New Species of Osedax (Siboglinidae: Annelida) from New Zealand and the Gulf of Mexico
Author
Berman, Gabriella H.
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093 - 0202, USA
Author
Hiley, Avery S.
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093 - 0202, USA
Author
Read, Geoffrey B.
National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research (NIWA), 301 Evans Bay Parade, Hataitai, Wellington New Zealand
Author
Rouse, Greg W.
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093 - 0202, USA
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-04-23
5443
3
337
352
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5443.3.2
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5443.3.2
1175-5326
11045291
AB6A5DE3-D85B-4103-A92F-917936F19EF3
Osedax estcourti
n. sp.
Fig. 7A, B
,
8A
Material examined.
Holotype
:
NIWA 159436
female (GenBank
COI
sequence ON211943,
18S
= ON220129,
28S
= ON220739,
H3
= ON254809), collected from a whale skull (most likely a southern minke whale
Balaenoptera bonaerensis
Burmeister, 1867
at
390–393 m
depth on the Pukaki Rise SE of
New Zealand
(
49.121° S
;
172.136° E
)
. Scientific trawl TAN1614, Station 9,
R
/
V
Tangaroa
,
December 1, 2016
. Fixed and preserved in 95% ethanol.
Diagnosis and description.
Live animals red, in transparent tubes on whale skull (
Fig. 7A
). Fixed roots and palps desiccated (
Fig. 7B
). Trunk not visible (
Fig. 7B
). Apinnulate palps are brown, approximately
3 mm
long and
1 mm
wide (
Fig. 7B
). Four palps contained inside translucent tube (
Fig. 7B
). Roots approximately
3 mm
long,
1.5 mm
wide, brown, still partially embedded in white bone (
Fig. 7B
). No dwarf males observed. The rDNC diagnosis for
Osedax estcourti
n. sp.
was recovered as: ‘C’ at site 348, ‘G’ at site 579, and ‘G’ at site 606 of mitochondrial COI.
Distribution.
Osedax estcourti
n. sp.
was recovered from a whale fall on the Pukaki Rise off SE
New Zealand
at
390–
393 m
.
Etymology.
Osedax estcourti
n. sp.
is named in remembrance of Dr. Ivan Neil Estcourt (1938–1981), benthic ecologist and the first polychaetologist researcher at the former
New Zealand
Oceanographic Institute (now NIWA).
Remarks.
Osedax estcourti
n. sp.
belongs to Clade II, an apinnulate clade.
Osedax estcourti
n. sp.
was recovered as the sister species to
Osedax ventana
, known from
2,898 m
in Monterey Bay (
California
,
USA
), though the relationship was not well supported, with poor bootstrap support (
Fig. 2
). The minimum interspecific distance between
O. estcourti
and
O. ventana
was 14.6% (
Table 3
), thus providing ample molecular evidence for it to be a new species. Two other specimens were destroyed for sequencing (ON211941, ON211942). The new species had a 1.5% maximum intraspecific pairwise distance among the three available sequences, though all three sequences showed the rDNC diagnostic bases. The haplotype network for
Osedax estcourti
n. sp.
showed three distinct haplotypes, one for each sequence with a maximum of 10 nucleotide substitutions (
Fig. 8A
). Specimens were not observed alive, however images of the whale skull at the time it was collected show red
Osedax
coating the surface (
Fig. 7A
), suggesting that living
Osedax estcourti
n. sp.
may have red palps.