Deep sea Syllidae (Annelida, Phyllodocida) from Southwestern Atlantic
Author
Barroso, Rômulo
Author
Paiva, Paulo Cesar De
Author
Nogueira, João Miguel De Matos
Author
Fukuda, Marcelo Veronesi
text
Zootaxa
2017
4221
4
401
430
journal article
37286
10.5281/zenodo.252007
9bca82d8-9571-4098-9e52-f05182541be2
1175-5326
252007
F353EEB2-882D-464B-A2CC-F40606B58EDC
Exogone anomalochaeta
Benham, 1921
Figures 1–2
Exogone anomalochaeta
Benham, 1921
: 24
–26, pl. 3, figs. 11–13;
Benham 1927
: 62
, pl. A, figs. 9–10.
Exogone
(
Exogone
)
anomalochaeta
.
San Martín & Parapar 1997
: 291
;
Fukuda 2010
: 115
–118, fig. 31;
Barroso 2011
: 68
–70, fig. 1.
Exogone heterosetosa
.
Monro 1939
: 115
–116, fig. 9 (not
E. heteroseta
McIntosh, 1885
).
Exogone
(
Parexogone
)
tridentata
Hartman-Schröder 1993
: 143
–144, fig. Abb 20–21.
Material examined.
Project '
Oceanprof
'. 22°02’50.81”S, 39°52’24.10”W,
0–2 cm
,
1050 m
deep: 1 spec. (MNRJP 1151),
14 Dec 2002
; 22°27’31.1”S, 40°09’23.5”W,
0–2 cm
,
749 m
deep: 1 spec. (MNRJP 1152),
18 Jun 2003
. Project ‘
Habitats
’. 21°22’58”S, 40°19’44”W,
53 m
deep: 1 spec.,
21 Jul 2009
; 21°42’53”S, 40°10’16”W,
98 m
deep: 1 spec. (MZUSP 2905),
9
Mar 2009
, and 1 spec.,
7 Jul 2009
; 22°17’42”S, 40°26’59”W,
104 m
deep: 1 spec.,
23 Feb 2009
, and 3 specs (MZUSP 2908),
4 Jul 2009
; 22°23’22”S, 40°34’59”W,
110 m
: 1 spec. (MZUSP 2909),
25 Jul 2009
; 22°46’54”S, 41°3’33”W,
78 m
deep: 1 spec.,
22 Feb 2009
, and 1 spec., 0
3 Jul 2009
; 22°52’1”S, 40°57’29”W,
92 m
deep: 1 spec.,
22 Feb 2009
, and 1 spec. (MZUSP 2907),
3 Jul 2009
; 23°10’5”S, 41°3’6”W,
107 m
deep: 2 specs (MZUSP 2906), 0
2 Jul 2009
; 23°11’28”S, 41°0’49”W,
117 m
deep: 1 spec. (MZUSP 2904),
21 Feb 2009
. Project ‘
AMBES
’. 19°33’20”S, 39°2’36”W,
420 m
deep: 1 spec. (MZUSP 2912),
11 Dec 2011
; 19°36’26”S, 39°10’17”W,
392 m
deep: 6 specs (MZUSP 2911),
14 Dec 2011
; 19°49’37”S, 39°35’41”W,
410 m
deep: 1 spec.,
14 Jan 2012
; 20°14’19”S, 39°48’36”W,
381 m
deep: 1 spec. (MZUSP 2914),
9 Jan 2012
, and 5 specs (MZUSP 2915),
19 Jun 2013
; 20°15’36”S, 39°46’15”W,
1040 m
deep: 1 spec. (MZUSP 2913),
9 Jan 2012
; 20°35’16”S, 39°53’47”W,
410 m
deep: 58 specs,
8 Jan 2012
, and 27 specs,
18 Jun 2013
; 20°36’2”S, 39°51’35”W,
1000 m
deep: 18 specs,
8 Jan 2012
; 21°4’43”S, 40°8’31”W,
1024 m
deep: 3 specs,
30 Dec 2011
.
FIGURE 1.
Exogone anomalochaeta
. (A) anterior body, dorsal view; (B–C) falcigers, anterior and mid- to posterior body chaetigers, respectively; (D, H) aciculae, anterior and posterior body chaetigers, respectively; (E–F) dorsal simple chaetae, anterior and posterior body chaetigers, respectively; (G) ventral simple chaeta.
Additional material examined.
Exogone anomalochaeta
—
Australia
,
Tasmania
,
Macquarie Island
(
54°37'S
,
158°51'E
): 17 specs (AM W617,
syntypes
), coll.
H. Hamilton
, det.
W. Benham. Antartic
, South
Shetland Islands
,
Livingston
Island: 2 specs (
MNCN
16.01
/1517), coll. & det.
G. San Martín
, 0
7 Feb 1994
; 24 specs (MNCN 16.01/ 1519), coll. & det. G. San Martín,
19 Feb 1994
.
Exogone heterosetosa
—
Australia
,
Western Australia
,
Goss Passage
, north end of
Long Island
(
28°28'18"S
,
113°46'18"E
)
,
8 m
deep: 10 specs (AM W27057), coll. C. Bryce,
22 May 1994
, det. G. San Martín, 2000.
Exogone tridentata
—Antarctic, Antarctic Peninsula, close to Base General Bernardo O´Higgins Riquelme (63°00.49'S, 57°09.45'W),
97 m
deep: 2 specs (ZMH P-21218, holotype; ZMH P– 21219, paratype), coll. G. Hartmann, M. Siegel & G. Hartmann-Schröder, 1991, det. G. Hartmann-Schröder, 1992.
Description.
Longest specimen examined 3.0 mm long,
0.3 mm
wide, with 35 chaetigers. Palps narrower than anterior chaetigers, almost totally fused, with distal notch. Prostomium ovate, shorter than palps, with two pairs of eyes in open trapezoidal arrangement, almost transversally in line (
Fig. 1
A); antennae inserted close to each other, on middle of prostomium or slightly posteriorly; lateral antennae ovate, papilliform; median antenna digitiform, elongate, distally tapering, reaching around half length of palps (
Fig. 2
A–B, D). Peristomium shorter than subsequent segments, sometimes covering posterior part of prostomium, including posterior pair of eyes; peristomial cirri minute, rounded to ovate. Dorsal cirri ovate, longer than peristomial cirri, slightly shorter than lateral antennae, absent on chaetiger 2 (
Figs 1
A; 2A–C). Ventral cirri similar to dorsal cirri but shorter (
Fig. 2
C). Parapodial lobes conical (
Fig 1
A; 2A–C, G–I). Compound chaetae as falcigers only; anterior parapodia with 5–9 falcigers each, midbody with 4–5, posterior parapodia with 3 falcigers each; falcigers with distally swollen, spinulated shafts; blades small, with inverted dorso-ventral gradation in length, ~4–8 µm long along body, dorsalmost blades sometimes not reaching beyond tips of shafts (
Fig. 2
F), blades bidentate and spinulated, distal tooth shorter (
Figs 1
B–C; 2F–I). Dorsal simple chaetae present on all parapodia, subdistally inflated, with slightly more sigmoid and more acute tip on posterior body chaetigers (
Figs 1
E–F; 2G–I); ventral simple chaetae only present on posterior body, smooth, bidentate, tips resembling those of blades of ventralmost falcigers, with distal tooth shorter (
Fig. 1
G). Anterior parapodia with 2 aciculae each, aciculae distally inflated, with apparently hollow tip, one straight, other slightly bent distally (
Fig. 1
D); from proventricle onwards, single acicula per parapodium, similar to anterior ones, progressively stouter (
Fig. 1
H). Pygidium with 1 pair of elongate anal cirri, much longer than dorsal cirri and up to twice as long as median antenna. Pharynx through 3 chaetigers, tooth close to anterior border; proventricle extending for 3.5–5 chaetigers, with ca. 20 rows of muscle cells (
Fig. 1
A).
FIGURE 2.
Exogone anomalochaeta
, SEM. (A) entire worm, dorsal view; (B–C) anterior body, dorsal and ventral views, respectively; (D) detail of prostomium and peristomium, right dorso-lateral view; (E) nuchal organ; (F) dorsalmost falciger, midbody chaetiger; (G–H) chaetae, chaetiger 1; (I) chaetae, midbody chaetiger.
Remarks.
The specimens herein examined match the original description, except for the length of the proventricle, which is longer in Brazilian specimens (3.5–5 chaetigers, as opposed to 2–3 chaetigers, as in the original description). In addition, although not mentioned in the text of the original description, Benham illustrated a specimen with dorsal cirri on chaetiger 2 (
Benham 1921: Pl. 5,
Fig. 11
), while in Brazilian specimens, dorsal cirri are absent on chaetiger 2. Both these differences, however, could not be confirmed in the specimens examined from other localities, including the
syntypes
, all specimens being remarkably similar to the Brazilian ones.
Based on specimens from the Kerguelen Islands,
Monro (1939)
synonymized this species with
E. heterosetosa
McIntosh, 1885
. However, based on the illustrations provided (
Monro 1939:
Fig. 9
), all the material examined by Monro belongs to
E. anomalochaeta
and not to
E. heterosetosa
, which is a fairly different species (see
San Martín 2005
).
Exogone heterosetosa
differs from
E. anomalochaeta
by having the median antenna longer than the combined length of prostomium and palps, by having falcigers with proportionally larger blades, and also by having spiniger-like compound chaetae, which are absent in
E. anomalochaeta
. So, we consider both
E. anomalochaeta
and
E. heterosetosa
as valid species.
The
type
series of
E. tridentata
was also examined, but we could not find significant differences to
E. anomalochaeta
. Thus,
E. tridentata
is herein considered as a junior-synonymy of
E. anomalochaeta
.
This is the first formal report of
Exogone anomalochaeta
out of the Southern Ocean, although the presence of this species in waters off southern
Brazil
was already known from two unpublished PhD thesis (
Fukuda 2010
;
Barroso 2011
).
Geographic
distribution and bathymetric range.
Southern Ocean—Commonwealth Bay
and
Macquarie Island
(
type
locality—from the intertidal zone to ~
10 m
deep) (Benhan 1921)
;
South
Shetland Islands
,
19–184 m
deep (
San Martín & Parapar 1997
). Brazilian specimens were collected from
749–1050 m
deep.