Revision of the taxonomy of Polycirrus Grube, 1850 (Annelida: Terebellida: Polycirridae)
Author
Glasby, Christopher J.
chris.glasby@nt.gov.au
Author
Hutchings, Pat
chris.glasby@nt.gov.au
text
Zootaxa
2014
2014-10-21
3877
1
1
117
journal article
5268
10.11646/zootaxa.3877.1.1
344cf70d-6a17-464b-9a35-40324bcef9d4
1175-5326
4948375
2695A2A6-2805-4FC6-B6B6-A8C68354B944
Polycirrus elisabethae
McIntosh, 1915
Fig. 26a–e
Polycirrus elisabethae
McIntosh, 1915: 35–36
.
Polycirrus haematodes
.—
McIntosh, 1922: 198–200
, pl. 127, figs. 2, 2d.—
Not
P. haematodes
Claparède, 1864
.
Type
locality.
St Andrews
,
Scotland
.
Material examined.
LECTOTYPE
designated herein (
NHMUK
2014.6. 1
)
Scotland
,
St Andrews
,
56°20ʹ13.32ʺ N
,
2°46ʹ53.68ʺ W
, from debris of fishing boats
.
PARALECTOTYPES
: 2,
BMNH
ZK 1921
:5:1:4119, same locality
.
FIGURE 25.
Polycirrus dubius
Day.
Holotype USNM 43130. a. Anterior ventral view. b. Left side posterior lateral view of notopodium, chaetiger 4. c. Notochaeta illustrated at x40 and x100 from chaetiger 4. d. Lateral and frontal views of uncini from posterior chaetiger. Scales in mm as indicated.
FIGURE 26.
Polycirrus elisabethae
McIntosh.
Lectotype BMNH ZK 1921.5.1.4119. a. Anterior ventral view. b. Left side anterior lateral view of notopodium, chaetiger 4. c. Two different length notochaetae from chaetiger 4. d. Frontal views of uncini from mid-body chaetiger. e. Lateral and frontal views of uncini from posterior body chaetiger. Scales in mm as indicated.
Description.
Lectotype
designated from amongst McIntosh's
syntypes
, well preserved with body wall damaged and large parts removed but chaetae mainly intact, colourless, one complete individual,
7 mm
long,
1 mm
wide excluding buccal tentacles, complete with about 30 segments. Sex unknown.
Dorsum anteriorly tessellated. Venter anteriorly with mid-ventral groove and discrete ventro-lateral pads; pads more-or-less smooth, extending from segment 3. Mid-ventral groove from segment 4 (
Fig. 26a
).
Buccal tentacles of
two types
, most missing: (1) cylindrical, thickened distally, distinctly grooved and (2) cylindrical, uniformly thin and weakly grooved, both arising at junction between prostomium and upper lip. Prostomial ridge slightly curved, extending laterally along anterodorsal base of upper lip. Upper lip comprising single (medial) lobe only, margin of lobe straight; oral surface glandular, ciliated, with grooves leading to mouth. Inner lower lip oblong (narrow; hidden by upper lip), smooth; outer region flat, shield-like, subtriangular and pointing toward mouth, ridged and grooved, extending posteriorly to segment 3. Achaetous segments visible dorsally but obscured by expanded outer lower lip ventrally (
Fig. 26a
).
Notochaetigerous segments 16, extending to segment 18. Notopodia more-or-less rectangular, prechaetal lobe low, postchaetal lobe digitiform, postchaetal lobe longer than prechaetal (
Fig. 26b
). Notochaetae within a chaetiger of
one type
(chaetigers 4, 14 examined), two distinct lengths, hirsute, uniformly tapered, posteriorly same form as those anteriorly (
Fig. 26c
). Neurochaetae beginning on segment 11. Neuropodial tori ridge like, similar along body. Uncini with short neck and straight to convex base (
Type
1), teeth above main fang arranged in double transverse series (
MF
:1:11–15) enlarged median tooth above main fang present, subrostral process present as low, angular protuberance (
Fig. 26d, e
)
.
Nephridial papillae present, globular, small and flattened. Pre-gular membrane nephridial papillae absent. Post-gular membrane nephridial papillae present, extending from segments 5 to 8; situated at posteroventral base of notopodia. Pygidium simple rosette.
Comments.
McIntosh described
P. elisabethae
in 1915, although briefly with no illustrations. Subsequently (1922) he illustrated the chaetae and formally synonymised it with
P. haematodes
(
Claparède, 1864
)
, described from Port Vendres on the French Mediterranean coast. However, after re-examination of McIntosh’s material, we believe that his specimens represent a distinct species and therefore should be removed from synonymy. McIntosh did not provide a precise locality for
P. elisabethae
in the original description, although from the title of his paper it is likely to be in the region of St Andrews,
Scotland
. However, the original label indicates that the specimens were collected from the debris of fishing boats at St Andrews. We have therefore designated the best specimen as the
lectotype
, and St Andrews is fixed as the type locality.
Hessle (1917)
,
Hartman (1959)
, and
Holthe (1986a)
considered
P. elisabethae
to be perhaps the same as
P. norvegicus
.
Although the two species are both in the North Sea (although on opposite sides), we reject this synonymisation because of differences in the shape of the lower lip (longer than wide in
P. norvegicus
and wider than long in
P. elisabethae
) and the shape and dentition of the uncini (more prominent subrostral process and 11–15 minute teeth surmounting the MF in
P. elisabethae
compared to only 1–4 larger teeth in
P. norvegicus
). It seems unlikely that
P. elisabethae
is synonymous with
P. haematodes
given the distance between
type
localities, but as we have been unsuccessful in locating the
type
material of
P. haematodes
, which we currently regard as a
species inquirenda
, the necessary comparison of
type
specimens is presently not possible.