Review of Orbiniidae (Annelida, Sedentaria) from Australia
Author
Zhadan, Anna
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-10-14
4860
4
451
502
journal article
8231
10.11646/zootaxa.4860.4.1
1f5ee6c2-2635-44a8-8469-49319b7a8c62
1175-5326
4414137
876F1085-5296-4340-A951-41420C011917
Protoariciella
cf.
heterosetosa
Hartmann-Schröder, 1962
Figure 26
Protoariciella heterosetosa
Hartmann-Schröder, 1962: 131–133
, fig. 157–160.
Material examined.
Queensland
:
Lizard Island
, off
Chinamans Head
,
14°40’S
,
145°27’E
, depth
7 m
,
08.01.1977
, coll.
P.A. Hutchings
, P.B. Weate,
AM
W.43257,
1 specimen
on SEM stub
.
Type
locality.
Taltal
,
Chile
.
FIGURE 26.
Protoariciella
cf.
heterosetosa,
AM W.
43257. A–J: SEM, K–M: compound microscope. A. General dorsal view; B. Anterior end, dorsal view; C. posterior end, dorsal view; D. anterior parapodia, lateral view; E. anterior neuropodium, lateral view; F. Middle body, dorso-lateral view; G, H. Posterior parapodium; I. Posterior neuropodium; J. Posterior notochaetae; K. anterior end, ventral view; L. Anterior parapodia; M. Posterior parapodia. cc, crenulated capillaries; fc, forked chaeta; h, hook; u, uncini.
Description.
Specimens entire, body length
7–8 mm
, 66–70 chaetigers, width 0.3–0.4 mm (
Fig. 26A, B, K
). Prostomium short, round, without eyes; two peristomial segments (
Fig. 26B, K
). Transition from thorax to abdomen indistinct (
Fig. 26A, K
). Branchiae from chaetiger 8; narrow triangular shorter than notopodia in anterior and posterior part, longer in middle; absent on five posteriormost segments (
Fig. 26
B–D, F). Notopodial postchaetal lobes digitiform; neuropodial lobes shorter, triangle in anterior part, digitiform with widened base in posterior (
Fig. 26C, D, F
, J–I, L, M). Pygidium without cirri (
Fig. 26C
). Notochaetae long crenulated capillaries in all segments, in abdominal notopodia also 1–2 forked chaetae present (
Fig. 26C, D
, F–H, J, M). Neurochaetae long and short crenulated capillaries and 2–4 straight serrated uncini in thorax, crenulated capillaries and one curved smooth hook in abdomen (
Fig. 26D, E
, G–I, L, M). All uncini unidentate.
Remarks.
Protoariciella heterosetosa
was described from Taltal (
Chile
, East South Pacific). It differs from other
Protoariciella
species owing to a combination of the following characters: branchiae starting from chaetiger 8, short rounded anterior parapodial lobes, pygidium without cirri, one forked chaeta in the posterior notopodia, unidentate neuropodial uncini, and is serrated in the anterior segments but smooth in the posterior segments. The specimens studied here are similar regarding the starting-point of the branchiae segment and shape/distribution of the chaetae, except for the number of forked chaetae in the middle and posterior notopodia, which can be two instead of one. Our specimens differ in terms of the absence of eyes, shape of the anterior parapodial lobes, which are digitiform in notopodia, and triangular instead of rounded neuropodia. Previously, one species of
Protoariciella
was described from
Australia
:
Protoariciella australiensis
Hartmann-Schröder, 1981
. It differed from other species of the genus owing to the branchiae starting from chaetiger 6, presence of forked chaetae in all abdominal notopodia, unidentate uncini, some hooded uncini, and pygidium with 4 short cirri. The specimens studied here differ owing to the starting-point of the branchiae segment (8 vs. 6), branchiae longer than notopodial lobes, absence of anal cirri, and absence of hoods in all posterior uncini. Another species reported from the West Pacific is
Protoariciella tuamotuensis
Hartmann-Schröder, 1992
. It differs from
P
.
australiensis
and from our specimens by the presence of branchiae from chaetiger 5, presence of subuluncini in the posterior notopodia, and shape of the parapodial lobes, which are long and finger-shaped in both the notopodia and neuropodia. The specimens studied here likely represent a new species; but due to the few poorly preserved specimens and the limited knowledge of the important taxonomic characters in this genus, it is not described as a new species.