Revision of Hyalopale (Chrysopetalidae; Phyllodocida; Annelida): an amphi-Atlantic Hyalopale bispinosa species complex and five new species from reefs of the Caribbean Sea and Indo-Pacific Oceans
Author
Watson, Charlotte
Author
Tilic, Ekin
Author
Rouse, Greg W.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-09-18
4671
3
339
368
journal article
25508
10.11646/zootaxa.4671.3.2
43f393b8-6c05-4861-9b7c-2f7f1a169d10
1175-5326
3442512
99459D5F-3C35-4F7D-9768-D70616676851
Hyalopale
cf.
bispinosa
Fig. 1B
Material examined.
Mediterranean Sea,
USNM 1076945
,
North Africa
,
Tunisia
,
Stn.
202B, coll.
M.L. Jones
,
August 1973
, 1, 10NE, L:
0.8mm
, W:
0.6mm
;
NTM
W.25601,
Spain
, coll.
Rafael Sarda
, 2: 1, 10E, L:
1.14mm
, W:
0.72mm
;
1, 14NE (gametes).
NTM
W.25602,
Eastern Mediterranean
,
Greece
,
Crete
,
Elounda
,
15m
, coll.
Chatzigeogiou
et al, 2007, 1, 12E, L:
0.6mm
, W:
0.35mm
;
NTM
W.25603,
Elounda
,
15m
, coll.
Chatzigeogiou
et al, 2007, 2:
1, 9E
,
1, 16E
;
NTM
W.25600,
Elounda
,
20m
, coll.
Chatzigeogiou
et al, 2008, 1 anterior end
.
Diagnosis.
Hyalopale
with mid-body main paleae with sloping convex margin, 23/24 (26) ribs, 3–4 shallow raised ribs.
FIGURE 1
. Composite plate comparing notochaetal main paleae in
Hyalopale
species.
A
.
Hyalopale bispinosa
s.s.
Florida, W. Atlantic;
B
.
H.
cf.
bispinosa
Crete, Mediterranean Sea;
C
.
H. leslieae
sp. nov.
Florida Keys, W. Atlantic;
D
.
H. furfuricula
sp. nov.
Mozambique, W. Indian Ocean;
E
.
H. angeliensis
sp. nov.
Western Australia, E. Indian Ocean; F.
H. zerofskii
sp. nov.
California, E. Pacific;
G
.
H. sapphiriglancyorum
sp. nov.
E. Indonesia, W. Pacific. Note: correct number of raised and internal ribs figured.
FIGURE 2
.
Hyalopale bispinosa
s.s
.
Bahama Islands, LACM–AHF 2879, live, colour photo, by Leslie Harris.
Description
. Older Mediterranean museum material collected from
Spain
light brown colour; more recent fresh collections from Crete comprise individuals coloured a dark red-brown. Notopodium of segment II with four simple spines. Mid-body notochaetal fan with single lateral spine, 6–8 (9) main paleae, 1–2 short, curved midline spines. Main paleae with 23–24 (26) ribs with ~ 3–4 very shallow raised ribs (
Fig. 1B
), lateral and midline-most main paleae with 19 ribs. Tunisian specimen poorly preserved. Main paleae shape similar to other Mediterranean material and possesses up to 22 ribs and four shallow raised ribs.
Remarks.
In the absence of additional material from the locality the Tunisian specimen is provisionally included within
Hyalopale bispinosa
species complex. Mediterranean individuals of
Hyalopale
cf.
bispinosa
exhibit a similar shaped notochaetal fan and shape of main paleae when compared with that of
H. bispinosa
s.s.
, Western Atlantic, but the main paleae of the former possess a slightly lower range of rib numbers and includes shallow raised ribs; both share similar shaped apices but the brow is a little more rounded in the Mediterranean form (cf.
Fig. 1A, B
; Key). Mature specimens examined in this present study from the western and eastern Mediterranean did not exceed 16 segments with a length of
1.1mm
; this is in comparison with Western Atlantic material of
H. bispinosa
s.s
.
,
e.g.
Florida, 20E, L:
2.8mm
and
Bahamas
, 17NE, L:
2.75mm
. However, the number of ribs of the main paleae in the Mediterranean specimens (up to maximum 26), is similar between
H. bispinosa
material from the Eastern and Western Atlantic Oceans. In this paper, Mediterranean material of
H.
cf.
bispinosa
is represented by a DNA sequence from the island of Crete but cannot be confirmed as
H. bispinosa
s.s
.
until sequences are available for comparison from the
type
locality in the western Atlantic.
About twelve specimens, including mature individuals, were collected from Elounda and Alykes sites in
Crete
, predominantly from algae on rocky substrates at
15–
20m
.
The Mediterranean
Hyalopale
cf.
bispinosa
,
provides the only example to date of a
Hyalopale
species dwelling in deeper water. Specimens are also much darker coloured, which may indicate a degree of camouflage within a dark algal habitat. In comparison, all other
Hyalopale
species are found in shallow waters (
0–2m
) associated with lighter green algae and possess pale and patchy green coloured bodies. The
Hyalopale
feeding mode is hypothesized as predatory on algal-living invertebrates and is based on the buccal structure: a pair of small, pointed stylet jaws with an inner longitudinal groove and a muscular, barrel-like pharynx which includes calcified pharyngeal muscle; imaged through micro-CT for
H.
cf.
bispinosa
(as
H. bispinosa
) from
Crete
(
Watson & Faulwetter 2017
).