Ampharetidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from cold seeps off Pakistan and hydrothermal vents off Taiwan, with the description of three new species
Author
Reuscher, Michael G.
Author
Fiege, Dieter
text
Zootaxa
2016
4139
2
197
208
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4139.2.4
47bbf69d-81b0-4525-b382-c798b608d441
1175-5326
262112
1436B8C8-52BB-495D-8617-0EC8410AADE8
Eclysippe
Eliason, 1955
Type
species:
Lysippe vanelli
Fauvel, 1936
Generic diagnosis.
Prostomium without glandular ridges. Buccal tentacles smooth. Three pairs of cirriform branchiae. Notochaetae of segment II enlarged as paleae. Twelve thoracic uncinigers. Posterior thoracic uncinigers strongly elongated. Two intermediate uncinigers. Abdominal rudimentary notopodia absent.
Remarks.
Curiously, both valid species of the genus,
Eclysippe vanelli
(
Fauvel, 1936
)
and
E. trilobata
(
Hartman, 1969
)
were originally described with four pairs of branchiae.
Eliason (1955)
accredited Fauvel’s diagnosis to a misinterpretation of notopodia as bases of the fourth pair of broken branchiae and redescribed the species
Lysippe vanelli
in the new genus
Eclysippe
Eliason, 1955
. This new diagnosis of
E. vanelli
has been widely accepted (e.g.
Holthe 1986
;
Hilbig 2000
).
E. trilobata
, described as
Anobothrus
by
Hartman (1969)
, was redescribed with three pairs of branchiae by
Williams (1987)
upon examination of the
type
specimens and assigned to
Eclysippe
.
Day (1973)
argued that specimens of
E. vanelli
described by
Eliason (1955)
were different from specimens reported by
Fauvel (1936)
and subsequently described a new species,
Samythella eliasoni
Day, 1973
from
North Carolina
, which, according to Day, was identical to the Swedish
E. vanelli
specimens described by
Eliason (1955)
. However, he assigned the species to
Samythella
because of the uncertainty in the number of branchiae in
Eclysippe
(see discussion above) and because it fit into the generic diagnosis of
Samythella
according to his opinion. We do not follow Day’s opinion because the latter genus lacks the elongation of posterior thoracic uncinigers that is characteristic for
Eclysippe
. Furthermore,
Samythella
has broad, foliaceus branchiae, whereas
Eclysippe
has thin cylindrical branchiae. In his description of
S. eliasoni
Day
did not mention the elongation of posterior thoracic uncinigers, which is the most conspicuous character of
Eclysippe
. Therefore, the generic affiliation of
S. eliasoni
is uncertain.
Day (1963)
described another species,
Samythella affinis
Day, 1963
that bears some resemblance to
Eclysippe
, even though Day did not mention the elongated posterior thoracic uncinigers and acknowledged that the generic affiliation of this species was uncertain.