The genus Syllis Savigny in Lamarck, 1881 (Annelida: Syllidae: Syllinae) from Australia (Part 3): new species and redescription of previously described species
Author
Martín, Guillermo San
Departamento de Biología (Zoología), Centro de Investigación en Biodiversidad y Cambio global (CIBC-UAM), Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, calle Darwin, 2, Canto Blanco, 28049 Madrid, Spain.
Author
Lucas, Yolanda
Departamento de Biología (Zoología), Centro de Investigación en Biodiversidad y Cambio global (CIBC-UAM), Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, calle Darwin, 2, Canto Blanco, 28049 Madrid, Spain.
Author
Hutchings, Pat
0000-0001-7521-3930
Australian Museum Research Institute, Australian Museum, 1, William Street, Sydney, NSW, 2010, Australia. pat. hutchings @ austmus. gov. au; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 7521 - 3930 & Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, North Ryde, 2109, Australia.
pat.hutchings@austmus.gov.au
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-01-23
5230
3
251
295
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5230.3.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5230.3.1
1175-5326
7561385
993813D9-1D74-4B6F-ACB4-EBE0183D5617
Syllis similisunzima
n. sp.
Figures 17
,
18
Material examined
.
AUSTRALIA
.
NEW SOUTH WALES
:
NSW 3382
,
Pittwater
, pontoon
400 m
east of
The Basin
,
33° 36’ 09” S
,
151° 17’ 49” E
, coll.
4 May 2009
, 11.9 m, hand collected on
SCUBA
, scraping of pontoon,
Holotype
AM
. W.35404;
Sydney Harbour
,
White Bay
Berth
3,
33° 51’ 47” S
,
151° 11’ 00” E
, coll.
5 March 2009
, 11.8 m, hand collected on
SCUBA
, scraping of wharf,
AM
W.53806,
5 paratypes
.
Diagnosis.
Single transversal, purple to brown, band on anterior segments; double band from segments anterior to proventricle backwards. Dorsal cirri long and slender, alternating in length in midbody. Compound chaetae bidentate falcigers, with small proximal tooth and short spines on margin. Posterior aciculae distally rounded, apparently hollow on tips. Pharyngeal tooth located back from anterior margin of pharynx.
Description
. Longest complete
paratype
, broken into two pieces,
7 mm
long, 0.47 mm wide, 61 chaetigers.
Holotype
smaller, an anterior part with regenerating posterior end, 4.2 mm long, 31 chaetigers. Body of medium size, elongate, cylindrical, with a distinctive colour pattern, anterior segments dorsally dark, each segment with a purple to brown or reddish band, anteriorly less marked; from proventricle onwards two slender transverse bands, anterior larger and less marked, posteriorly thin and darker; from midbody, only one thin transverse band, present just before intersegmental furrow, and some scattered spots of pigment dorsally on segments (
Fig. 17A
), or forming two rows, anterior light and posterior darker; some scattered pigment on prostomium. Prostomium oval, with two pairs of red eyes in trapezoidal arrangement and pair of anterior eyespots (
Fig. 17A
). Palps triangular, as long as prostomium. Antennae, tentacular and dorsal cirri slender and distinctly articulated (
Fig. 17A, B
). Median antenna much longer than prostomium and palps together, with about 37 articles, arising between posterior pair of eyes; lateral antennae distinctly shorter than median one, about half the length, with about 30–32 articles, originating in front of anterior pair of eyes (
Fig. 17A
). Peristomium shorter than subsequent segments; dorsal tentacular cirri similar to median antenna, with about 30 articles, ventral pair shorter, with about 18 articles. Dorsal cirri longer than body width, longer on anterior segments, with about 40, 15, 34, 37 articles on first four segments, and alternating in length in midbody and posteriorly, with about 36 articles longer, 20 articles shorter ones (
Fig. 17B
), diminishing in length posteriorly. Ventral cirri short, digitiform, not extending beyond parapodial lobes. Parapodial lobes distally bilobed (
Fig. 17A
). All falcigers heterogomph, bidentate with proximal tooth small, distally hooked, with long, thin spines on margin, numbering 7–8 per parapodium throughout; slight dorso-ventral gradation on anterior parapodia (
Fig. 18A
), 40 µm above, 25 µm below; compound chaetae of midbody all similar (
Fig. 18B
), broader than those of anterior segments, 33 µm above, 25 µm below; posterior compound chaetae (
Fig. 18C
) with smaller blades, 23–16 µm. Dorsal simple chaeta on posterior chaetigers, slender, subdistally spinulated, finely bidentate (
Fig. 18D
); ventral simple chaetae thin, sinuous, finely bidentate (
Fig. 18E
). Three aciculae in each anterior parapodium, distally rounded, difficult to see (
Fig. 18F
), two in midbody, distally rounded and hollow (
Fig. 18G
) and solitary in midposterior and posterior parapodia, distally hollow (
Fig. 18H
). Pharynx long, extending through 8–10 segments; large, conical tooth distinctly distant to anterior margin (
Fig. 17A
). Proventricle similar in length to pharynx, extending through 6–8 segments, with about 40–48 muscle cell rows, with midline (
Fig. 17A
). Pygidium rounded, with a digitiform median stylus and two long anal cirri, with about 40 articles.
Remarks
.
Syllis similisunzima
n. sp.
is very similar to
Syllis unzima
Simon, San Martín & Robinson, 2014
, from
South Africa
; both have similar colour pattern, size, shape of dorsal cirri, bilobed parapodial lobes, long and distinct pharyngeal tooth located distally from anterior margin of pharynx, and compound chaetae with slightly hooked blades. However,
S. similisunzima
n. sp.
has darker pigmentation on anterior segments, the transverse row of pigment on midbody and posterior segments is just in front of the subsequent intersegmental furrow, not after, as happens in
S. unzima
, the blades of compound chaetae in
S. similisunzima
are bidentate (although the proximal tooth is small), whereas they are unidentate in
S. unzima
, the anterior chaetae in
S. similisunzima
are longer than those of
S. unzima
, the compound chaetae of
S. unzima
have longer spines on the margin than those of
S. similisunzima
, and finally,
S. similisunzima
has a longer proventricle than
S. unzima
, with more muscle cell rows and a marked midline, which is lacking in
S. unzima
.
FIGURE 17.
Syllis similisunzima
n. sp.
Holotype, AM. W.35404. A, anterior end, dorsal view. B, midbody long and short dorsal cirri. Scale. 0.2 mm
FIGURE 18
.
Syllis similisunzima
n. sp.
Holotype, AM. W.35404. A, falcigers, anterior parapodium. B, falcigers, midbody parapodium. C, falcigers, posterior parapodium. D, dorsal simple chaeta. E, ventral simple chaeta. F, aciculae, anterior parapodium. G, aciculae, midbody parapodium. H, acicula, posterior parapodium. Scale. 20 µm.
Furthermore,
S. unzima
is a viviparous species living associated with sea cucumbers of the genus
Holothuria
; none of the specimens of
S. similisunzima
shows any sign of viviparity, and they are free living.
Etymology
. The species is named after its similarity to
Syllis unzima
Simon, Robinson & San Martín, 2014
;
similis
is a latin word that means “similar to”.
Habitat
. Scrapings of pylons in
12 m
depth.
Distribution
.
Australia
(NSW).