Revision of Chloeia Savigny in Lamarck, 1818 from tropical American seas (Annelida, Amphinomidae)
Author
Yáñez-Rivera, Beatriz
Author
Salazar-Vallejo, Sergio I.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-04-22
5128
4
503
537
journal article
55837
10.11646/zootaxa.5128.4.3
bb39ebf4-a5cd-452a-afcc-841459b7274e
1175-5326
6479987
DFF17C52-A983-4F73-84A7-CE5889D62C13
Chloeia entypa
Chamberlin, 1919
Fig. 3
Chloeia entypa
Chamberlin, 1919: 30
, Pl. 13,
Figs 7
,
8
; Pl. 14,
Figs 1
,
2
.
Type material.
Eastern Pacific.
Holotype
[
USNM 19346
], off
Mexico
, between
Guerrero
and
Oaxaca
, R/
V Albatross
,
Sta.
3418 (
16°31’N
,
99°52’W
),
1207 m
,
11 Apr. 1891
.
Diagnosis.
Chloeia
with dorsum colorless; caruncle rectangular, pale; bipinnate branchiae from chaetiger 4; ventral cirri of chaetiger 2 markedly longer than following ones; chaetal bundles homogeneously pale.
Description.
Holotype
complete; body fusiform, pale (
Fig. 3A
),
9 mm
long,
4.2 mm
wide, 22 chaetigers. Remaining pigmentation includes a dark region on buccal lips in front of lateral antennae.
Prostomium semicircular with four red eyes, anterior eyes 5× larger than posterior ones (
Fig. 3B
). Anterior prostomial area blackish. All antennae of similar size, median antenna arising from anterior margin of caruncle (
0.6 mm
long). Palps inserted laterally on buccal lips, slightly shorter than antennae (
0.5 mm
). Mouth ventral on chaetiger 3.
Caruncle colorless, oblong (
1.1 mm
long,
0.4 mm
wide). Median lobe elevated with about seven folds. Lateral lobes narrow, each with seven folds, without pigmentation, hidden by median lobe (
Fig. 3B
). Bipinnate branchiae from chaetiger 4, present throughout body.
Parapodia biramous. Notopodia with single cirri; cirriform branchiae along chaetigers 1–3. Second ventral cirri (
3 mm
long) about 3× longer than following ones (
1 to 1.2 mm
).
All chaetae furcates (
Fig. 3C–F
). Notochaetae longer and wider than neurochaetae. Length proportions between chaetal tines vary from 1:
3 in
notochaetae to 1:
5 in
neurochaetae.
Anus dorso-terminal in last chaetigers.
Remarks.
The original description of
C. entypa
does not indicate the start of branchiae, and the relative size of the second ventral cirri.
Chamberlin’s (1919)
illustrations show a serrated edge in the notochaetae; however, in the
holotype
no serrated edges were observed in median notochaetae. Additionally, the dark violet pigmentation of the dorsal cirri is now lost.
Chamberlin (1919: 31)
noted that the depth was exceptional for the genus but the locality depth data was mistakenly listed as 66 fm (
121 m
) instead of 660 fm (
1207 m
), the correct sampling depth, as can be confirmed in Townsend (1900: 465), and also indicated in the label (
Fig. 3G
).
Hartman (1940)
, through the examination of six shallow water samples from
Ecuador
(1),
Colombia
(2),
Panamá
(1) and California (2), characterized this species as having a dorsal reddish-brown, continuous stripe, and emphasized the dark purple dorsal cirri. The violet pigmentation in dorsal cirri is a shared feature among several species of the genus but the dorsal stripe pointed out by
Hartman (1940)
was not mentioned by
Chamberlin (1919)
in the original description. The specimens that Hartman studied had been collected up to five years before her publication, whereas Chamberlin’s specimens were collected about 30 years before he studied them. Pigmentation might fade off after such a long time in ethanol. However, the dorsal stripe is a reliable diagnostic feature used to characterize specimens from different habitats, and, on the other hand,
C. entypa
has been recorded as an intertidal species from California to
Ecuador
(Kudenov 1975;
Dean 2004
). However,
C. entypa
was described from deep water sediments and probably lacks such dorsal stripe, but it has not been found again in large-scale dredging cruises in the region (
Fauchald 1972
;
Méndez 2007
).
Kudenov (1995)
suggested that this species could be a junior synonym of
C. pinnata
from
California
, since both share violet pigmentation in dorsal cirri and the second ventral cirri is larger than the others; nevertheless, they have differences in the first appearance of branchiae, in chaetal features, and in dorsal pigmentation pattern (
Table 1
). We disagree and think that these shallow water records might belong to a different species, whose abundance does not match the high numbers of
C. pinnata
off Southern
California
(
Hartman 1963
;
Jones & Thompson 1988
). Consequently, in so far as these records can be assessed after their descriptions or illustrations, they could be regarded as
Chloeia nuriae
sp. n
.
(see below).
On the other hand,
C. entypa
resembles
C. kudenovi
Barroso & Paiva, 2011
from
Brazil
. Both species were found in deep waters, they lack dorsal pigmentation patterns, have larger second ventral cirri, and their furcates are smooth. However, the position of the mouth in
C. kudenovi
is on chaetiger 2, dorsal cirri lack pigmentation, and has dark purple eyes, whereas in
C. entypa
the mouth is on chaetiger 3, has deep violet dorsal cirri, and red eyes.
Distribution.
Only known from the
type
locality off Western
Mexico
, in sediments at
1200 m
water depth.