Pherecardites Horst, 1912 and Branchamphinome Hartman, 1967 are synonyms (Annelida, Amphinomidae, Amphinominae)
Author
Bleeker, Joke
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Darwinweg 2, 2333 CR Leiden (The Netherlands)
Author
Harris, Leslie
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, 900 Exposition Blvd., Los Angeles, California, 90007 (United States)
Author
Ten Hove, Harry A.
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Darwinweg 2, 2333 CR Leiden (The Netherlands)
Author
Salazar-Vallejo, Sergio I.
Depto. Sistemática y Ecología Acuática, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Chetumal, Q. Roo (México)
ssalazar@ecosur.mx & savs551216@hotmail.com
text
Zoosystema
2023
2023-07-20
45
13
435
443
journal article
10.5252/zoosystema2023v45a13
1638-9387
8177448
514F0BBF-E6AA-461D-8B31-3A646B8C1157
Genus
Pherecardites
Horst, 1912
Pherecardites
Horst, 1912: 33
.
Branchamphinome
Hartman, 1967:
42
n. syn.
TYPE
SPECIES
. —
Pherecardites parva
Horst, 1912
, by monotypy.
GENDER
. — Feminine, after the epithet originally proposed for the
type
species,
parva
;
Brown (1954: 590)
indicates
parvus
is a Latin masculine adjective, meaning little or small (
parva
feminine,
parvum
neuter (see below).
DIAGNOSIS
. —
Amphinominae
with chaetiger 1 dorsally incomplete. Caruncle with a median ridge and separate, diverging lateral lobes. Branchiae from chaetiger 1. Neurochaetae spurred, with denticles along inner side.
REMARKS
Pherecardites
Horst, 1912
was described without an illustration of the anterior end.
Fauchald (1977)
included
Pherecardites
Horst,
1912
in his key to all genera; however, Fauchald regarded the body shape of
Branchamphinome
as oval, whereas for
Pherecardites
it was assumed as rectangular. Nevertheless,
Hartman (1967: 43)
indicated the body shape of the
type
species,
B. antarctica
Hartman, 1967
changes during development: “Smaller individuals resemble the short
Chloeia
whereas longer ones are more like
Eurythoe
.” The latter has been regarded as having rectangular body.
Consequently,
Pherecardites
and
Branchamphinome
have the same body shape and
types
of chaetae. What about the caruncle?
Horst (1912: 33)
indicated “caruncle consisting of a median axis and some lateral lamellae, directed backwards.” And in describing the
type
species,
P. parva
, a few lines below, he wrote: “its caruncle extends over three segments and consists of a median axis and four lateral lobes, directed backwards.”
Hartman (1967: 43)
indicated, in the description of the
type
species,
B. antarctica
, “the caruncle is tripartite, consisting of a larger, longer median lobe with lateral branches, and a pair of shorter lateral lobes […]” These two descriptions indicate a very similar shape, and after the study of
type
specimens, the two genera are herein regarded as synonyms.
Pherecardites
Horst, 1912
might be regarded as a name applied to fossils (
ICZN 1999
, Art. 20) and consequently, it could not “be used as the valid name of a taxon”. Further, as indicated in the example given for the same article, the genus-group name might be available if proposed “for genus-group of taxa of fossils […] and not merely to indicate fossil members of genera of extant animals”.
Horst (1912)
proposed
Pherecardites
, forming the name after
Pherecardia
Horst, 1886
, but he was not referring to any fossil members of the same group. Consequently, it cannot be rejected as a valid name.
There are a few instances where a similarly ending genus-group name has been regarded as valid, such as
Tringites
Cabanis
in
Gundlach, 1856
(
Aves
,
Scolopacidae
), or
Oceanites
Keyserling & Blasius, 1840
(
Aves
,
Hydrobatidae
).On the other hand,
Read & Fauchald (2022)
explained the etymology as: “The name of the genus is formed by the postposition of the suffix of Greek origin -
ites
, used to form adjectives, especially those to identify groups as ‘those belonging to’, to the name of the genus
Pherecardia
Horst, 1886
, and seems to be used to indicate the resemblance of the new genus
Pherecardites
with
Pheracardia
.” On the other hand, the suffix -
ites
is “to be treated as masculine unless its author, when establishing the name, stated that it had another gender or treated it as such by combining it with an adjective species-group name in another gender form” (
ICZN 1999
, Art. 30.1.4.4). As indicated above, because Horst used the feminine (
parva
) species-group name, the gender of the genus must be treated as feminine.
Hartman (1967)
compared
Branchamphinome
with
Benthoscolex
Horst, 1912
because both have tripartite caruncle, and concluded they differ because the former has eyes, and branchiae from chaetiger 1, whereas the latter had no eyes, and branchiae from chaetiger 6.
Kudenov (1993)
modified the diagnosis but restricted the comparison to
Benthoscolex
. After
Horst (1912)
the presence of spurred neurochaetae with denticles along the inner side in
Pherecardites
resembles
Hermodice
, although some other genera also have this
type
of neurochaetae such as
Benthoscolex
,
Linopherus
de Quatrefages, 1866
,
Paramphinome
Sars
in
Sars, 1872
and
Pareurythoe
Gustafson, 1930
. Horst likely restricted the comparison to
Hermodice
and
Pherecardia
because they also have complex caruncle, as opposed to those present in the other genera.
Benthoscolex
, however, has a caruncle with three longitudinal lobes directed posteriorly, but they rise from the same point, not from a single median ridge, as is the case in
Pherecardites
.
As currently redefined,
Pherecardites
Horst, 1912
includes
Branchamphinome
Hartman, 1967
. Consequently, the species described in the latter genus must be newly combined such that
Pherecardites
includes
P. antarctica
(
Hartman, 1967
)
n. comb.
,
P. islandica
(Detinova, 1968)
n. comb.
,
P. kohtsukai
(Jimi
in
Jimi
et al.
2021
) n. comb.,
P. parva
Horst, 1912
,
P. quinquemaculata
Augener, 1927
, and
P. tropicalis
(
Barroso, Ranauro & Kudenov, 2017
)
n. comb.
KEY
TO
SPECIES
OF
PHERECARDITES
HORST
, 1912
(modified after
Jimi
et al.
2021
)
1. Prostomium with eyes, sometimes coalescent; first branchiae with 3 or more filaments ............................ 2
— Prostomium with indistinct eyes; body pale; first branchiae with 1-2 filaments ........................................... ..................................................................................................................
P. parva
Horst, 1912
,
Indonesia
2(1). Median segments branchiae with 15-20 filaments; body colorless ............................................................... ..................................
P. antarctica
(
Hartman, 1967
)
n. comb.
(redescr.
Kudenov 1993: 95
), Antarctic Seas
— Median segments branchiae with 4-12 filaments; body variable ............................................................... 3
3(2). Body pale; eyes nearly coalescent, forming an 8-shaped spot ....................................................................... ......
P. islandica
(Detinova, 1968)
n. comb.
(recorded as
B. antarctica
by
Amoureux 1982: 34
), NE Atlantic
— Body with dorsal pigmentation; eyes separate, not coalescent ................................................................... 4
4(3). Median branchiae with 4-8 filaments ....................................................................................................... 5
— Median segments with about 12 filaments; dorsal pigmentation includes 5 spots, three dorsal and two interramal ..............................................................................
P. quinquemaculata
Augener, 1927
,
New Zealand
5(4). Venter of first four chaetigers broadly pigmented, following segments pale ................................................. ................................................................................
P. kohtsukai
(Jimi
in
Jimi
et al.
, 2021
) n. comb.,
Japan
— Venter with similar pigmentation along body .............................................................................................. ...................................................
P. tropicalis
(
Barroso, Ranauro & Kudenov, 2017
)
n. comb.
, SW Atlantic