Mesoparasitic copepods (Copepoda: Cyclopoida) associated with polychaete worms in European seas
Author
Boxshall, Geoff A.
Author
O’Reilly, Myles
Author
Sikorski, Andrey
Author
Summerfield, Rebecca
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-04-09
4579
1
1
69
journal article
27318
10.11646/zootaxa.4579.1.1
a72a13f8-f366-41db-835b-4b42169fd25b
1175-5326
2637477
A4015309-D9B3-4BB7-ABCB-B88A1F8CE5FC
Xenocoeloma orbicularis
sp. nov.
Type Material
:
Holotype
ovigerous
♀
attached to head of
Paramphitrite birulai
(Ssolowiew, 1899)
,
Statfjord B
,
Stn
3-5 (
59.1735°N
,
01.843177°E
), depth
144 m
,
20 June 1999
; collected by
A. Sikorski
;
NHMUK
Reg. No.
2015.3035.
Differential diagnosis
. Female body orbicular with flattened underside (
Fig. 27D, E
); maximum length
0.87 mm
, maximum width
0.95 mm
, maximum height in lateral view
0.80 mm
. Body lacking traces of segmentation and without vestiges of paired limbs. Egg sacs paired, both egg sac stalks originating from common genital aperture located posterodorsally on body (
Fig. 27E
); egg arrangement multiseriate; egg sac length unknown (both sacs incomplete in
holotype
). Body attached to host via broad, featureless stalk, located on ventral surface just anterior to middle of body. Colour of body white.
Etymology
. The name of the new species refers to the shape of the ectosoma of the mature female.
Remarks
. This unusual parasite is placed in the
Xenocoelomidae
because it shares the possession of a posteriorly-located common genital atrium, within which both egg sacs originate. It is placed in
Xenocoeloma
because the body is carried external to the host. The body of the ovigerous female differs markedly in proportions from the two previously described species of
Xenocoeloma
: in
X. brumpti
and
X. alleni
the L:W ratio of the cylindrical ectosoma of the adult female is 3.42 to 4.8:1 and about 1.75 to 3.39:1, respectively, whereas in the new species the body is wider than long and is orbicular rather than cylindrical. The establishment of a new species to accommodate this single specimen should be treated as a working hypothesis to be tested when more material and molecular data are available.
The host of the new species belongs to the subfamily
Terebellinae
and, given that all other known hosts of
Xenocoeloma
species belong to the subfamily
Polycirrinae
, the utilization of a host from a different subfamily could be interpreted as supporting evidence justifying the establishment of the new species. However, as noted below, another xenocoelomid,
Aphanodomus terebellae
, has now been reported from six different hosts also representing two subfamilies of
Terebellidae
.