Species of Odontosyllis Claparède, 1863 (Annelida: Polychaeta: Syllidae) occurring along the Brazilian coast
Author
Fukuda, Marcelo Veronesi
Author
Nogueira, João Miguel De Matos
Author
Paresque, Karla
Author
Martín, Guillermo San
text
Zootaxa
2013
3609
2
142
162
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3609.2.2
f85a8f54-3a60-4919-9458-159117a8c00f
1175-5326
220583
3A3D9A7D-6207-457B-B1FC-744A9202EB6B
Genus
Odontosyllis
Claparède, 1863
Type
species: S
yllis
fulgurans
Audouin & Milne Edwards, 1833, designated by Hartman (1959).
Diagnosis.
Medium to large sized body. Prostomium with two pairs of eyes and three antennae; palps fused only at bases or free, close to each other. Nuchal organs as one pair of ciliated rows extending along posterior border of prostomium. Peristomium with two pairs of cirri; rounded occipital flap usually present, frequently well developed, extending over posterior part of prostomium, covering dorsal end of nuchal organs. Antennae, peristomial and dorsal cirri throughout smooth to irregularly wrinkled, usually distally tapering. Compound chaetae as uni- or bidentate falcigers, elongated in some species. Pharynx usually short; trepan with teeth directed backwards and, frequently, two lateral plates; pharyngeal central tooth absent. Reproduction by epigamy; epitokes frequently bioluminescent.
Remarks.
Odontosyllis
is a relatively large genus of syllids, currently with about 49 valid species (Verdes
et al.
2011), relatively easily recognized by the morphology of the trepan, with backwards directed teeth, and by the usual presence of an occipital flap extending over the posterior part of prostomium.
In many species of this genus (including all the Brazilian ones), the dorso-ventral gradation in length of the falciger blades is opposite to that usually found in syllids (i.e., the dorsalmost falciger blades are shorter than the ventralmost ones). This feature was misinterpreted in Fukuda & Nogueira (2006) and is usually not mentioned in species descriptions.