A review of the worldwide distribution of Marenzelleria viridis, with new records for M. viridis, M. neglecta and Marenzelleria sp. (Annelida: Spionidae)
Author
Radashevsky, Vasily I.
A. V. Zhirmunsky National Scientific Center of Marine Biology, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 17 Palchevsky Street, Vladivostok 690041, Russia.
Author
Pankova, Victoria V.
A. V. Zhirmunsky National Scientific Center of Marine Biology, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 17 Palchevsky Street, Vladivostok 690041, Russia.
Author
Malyar, Vasily V.
A. V. Zhirmunsky National Scientific Center of Marine Biology, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 17 Palchevsky Street, Vladivostok 690041, Russia.
Author
Cerca, José
Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, P. O. Box 1172, Blindern, NO- 0318 Oslo, Norway.
Author
Struck, Torsten H.
Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, P. O. Box 1172, Blindern, NO- 0318 Oslo, Norway.
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-12-13
5081
3
353
372
journal article
2998
10.11646/zootaxa.5081.3.3
a8980f07-e2f6-440e-a3fb-5b26636382ee
1175-5326
5775688
0173F43D-38AB-4010-8B2A-1DFD5F118A2C
Marenzelleria viridis
(
Verrill, 1873
)
(
Figs 1–3
)
Scolecolepis viridis
Verrill, 1873: 345
, 600–601.
Marenzelleria viridis
:
Maciolek 1984
(
Part
.)
: 51–55, fig. 2.
Atkins
et al.
1987: 311–320
, fig. 2.
Bastrop
et al.
1995
: North Sea population.
Röhner
et al.
1996a
: North Sea population.
Dauer 1997: 512–515
, figs 1, 2 (palp morphology).
Sikorski & Bick 2004
(
Part
.): 261–264, figs 2C, 3B, 4A–F.
Bastrop & Blank 2006: 1197–1199
.
David & Williams 2016: 821–827
, figs 1–5 (regeneration).
Whitford & Williams 2016: 357–367
, figs 1–3 (regeneration).
Kauppi
et al.
2018: 48–55
.
Wasmund
et al.
2018: 78
.
O’Reilly & Nowacki 2019: 1–4
, fig. 1.
Scolecolepides viridis
:
Hartman 1942: 13
.
George 1966: 76–92
, figs 1–21 (adult, gamete and larval morphology).
Foster 1971: 37–40
, figs 57–65.
Scolelepides viridis
:
Hartman 1944: 340
.
Marenzelleria jonesi
Maciolek, 1984: 55–58
, figs 3, 4.
Fide
Rodi & Dauer 1996: 72
.
Marenzelleria
type
I:
Röhner
et al.
1996b: 279–281
.
Bastrop
et al.
1997: 125–127
;
1998: 98–102
.
Fide
Sikorski & Bick 2004: 264
.
Marenzelleria
cf.
wireni
:
Bick & Zettler 1997: 138–141
, figs 1, 2.
Fide
Sikorski & Bick 2004: 264
.
Scolecolepis tenuis
Verrill, 1873: 345
, 601.
Fide
Foster 1971: 37
.
Remarks.
Verrill (1873)
described
Scolecolepis viridis
based on material from
Connecticut
,
Massachusetts
,
New Jersey
, and
Rhode Island
,
USA
.
Maciolek (1984)
transferred Verrill’s species to
Marenzelleria
.
Sikorski & Bick (2004)
established a
lectotype
and designated the type locality for
M. viridis
as Naushon Is., off Martha’s Vineyard,
Massachusetts
(
Fig. 2
). They also referred to this species
Marenzelleria
Type I, which was earlier distinguished in genetic studies by
Röhner
et al.
(1996a
, b) and
Bastrop
et al.
(1997
,
1998
). Invasion of North American
M. viridis
into northern European waters resulted in numerous studies on this species (see brief review in the Introduction).
In Europe,
M. viridis
was collected for the first time in 1979 from the western part of the North Sea: Fourth Estuary (
Scotland
) (
Elliott 1983
;
Elliott & Kingston 1987
; as
M. wireni
). In 1983, it was recorded from the southern part of the North Sea: Ems Estuary (
The Netherlands
/
Germany
) (
Essink & Kleef 1988
). In the late 1980s–1990s,
M. viridis
spread over the North Sea and also appeared in the Baltic Sea (see reviews by
Essink & Kleef 1993
;
Röhner
et al.
1996b
;
Bastrop
et al.
1997
;
Zettler 1997
;
Essink 1999
;
Olenin & Leppäkoski 1999
;
Leppäkoski & Olenin 2000
;
Simm
et al.
2003
;
Bastrop & Blank 2006
;
Blank & Bastrop 2009
;
Kauppi
et al.
2017
,
2018
).
We collected
M. viridis
from the Oslofjord in
October 2018
and here for the first time report the species for Norwegian waters. Two collected specimens had about 20 narrow yellowish-brown bands on each palp. However, this species was first collected in the region in 2008. A single
Marenzelleria
specimen was collected from Idefjorden (see VIR ID
24704 in
Table S1
) and photographed by Fredrick Pleijel in
June 2008
(
Fig. 3B
). Idefjorden is next to the Oslofjord, separating the southern parts of
Norway
and
Sweden
(
Fig. 3A
). The specimen was not preserved, but, according to the features shown on the picture (
i.e.
, about 20 narrow dark bands on each palp, arrangement of branchiae), we identify it as
M. viridis
.
Marenzelleria viridis
was reported from San Francisco Bay (
California
) based upon specimens collected during the Benthic Pilot Study (BPS) in 1994–1997 (
Cohen & Carlton 1995
;
Thompson
et al.
2000
,
2013
;
Ranasinghe
et al.
2012
) and Rapid Assessment Survey (RAS) for Exotic Species in
May 2004
(
Cohen
et al.
2005
). No samples were left in public museums from the BPS 1994–1997, but
Sikorski & Bick (2004)
identified
Marenzelleria
collected from that same area (Grizzly Bay, a northern embayment of San Francisco Bay; SIO BIC A 660, ZSRO P-869) in 1999 as
M. neglecta
. Moreover, Leslie H. Harris, who first identified specimens from the RAS-2004 as
M. viridis
, re-examined the same specimens after the publication of
Sikorski & Bick (2004)
and referred them to
M. neglecta
(Harris, L.H.,
in litt
.
2 June 2021
). The taxonomists at the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission’s Marine Biology Laboratory, who identified
M. viridis
specimens cited in
Cohen & Carlton (1995)
,
Thompson
et al.
(2000
,
2013
) and
Ranasinghe
et al
. (2012)
, also re-assessed them as
M. neglecta
following
Sikorski & Bick (2004)
(Norris, D., pers. comm.). We assume that it might be the only
Marenzelleria
species
widely distributed in San Francisco Bay in areas with low salinity.
FIGURE 3.
The distribution and morphology of
Marenzelleria viridis
from European waters. A, map showing records of
M. viridis
from European waters based on morphology (circles) and molecular data (triangles); new record from the Oslofjord, Norway, is marked by a rhomb; see Table 1 and Table S1 for details. B,
M. viridis
from Idefjorden, Sweden; photo by Fredrik Pleijel; see VIR 24704 in Table S1 for details.
Carr
et al.
(2011)
reported
M. viridis
from St. Andrews (
New Brunswick
,
Canada
). However, the photos of
two specimens
(NBPOL181–08, NBPOL262–08) provided by the authors in BOLD (http://boldsystems.org) clearly show features characteristic for
Spiophanes
Grube, 1860
: absence of branchiae, and enlarged neuropodial lamellae of chaetigers 5–13(14) bearing glandular organs. We compared the
COI
sequences of these specimens (
HQ024089
,
HQ024090
) provided by
Carr
et al.
(2011)
with those of other spionids and found them nested among
Spiophanes
, probably representing a new and not yet described species.
Chertoprood
et al.
(2004)
reported
M. viridis
from Kandalaksha Bay of the White Sea (
Russia
). One of the authors, however, clarified that it was a mistake in the manuscript and that only
M. arctia
was collected and identified in that study (Udalov, A.A.,
in litt
.
3 Apr 2019
).
Distribution worldwide.
Atlantic coast of North America: from
Nova Scotia
(
Canada
) and
Maine
(
USA
) south to
Delaware
(
USA
). North Europe:
Northern Ireland
, North Sea, Baltic Sea (
Figs 2
,
3A
).