticus
, presumably European). The range of penis sheath length/width values is very broad (2–7) in those references, but the mean (4.5) is similar to other published
profundicola
values, as well as to the new measurements (
Table 1
).
Kennedy (1969)
appears to use the same values, concluding that
profundicola
is best determined by the circular head at the ectal end of the sheath, which is more broad and flat than that of
L. udekemianus
, and never forming an asymmetrical hood, as in some forms of
L. hoffmeisteri
sensu lato
.
The description of
L. helveticus
(
Piguet 1913
)
was more detailed, showing basic morphology of the penis sheath, atria, chaetae, and spermathecae. It should be noted that Sokol’skaya (1972, 1983) questioned Brinkhurst’s synonymies and preferred to retain
helveticus
, based on the high variability in penial morphology in the above descriptions, and also because the
profundicola
spermathecae were not described by either
Brinkhurst (1965
,
1971
) or
Kennedy (1969)
. This apparently refers to the spermathecal duct, which Sokol’skaya (1983, Fig. 6) describes and illustrates as "forming a distal expansion".
Piguet (1913, Fig. 8B)
described and illustrated a duct with a globular ectal end, and
Cui
et al.
(2015
, Fig. 7A) illustrate a sharply expanded spermathecal duct in a specimen from Tibet, attributed to
profundicola
. Spermathecal ducts were consistently enlarged in all of our new material, but the ectal end was globular in some, sacciform in other specimens (
Fig. 4
E,F).
The new Nearctic material is from southern Lake Michigan, rather than the
type
locality in Lake Superior, but still within the Great Lakes region. Size and proportions of the penis sheath and chaetal morphology were reasonably consistent among regions, and comparable to literature values (
Table 1
), thus supporting Brinkhurst’s (1966) combination of
helveticus
with
profundicola
. Penis sheaths of the new material are all similar to illustrations by
Brinkhurst (1965,
Fig. 4
K–M)
,
Piguet (1913, Fig. 10b)
, van
Haaren & Soors (2013, Fig. 237)
and
Cui
et al.
(2015
, Fig. 7B). Chaetae are typical for the genus; teeth have normal, slight curvature, in contrast to the strongly angled teeth in
L. sulphurensis
. The nearly equal teeth in new specimens (
Fig. 4
G–J) generally resemble
Fig. 3
A–B of
Ohtaka (1992)
, Fig.
68 in
Timm (1998)
and
Fig.
4
in
Steinlechner (1987)
, but contrast slightly with Fig. 8a of
Piguet (1913)
and Fig. 5 of
Kennedy (1969)
, in which the upper tooth is distinctly longer. The chaetae in anterior bundles show a fan-like orientation, considered characteristic of Palearctic
profundicola
populations (
Fig. 4
G; T. Timm, personal communication). The spermathecal duct is expanded (
Fig. 4
F), consistent with Palearctic populations, and further supporting their combination.