Nereididae (Annelida: Phyllodocida) from intertidal macroalgae in Western Australia
Author
Hadiyanto, Hadiyanto
0000-0001-8911-8141
School of Biological Sciences, the University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia & Research Center for Oceanography, National Research and Innovation Agency, Jakarta, Indonesia hadiyanto. hadiyanto @ research. uwa. edu. au; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 8911 - 8141
hadiyanto.hadiyanto@research.uwa.edu.au
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-02-09
5239
2
151
203
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5239.2.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5239.2.1
1175-5326
7624123
CE60488D-EE58-41E5-9FB1-C34D82E795D6
Ceratonereis mirabilis
Kinberg, 1865
Fig. 2A–G
Ceratonereis mirabilis
Kinberg, 1865: 170
;
Hartman 1948: 71–72
;
Imajima & Hartman 1964: 141–142
;
Day 1967: 324
, fig. 14.10a–g;
Imajima 1972: 64–66
, figs 13a–s, 17;
Hartmann-Schröder 1979: 113–114
, figs 184–187;
Hartmann-Schröder 1980: 58
;
Perkins 1980: 4–11
, figs 1–4;
Hutchings & Turvey 1982: 98
;
Hartmann-Schröder 1985: 43
, fig. 23;
Imajima 2003: 170
;
Conde-Vela 2021: 305–309
, figs 3–4.
Type
locality
.
Brazil
.
Material examined
.
WesternAustralia
:
Cowrie Creek
,
Bidyadanga
,
18°32′23.82″S
121°46′09.91″E
,
4November 2020
,
2 specimens
(
WAM
V11616
)
.
Cape
Bosut
,
Bidyadanga
,
18°42′4.99″S
121°37′34.11″E
,
3 November 2020
,
2 specimens
(
WAM
V11617
)
.
Cape
Keraudren
,
19°57′52.62″S
119°46′54.44″E
,
5 November 2020
,
2 specimens
(
WAM
V11618
)
.
Cemetery Beach
,
Port Hedland
,
20°18′21.44″S
118°36′40.39″E
,
2 November 2020
,
1 specimen
(
WAM
V11619
)
.
Five Finger Reef
,
Ningaloo
,
23°11′24.36″S
113°46′24.35″E
,
19 September 2020
,
4 specimens
(
WAM
V11620
)
.
Gnaraloo
,
23°46′21.83″S
113°32′9.24″E
,
22 September 2020
,
2 specimens
(
WAM
V11621
)
.
Coral Bay
,
Ningaloo
,
23°9′16.27″S
113°46′4.40″E
,
26 July 2016
,
1 specimen
(
WAM
V11622
)
.
Description
. Incomplete specimens with 15–61 chaetigers, posterior end missing, remaining body 3.0–
19.4 mm
long and 0.6–1.0 mm wide; cream yellow or reddish brown in alcohol. Dark brown pigment present on prostomium and tentacular segments, thin dark brown bands present on few anterior chaetigers.
Prostomium wider than long, with antero-medial incision. Eyes two pairs, equal size, in trapezoidal arrangement. Palps one pair, palpophores tubular, palpostyles subconical. Antennae one pair, as long as palps. Tentacular cirri four pairs with basal articulation, longest ones extending to chaetiger 8–16. Pharyngeal jaws reddish brown or translucent in small specimens, curved at tips, with nine teeth on each jaw. Paragnaths reddish black, present on maxillary ring only, arranged as follows: Area I= 0, Area II= 6–13 cones in an oblique oval, Area III= 8–14 cones in a circle, Area IV= 12–24 cones in a circle, Area V= 0, Area VI= 0 (1 rounded papilla in some specimens), Areas VII–VIII= 0 (
Fig. 2A–B
).
Apodous segment as long as first chaetiger. First two chaetigers uniramous. Notopodia present with digitiform dorsal and ventral ligules, dorsal ligules about half as long as ventral ligules in middle chaetigers and much smaller in posterior chaetigers. Dorsal cirri cirriform, attached on middle of dorsal parapodia in anterior chaetigers, nearer to distal edge of dorsal parapodia in posterior chaetigers, about five times longer than ventral ligules, similar length throughout chaetigers. Neuropodia with digitiform ventral ligules, acicular ligules, and triangular postchaetal lobes extending to same level of acicular ligule tips. Ventral cirri cirriform, attached basally on ventral parapodia, slightly longer than ventral ligules, similar length throughout chaetigers (
Fig. 2C
).
Notochaetae present with homogomph spinigers in anterior chaetigers, sesquigomph falcigers from chaetiger 13–19 (
Fig. 2D
). Notopodial falcigerous blades long, slightly curved, bidentate (with a small distal tooth), with fine serrations, serrations longer towards tips.Neurochaetae present with heterogomph falcigers (
Fig.2E
) and homogomph spinigers (
Fig. 2F
) in dorsal fascicles; falcigerous blades long, slightly curved, bidentate with fine serrations, serrations longer towards tips. Neurochaetae also present with heterogomph spinigers (
Fig. 2G
) and falcigers (
Fig. 2H
) in ventral fascicles; falcigerous blades long, slightly curved, unidentate (without a small distal tooth), with fine serrations, serrations longer towards tips. All spinigerous blades long, with fine serrations. Acicula translucent.
Remarks
. Our specimens differ from
Ceratonereis mirabilis
from South Australia,
Mozambique
,
Madagascar
,
Japan
, and
Brazil
.
Ceratonereis mirabilis
from South Australia has more elongate conical paragnaths in some specimens, digitiform prechaetal lobes in dorsal neuropodial ligules, and heterogomoph spinigers in the dorsal fascicles of the neuropodia (
Hutchings & Turvey 1982
).
Ceratonereis mirabilis
from
Mozambique
and
Madagascar
has minutely papillated dorsum in posterior segments (
Day 1967
).
Ceratonereis mirabilis
from
Japan
has unidentate falcigers in noto- and neuropodia of some specimens (
Imajima 1972
).
Ceratonereis mirabilis
from
Brazil
has fewer teeth on each jaw (7) and heterogomph spinigers in the dorsal fascicles of the neuropodia (
Conde-Vela 2021
).
The degree of variation in
C. mirabilis
is highly suggestive of a species complex. Assessing specimens using molecular and morphological evidence of atokes and epitokes across the oceans: Indian Ocean (
Mozambique
,
Madagascar
, and Western Australia), and Southern Ocean (South Australia), Pacific (
Japan
), and Atlantic (
Brazil
) will be required to establish the possible presence of additional species.
Ceratonereis
species
from Western Australia, i.e.,
Ceratonereis (Ceratonereis) perkinsi
Hartmann-Schröder, 1985
;
Ceratonereis singularis australis
HartmannSchröder, 1985
;
Ceratonereis (Ceratonereis) longiceratophora
Hartmann-Schröder, 1985
; and
Ceratonereis tentaculata
Kinberg, 1865
, differ from the present material.
Ceratonereis perkinsi
and
C. singularis australis
have unidentate falcigers in notopodia, instead of bidentate falcigers for
C. mirabilis
.
Ceratonereis longiceratophora
has only bidentate falcigers in ventral fascicles of neuropodia, instead of both unidentate and bidentate falcigers or only unidentate falcigers for
C. mirabilis
.
Ceratonereis tentaculata
has longer dorsal notopodial ligules than those of
C. mirabilis
.
Distribution
. Indo-Pacific Ocean: Red Sea,
Australia
,
Japan
, Galapagos Islands; and the western Atlantic Ocean:
Brazil
, Gulf of Mexico (
Table 2
).
Habitat
. Intertidal, subtidal, rocky shores (
Table 2
).