Integrative taxonomy of West African Magelona (Annelida: Magelonidae): species with thoracic pigmentation
Author
Mortimer, Kate
Author
Kongsrud, Jon Anders
Author
Willassen, Endre
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2022
2021-10-22
194
4
1134
1176
journal article
55992
10.1093/zoolinnean/zlab070
b9609b0c-597f-4617-8bc5-7fbd253302c2
0024-4082
6459404
278AA1B0-674E-414D-A47A-D87F43E2D6E4
MAGELONA GUINEENSIS
SP. NOV.
(
FIGS 7
,
8
)
Z o o b a n k r e g i s t r a t i o n.
u r n: l s i d: z o o b a n k. org:act:
053593E9-5402-4D0F-9519-8CAC8C23788E
.
Type
locality:
São Tomé and Príncipe
,
1.5345°N
7.4225°E
,
38 m
depth
.
Type material:
Holotype
,
São Tomé and Príncipe
St. 5SP–05, af in 75%
Etoh
(
ZMBN132137
)
.
Paratypes
:
Guinea
(Conakry)
:
St.
7GU–01, 5af in 75%
Etoh
(
ZMBN107270
)
;
1af in 75%
Etoh
(
ZMBN107271
, imaged)
.
Sierra Leone
:
St.
7SL–04, 1af in 75%
Etoh
(
NMW
.Z.2021.001.0004)
.
Nigeria
:
St.
6N–01, 1af in 96%
Etoh
(
ZMBN115736
, DNA-voucher); St. 6N–20, 1af in 96%Etoh (
ZMBN107331
, DNA-voucher)
.
Cameroon
:
St.
5C–10, 1af in 96%
Etoh
(
ZMBN107269
)
;
St.
6C–21, 3af in 75%
Etoh
(
ZMBN107268
)
.
Gabon
:
St.
5G–13, 1af in 75%
Etoh
(
ZMBN132140
)
.
São Tomé and Príncipe
:
St.
5SP –05, 1af, 1f in 75%
Etoh
(
NMW
.Z.2021.001.0005); 1af in 96%
Etoh
(
ZMBN107303
, DNA-voucher)
.
Angola
:
St.
7AN–05, 1af in 75%
Etoh
(
ZMBN107267
)
.
Etymology:
The specific name refers to
type
locality in the Gulf of
Guinea
.
Additional material:
Guinea-Bissau
: St. 6
GB
– 07, 17af in 75%Etoh (ZMBN107272); St. 7
GB
–08: 3af in 96%Etoh (ZMBN107273); 1af in 96%Etoh (ZMBN107274).
Diagnosis:
Prostomium width similar to length, no prostomial horns. Chaetigers 1–8 with slender sinuous notopodial lamellae with small superior dorsal lobes and triangular ventral neuropodial lamellae. Lamellae of chaetiger 9 triangular and postchaetal, with additional small, ventral, neuropodial processes. All thoracic chaetae capillary. Abdominal lateral lamellae spatulate, with pointed tips. Abdominal hooks tridentate, in two groups,
vis-à-vis
. No pouches observed, pygidium unknown.
Description:
A moderately sized species; junction between thorax and abdomen fairly marked (
Figs 7A
,
8A, B
), abdomen more rounded than the dorsally flattened thorax.
Holotype
, anterior fragment: prostomium
0.7 mm
wide,
0.7 mm
long; thorax
3.5 mm
long (including prostomium),
0.65 mm
wide; abdomen,
0.45 mm
wide; total length
9 mm
for 21 chaetigers. Largest DNAvoucher specimen (ZMBN107331), anterior fragment: prostomium
0.6 mm
long,
0.6 mm
wide; thorax 5.0 mm long (including prostomium),
0.6 mm
wide; abdomen
0.65 mm
wide; total length approximately
7.8 mm
for 17 chaetigers (width measurements not including parapodia). Other anterior fragments:
3–14 mm
long for eight to 31 chaetigers.
Prostomium (
Figs 7B
,
8A, C
), approximately as wide as long (L: W ratio 1), anterior margin straight and square, rounded lateral margins. One pair of prominent longitudinal dorsal muscular prostomial ridges, abutting for majority of length, diverging at distal tips. Thin and marginally shorter outer pair of ridges abutting inner pair for entire length. Light, almost diagonal lines, either side of ridges, composed of small oblong to long rectangular patches, not as marked as seen in other species. Burrowing organ partially everted in
one specimen
(ZMBN107331), longitudinally ridged. No palps retained.
Achaetous region behind the prostomium, roughly twice the size of chaetiger 1 (
Figs 7A
,
8A, C
). Chaetigers 1–8 similar; parapodia biramous (
Fig. 7C–L
). Notopodia with low, triangular prechaetal lamellae confluent with slender, smooth-edged, sinuous postchaetal lamellae, decreasing slightly in size along thorax. Single, small digitiform, prechaetal superior dorsal lobe present on all thoracic chaetigers, except chaetiger 9, decreasing in size in posterior thorax. Neuropodia with low pre- and postchaetal lamellae, encircling chaetae cufflike and confluent with slender triangular lamellae underneath the chaetal bundle, with rounded tips. Lamellae initially slightly prechaetal in position but becoming completely ventral by chaetiger 4, decreasing in size in posterior thorax.
Chaetiger 9: shorter and narrower than preceding chaetigers (
Figs 7A
,
8A, C
). Notopodial prechaetal lamellae low, confluent with slender triangular postchaetal lamellae, shorter but wider than on preceding chaetiger (
Fig. 7M
). No superior dorsal lobes observed. Neuropodia similar to notopodia, with a low inferior ridge terminating in an additional small, triangular process on both sides of the chaetiger. Chaetae of chaetigers 1–9 simple bilimbate winged capillaries.
Figure 7.
Magelona guineensis
. Holotype (São Tomé and Príncipe, St. 5SP–05, ZMBN132137): A, anterior region (dorsal view); B, prostomium (dorsal view); C, parapodium of chaetiger 1 (anterior view); D, ventral neuropodial lamella of chaetiger 1 (dorsal view); E, parapodium of chaetiger 2 (anterior view); F, parapodium of chaetiger 3 (anterior view); G, ventral neuropodial lamella of chaetiger 3 (dorsal view); H–N, parapodia of chaetigers 4–10, respectively (anterior views); O, abdominal tridentate hooded hook (oblique frontal view).
Figure 8.
Magelona guineensis
. Holotype (São Tomé and Príncipe, St. 5SP–05, ZMBN132137): A, B, anterior region (dorsal and ventral views respectively, showing pigment band); C, D, anterior region (dorsal and ventral views respectively); E, prostomium (ventral view, showing buccal region). C–E, stained with methyl green.
Parapodia of abdominal chaetigers (
Fig. 7N
) with spatulate to broad triangular lateral lamellae of similar size in both rami, showing a slight basal constriction, but with no obvious postchaetal expansion of lamellae behind chaetal rows. Chaetae emerging from definite ridge. Small triangular dorsal (DML) and ventral (VML) processes observed at inner margins of chaetal rows. Abdominal chaetae tridentate hooded hooks (
Fig. 7O
) all of a similar size, superior two fangs parallel, above main fang. Hooks in two approximately equal groups in each ramus, main fangs
vis-à-vis
(
Fig. 7N
). Approximately eight to ten hooks per ramus in the anterior abdomen. No abdominal pouches observed, although no posterior fragments present within examined material. Pygidium unknown.
Colour:
No living material observed. Preserved specimens cream in colour, faint reddish pigment present in the posterior thorax between chaetigers 5–8 (
Figs 7A
,
8A, B
), particularly noticeable ventrally. Pigmentation of freshly preserved specimens unknown, pigment likely to have faded to some degree after more than 10 years of preservation. Yellow dorsal, linear speckled patches (glandular?) present between chaetigers 1–4, adjacent to parapodia, either side of the mid dorsal line. Staining with methyl green (
Fig. 8C–E
) shows no distinct pattern, just weak stain all over. However, dorsal speckles and abdominal interparapodial patches more apparent in stained specimens (e.g.
Fig. 8C
).
Distribution:
Collected at 11 stations from eight countries during West African surveys at depths between 8 and
92 m
.
Distributed around the Gulf of
Guinea
, from
Sierra Leone
to
Angola
(
Fig. 1
).
Remarks:
Magelona guineensis
can be distinguished morphologically from all other magelonids in the MIWA region carrying posterior thoracic pigmentation using the following criteria. It differs from
M. fasciata
and
M. alleni
in possessing thoracic superior dorsal lobes, further differing from
M. fasciata
and, additionally,
M. mackiei
in possessing tridentate, instead of bidentate, abdominal hooded hooks.
Magelona guineensis
differs from
M. alleni
,
M. picta
and
M. nanseni
in the nature of the neuropodia of chaetiger 9; the neuropodial lamellae of
M. alleni
being ventral, as opposed to postchaetal, and in possessing additional small, triangular processes, which are not present in
M. picta
and
M. nanseni
.
The new species can also be distinguished from all other known pigmented magelonid species based on the following criteria. In stark contrast to
M. guineensis
, the outer pair of prostomial dorsal ridges of
M. cincta
are indistinct and no additional prostomial markings are present. Additionally,
M. cincta
does not have processes below the neurochaetae of chaetiger 9 (present in
M. guineensis
), and the ventral neuropodial lamellae of the anterior thorax in
M. cincta
are distinctly scoopshaped (not slender triangular as in the new species).
Magelona guineensis
can be distinguished from
M. cincta
,
M. equilamellae
,
M. japonica
,
M. symmetrica
and
M. variolamellata
by possessing thoracic superior dorsal lobes.
Magelona polydentata
differs in possessing polydentate abdominal hooded hooks (not tridentate). Lastly,
M. symmetrica
is recorded to have only light pigmentation in the posterior thorax, which does not form a distinct pigment band, as seen in
M. guineensis
.
The only remaining African species sharing affinities with
M. guineensis
is
Magelona cepiceps
Mortimer & Mackie, 2006
described from the
Seychelles
. However,
M. guineensis
differs in the prostomial shape (being somewhat onion-shaped in
M. cepiceps
), in possessing thoracic notopodial lamellae and superior dorsal lobes, which are both slender (much broader in
M. cepiceps
), and in the absence of superior dorsal lobes of chaetiger 9 (present in
M. cepiceps
).
Magelona hartmanae
Jones, 1978
, originally described off California, shares some affinities with
M. guineensis
in terms of lamellar and prostomial shape. However, the species differ in the nature of the postchaetal neuropodial lamellae of chaetiger 9, which is low and broad in the former species, whilst in the latter it is elongate. Additionally, the length of the prechaetal processes of the same chaetiger is much greater in
M. hartmanae
than the new species.