Review of Oweniidae Rioja, 1917 (Annelida, Palaeoannelida) from Malaysia, with a description of two new species and a key to South China Sea species
Author
Ibrahim, Nur Fazne
Institute of Oceanography and Environment (INOS), Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, 21030, Kuala Nerus, Terengganu (Malaysia)
Author
Villalobos-Guerrero, Tulio F.
Departamento Ecología Marina, Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada, 22860, Ensenada, Baja California (Mexico)
Author
Idris, Izwandy
South China Sea Repository and Reference Centre (RRC), Institute of Oceanography and Environment, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu (INOS), 21030, Kuala Nerus, Terengganu (Malaysia)
text
Zoosystema
2024
2024-09-05
46
20
513
542
https://sciencepress.mnhn.fr/sites/default/files/articles/pdf/zoosystema2024v46a20.pdf
journal article
302441
10.5252/zoosystema2024v46a20
9bde1a14-70e3-4cf5-b3d1-2b3ae1b7d108
1638-9387
13712328
ABFAAE4E-1226-48CA-8FC2-F0CCB1A89228
Galathowenia minuta
n. sp.
(
Fig. 2
)
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
FB36DAA2-35F0-4A14-8607-4F8733CC7728
TYPE
MATERIAL
. —
Holotype
. South China Sea,
Malaysia
,
Terengganu
•
Kampung Kubang Badak
,
Kuala Nerus
;
5°24’12.6”N
,
103°06’15.5”E
;
2-8 m
depth
;
24.7.2021
;
Ibrahim
leg.;
decantation
;
UMTAnn 2184
.
FIG
. 1. — Sampling positions along the coastal defence structure areas of Kuala Nerus, Terengganu:
station 1
, groyne (1.1: 5°23’25.7”N, 103°06’59.9”E; 1.2: 5°23’47.5”N, 103°07’04.3”E; 1.3: 5°23’58.0”N, 103°06’26.6”E);
station 2
, semi-enclosed jetty type breakwater (Inside lagoon: 5°24’08.2”N, 103°06’06.6”E; Outside lagoon: 5°24’12.6”N, 103°06’15.5”E);
station 3
, parallel breakwater without tombolo (3.1: 5°24’21.6”N, 103°05’56.7”E; 3.2:5°24’32.4”N, 103°05’54.2”E; 3.3:5°24’32.0”N, 103°05’45.7”E);
station 4
, Parallel breakwater with tombolo (4.1: 5°24’38.2”N,103°05’39.4”E; 4.2:5°24’45.9”N,103°05’40.3”E; 4.3:5°24’42.9”N, 103°05’33.4”E);
station 5
, Batu Rakit (5°27’09.0”N, 103°02’58.4”E).
Paratypes
.
South
China
Sea
,
Malaysia
,
Terengganu
•
5 specimens
;
Kampung Kubang Badak
,
Kuala Nerus
;
5°23’25.7”N
,
103°06’59.9”E
;
24.VII.2021
;
Ibrahim
leg.; decantation; UMTAnn 2185,
LACM-AHF 13506-13507
,
ZRC
.
ANN 1616-1617
.
ADDITIONAL
NON-TYPE
MATERIALS
. —
South
China
Sea
,
Malaysia
,
Terengganu
•
44 specimens
; Kuala Nerus; St. 1;
5°23’25.7”N
,
103°06’59.9”E
;
24.VII.2021
; RRC
•
5 specimens
; Kuala Nerus; St. 2;
5°24’12.6”N
,
103°06’15.5”E
;
24.VII.2021
; RRC
•
20 specimens
; Kuala Nerus; St. 3;
5°24’21.6”N
,
103°05’56.7”E
;
24.VII.2021
; RRC
•
20 specimens
, Kuala Nerus; St. 4;
5°24’42.9”N
,
103°05’33.4”E
;
24.VII.2021
; RRC
•
11 specimens
; Kuala Nerus; St. 5;
5°27’09.0”N
,
103°02’58.4”E
;
24.VII.2021
; UMTAnn 2328-2427
.
ETYMOLOGY
. — The specific epithet was selected after the Latin adjective
minuta
(-us, -um) meaning tiny, in reference to the body size of the species. The name is proposed in the feminine, to match the gender of the genus (ICZN 1999: Art. 31.2).
TYPE
LOCALITY
. — Kuala Nerus,
Terengganu
,
Malaysia
.
DISTRIBUTION
. — Known only from the
type
locality.
DESCRIPTION
(based on
holotype
)
Short, slender, thread-like body, cylindrical in cross-section, BL:
10 mm
, BW:
0.02 mm
, 18 segments. Brownish colour in alcohol, slightly transparent, with some brownish pigmented spots encircling segment 4 immediately after tori (
Fig. 2A
). Elongated head, truncated prostomium, terminal mouth extending mid-ventrally as an elongated slit (
Fig. 2A
). Two ventrolateral brownish eyespots. First three anterior segments uniramous, each with notochaeta only. First and second segments twice as long as third segment (RLUS 2:2:1). White oesophageal commissures, ventral longitudinal band, Y-shaped in anterior segment, extending to segment 5. Anterior biramous segments starting from 4th segment throughout, three times longer than wide, segment 7th being longest; following ones becoming posteriorly slightly tapered and shorter, far posterior ones much compressed (
Fig. 2B
). Capillary notochaetae on both uniramous and biramous segments decreasing in size ventrally, basally slightly striated, median and distal regions with spinules; typically, more abundant in uniramous segments (3-9 capillary chaetae) than in biramous ones (3-4 capillary chaetae), the latter with far longer capillary chaetae posteriorly (
Fig. 2E
) but single in last three segments. Ventrolateral neurochaetae from segment 4, transverse rows of hooked uncini in long, broad tori (
Fig. 2F, G
). Tori along anterior to middle segments longer than wide, with dense oblique rows of uncini (
Fig. 2G
); in posterior segments (segment 14 and above) much shorter and smaller, with fewer uncini (less than 20), lying in rows forming oval fields. Bidentate, long-shafted, numerous uncini (around 100) in mid-body (6th to 7th) segments, fewer toward posterior end. Long teeth of uncini, nearly equal in size, arranged obliquely because one offset higher (
Fig. 2F, G
). Pygidium with terminal anus and two blunt lobes (
Fig. 2B, D
). Tube slightly longer than animal, slender, cylindrical in cross-section, composed of thin secreted layer, ornamented with sand grains and fragments of shells (
Fig. 2C, D
).
VARIATION
Number of total segments: 17-18.Total body length:
5-15 mm
. Maximum body width: 0.02 ±
0.002 mm
. Most specimens incomplete, laborious to extract from their tubes, especially at the middle and posterior parts, those variations could be greater than reported above. Most specimens lack pigmentation pattern, some have patchy brownish spots on mid-dorsal surface of head and pigmented band entirely encircling distal end of segment 4 (immediately after tori). No prominent constriction or division exists between head and first segment in most of the specimens. The first and second segments have transverse grooves or constrictions. Longest segment, 7, infrequently segments 6-9.
ECOLOGICAL
NOTES
Galathowenia minuta
n. sp.
lives in shallow coastal areas with a depth of
2-8 m
, inhabiting very fine sands of up to 86.70%, with a percentage of total organic matter of 1.6-6.3%.
REMARKS
Galathowenia minuta
n. sp.
can be distinguished from
G. annae
Capa, Parapar & Hutchings, 2012
based on several features. In
G. minuta
n. sp.
the RLUS is 2: 2: 1, whereas in
G. annae
it is 1: 2: 1. In
G. minuta
n. sp.
the brown pigmented band presents encircled segment 4, whereas in
G. annea
,
the brownish red pigmented areas is present at the head with some pigmented bands in the four anterior segments. The longest segment in
G. minuta
is the 7th segment, whereas, in
G. annae
, it is the 6th.
Galathowenia minuta
n. sp.
has two blunt pygidial lobes, whereas
G. annae
has three prominent digitiform lobes (the dorsal one is slightly smaller than the two lateral ones) (
Capa
et al.
2012
).
Galathowenia minuta
n. sp.
is smaller (
5-15 mm
BL;
0.018
-0.022
mm
BW) than
G. annae
(
5-11 mm
BL;
0.05-0.1 mm
BW).
In terms of similarity,
G. minuta
n. sp.
has a similar RLUS to that of
G. australis
(
Grube, 1866
)
and
G. oculata
(
Zachs, 1923
)
, 2:2:1. However, they differ by the absence of eyespots and the presence of long and short capillary chaetae in
G. australis
and a higher number of segments (>23) as well as a pigmented dorsal head in
G. oculata
(Parapar, 2003)
. In addition, segments 5-9 are the longest in
G. minuta
n. sp.
, with the segment 7 being the longest most frequently, whereas, in
G. australis
and
G. oculata
, the segments 4-6 and the segment 5 are the longest, respectively. More detailed information regarding the similarities and differences among
Galathowenia
species
worldwide is presented in
Appendix 1
.
The nearest record to
Malaysia
of
Galathowenia
species
sterns from
Indonesia
with
Owenia lobopygidiata
Uschakov, 1950
(currently accepted as
G. lobopygidiata
(
Uschakov, 1950
)
and
G. eurystoma
(
Caullery, 1944
)
, with the latter then being assigned as
Myriochele eurystoma
(
Caullery, 1944
)
(
Kirkegaard 1956
;
Parapar
et al.
2021
; GBIF 2022).
Galathowenia lobopygidiata
was recorded in the Banda trench,
Indonesia
and seems doubtful as incomplete specimens (without the anterior part, and only the posterior part being present) were described (
Parapar & Moreira 2015
). The transfer of the genus
Owenia
into
Galathowenia
for
lobopygidiata
species occurred as
Koh
et al.
(2003)
reported an identical anterior end structure for
Galathowenia
(without a branchial crown) compared with
O. lobopygidiata
samples from the Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Science. Regarding the Malaysian specimens, they do not represent
G. lobopygidiata
as the one recorded in
Indonesia
, as this species from the Okhotsk Sea locality has nine short, finger-shaped papillae in one row around the anus (
Uschakov 1950
).
In terms of habitat location,
G. minuta
n. sp.
shares the same coastal habitat with
G. oculata
(
12-2500 m
in depth),
G. quelis
Capa, Parapar & Hutchings, 2012
(
1- 60 m
in depth), and
G. annae
(
13-18 m
in depth) (
Parapar 2003a
;
Capa
et al.
2012
). However, the species has been classified as new based on several distinct morphological characters, especially the RLUS, pigmentation, and anal lobes.
Galathowenia minuta
n. sp.
has RLUS of 2:2:1, whereas
G. annae
,
G. oculata
and
G. quelis
have RLUS of 1:2:1, 1:1:1 and 1:2:1, respectively. In addition,
G. minuta
n. sp.
has pigments encircling segment 4, whereas
G. annae
bears pigments at the anterior four segments.
Galathowenia oculata
in general has pigments on the dorsal head, whereas
G. quelis
does not have any pigmentation.
Galathowenia minuta
n. sp.
is completed with two blunt anal lobes, similar to
G. quelis
. However,
G. annae
and
G. oculata
have three prominent digitiform lobes, with one located dorsally and another two located laterally (
Capa
et al.
2012
) (
Appendix 1
).