New and lesser known species of Chrysopetalidae, Phyllodocidae and Syllidae from south California (Phyllodocida, Aciculata, Annelida)
Author
Pleijel, Fredrik
Author
Aguado, Maria Teresa
Author
Rouse, Greg W.
text
Zootaxa
2012
3506
1
25
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.211061
154427e6-de83-4059-9a41-e69a4e03a86c
1175-5326
211061
Pterocirrus montereyensis
(
Hartman, 1936
)
Figs 11
,
12
Sige montereyensis
Hartman, 1936
: 126
, figs 27–29, 1961: 14, 1968: 301, figs 1–3;
Pleijel 1990
: 182
.
Pterocirrus montereyensis
Pleijel 1991
: 260
.
Type
material:
Holotype
(
USNM
20340).
Material examined: California.
Holotype
(
USNM
20340), Monterey Bay, 6–8 fathoms, coll. E. F. Ricketts
Jun 1934
; 1 spm, preserved in ethanol (SIO-BIC A2631), La Jolla, off La Jolla Beach,
32°50.26’N
,
32°50.26’N
,
15 m
depth,
Macrocystis pyrifera
holdfasts,
SCUBA
, colls GWR & Phil Zerofski
15 Oct 2010
; 1 spm, preserved in ethanol (SIO-BIC A2632), same collection data; 1 spm, preserved in ethanol (SIO-BIC A2633), same collection data; 1 spm, preserved in ethanol, same collection data, destroyed for
DNA
sequencing.
FIGURE 11
. Micrographs of live, relaxed specimen of
Pterocirrus montereyensis
(specimen used for sequencing).
A,
entire specimen, dorsal view.
B,
anterior end, dorsal view. Scale bars A 2 mm, B 1 mm.
Description: Entire specimen
35 mm
long for 115 segments (specimen used for sequencing). Live specimens yellowish transparent with dorsum covered with dense, fine brown-grey spots, also on dorsal cirri but less dense (
Fig. 11
A, B). Eyes dark red. Preserved specimens yellowish with brown to violet dorsum. Body elongated cylindrical with truncate anterior and tapering posterior end (
Fig. 11
A), venter flattened. Prostomium rounded, about as wide as long (
Fig. 11
B). Palps and paired antennae long, tapering to fine tips, insert point without prostomial protuberance. Median antenna similar to paired antennae and palps, inserted on antero-dorsal side of prostomium, well anterior to eyes. Eyes very large, rounded. Nuchal organs not observed. Everted proboscis densely covered with diffusely distributed filiform papillae, terminal ring not observed. Segment 1 dorsally partly reduced, visible as triangular section forming a posterior incision in posterior side of prostomium. Dorsal cirri of segment 1 and ventral cirri of segment 2 reaching segment 7–8, dorsal cirri of segments 2 and 3 reaching segment 14–16. Ventral cirri of segment 2 with large foliaceous ventral extension (
Fig. 12
A). Segment 3 without neuropodial lobes and chaetae, segment 4 with neuropodial lobes and chaetae. Dorsal cirri almost twice as long as wide, asymmetrical at bases around longitudinal axis, with pointed tips (
Fig. 12
B). Supraacicular parapodial lobes distinctly larger and more elongated than subacicular lobes. Chaetae ca. 20. Rostrum of chaetal shaft with small teeth, similar to other
Pterocirrus
(
Eibye-Jacobsen 1991b, fig. 3H
) and many other phyllodocids. Ventral cirri oval, near twice as long as wide, with poorly defined tips. Pygidial cirri cylindrical, inflated, with pointed ends (
Fig. 11
A). Pygidial papilla absent.
FIGURE 12
. LM micrographs of
Pterocirrus montereyensis
(SIO-BIC A2631).
A,
ventral cirrus segment 2, right side. Scale bar A200 µm.
B,
dorsal cirrus from median segment. Same scale.
Distribution: Only known from Monterey and La Jolla in California.
Habitat: In her original description, Hartman did not specify habitat, but later (1961) stated that it occurs in intertidal rocky areas; otherwise only known from holdfasts of
Macrocystis pyrifera
.
Remarks: This species is referred to
Pterocirrus
based on the presence of very large and elliptical eyes, enlarged ventral cirri on segment 2 with prolonged ventral wings, and densely and diffusely distributed long, filform proboscideal papillae.
Pterocirrus montereyensis
is very similar to
P. macroceros
(Grube, 1860)
, and belongs to what may be referred to as a
P. macroceros
species complex with a world-wide distribution in temperate and warm water regions (Pleijel pers. obs.). The group is characterized by having a triangular portion of segment 1 visible as a posterior incision in the prostomium, dorsal cirri near twice as long as wide and with asymmetrical basis, ventral cirri without distinct tips, and dorsum with a uniform brownish pigmentation. A distance analysis in
PAUP
* of the
COI
sequence of
P. montereyensis
(GenBank Accession number
JQ623498
) showed a 17% uncorrected distance from the sequence of
P. macroceros
from Banyuls in southern
France
(GenBank
AY996111
;
Eklöf
et al.
2007
).
A
BLAST
search for our
COI
sequence of
P. montereyensis
showed 99% identity to two sequences already on GenBank; one is listed as
Anaitides
sp. THS-2005 (GenBank
AY894308
) from Point Sur, CA deposited by
Struck et al (2005)
and the other is listed as
Bergstroemia nigrimaculata
(GenBank
HM473327
) from British
Columbia
from
Carr et al (2011)
. We suggest that the identities of the
COI
sequences at GenBank for both
Anaitides
sp. and
Bergstroemia nigrimaculata
require confirmation and should be used with caution.