New data on the Opheliidae (Annelida) from Lizard Island (Great Barrier Reef, Australia): five new species of the genus Armandia Filippi, 1861
Author
Moreira, Juan
Author
Parapar, Julio
text
Zootaxa
2017
4290
3
483
502
journal article
32702
10.11646/zootaxa.4290.3.4
e9be13b4-b13b-458e-af94-7f9118030ec7
1175-5326
829231
EF174B38-8669-4A61-9989-34C2B4B74C35
Armandia parva
n. sp.
(
Figs 1
,
9–11
)
Material examined.
Seven specimens in six samples. Holotype: AM W.44244, MI QLD 2368. Paratypes: AM W.49299, MI QLD 2334 (1); AM W.49300, MI QLD 2374 (2); AM W.44558, MI QLD 2395 (1, on SEM stub); AM W.45407, MI QLD 2443 (1); AM W.49301, MI QLD 2444 (1).
Diagnosis.
Prostomium distinctly short, truncated, with conspicuous anterior incision before palpode. Parapodia biramous, with prechaetal lobe and ventral lobe on each parapodium; dorsal cirrus from CH2. Prechaetal lobes with distinct tip, short and oval. Anal tube square-shaped, about as long as wide at base; tube as long as last 2 chaetigers; posterior and ventral margins open, provided with short unpaired anal cirrus, projecting outwardly. Posterior border provided with several elongate paired marginal papillae, some larger and inflated; pair of basal papillae large, slightly shorter than anal tube, provided with several protuberances distally resembling small papillae.
FIGURE 9.
Armandia parva
n. sp.
A–H, holotype AM W.44244; I, paratype AM W.49300. A, anterior end, dorsal view; B, anterior end, ventral view. (C–G) Parapodia, ventral (v, left) and dorsal view (d, right) (C–E) and dorsal view only (F–G): C, CH1; D, CH2; E, CH4; F, CH18 (showing branchia in full); G, CH23 (C–F, right side of body; G, left side). H, last chaetigers and anal tube, ventral view; I, posterior end, lateral view. A–B, C–E, same scale.
Description.
Based on
holotype
(longest specimen available) complemented with features of
paratypes
(no specimen was fully complete regarding branchiae and anal tube papillae).
Holotype
complete,
6.6 mm
long and
0.37 mm
wide, with 29 chaetigers. Body slender, slightly tapering towards anterior end, posterior end truncated (
Figs 9
A, 10A). Prostomium short, truncated anteriorly, with conspicuous incision before palpode (
Figs 9
A, 10A); palpode well-developed, digitiform. Prostomium with one dorsal eye and two lateral conspicuous reddish eyes. One pair of evaginated nuchal organs; pharynx and oral tentacles not seen (
Fig. 10
A, B). Branchiae highly deciduous, lacking in several chaetigers; present from
CH
2 to
CH
22–25, absent in last 4–7 chaetigers (considering all
type
series); short in most chaetigers, not reaching chaetal bundle of next chaetiger (
Fig. 10
C, D), sometimes longer in mid-body and then meeting mid-dorsally (
Fig. 9
F). Parapodia biramous, with prechaetal lobe and ventral lobe on each parapodium (
Fig. 11
A–D); dorsal cirrus present from
CH
2. Prechaetal lobe distally rounded provided with distinct oval, short tip directed posteriorly (
Fig. 9
C–G). Lateral reddish eyespots anterior to parapodia on 11 chaetigers (
CH
7–17), those of
CH
7 and
CH
17 smaller than others. Numerous simple capillary chaetae, arranged in two rows in each noto- and neuropodium; each row with up 6–8 chaetae, chaetae of anterior row shorter; notochaetae longer than neurochaetae, those of first chaetigers longer than those of subsequent chaetigers. Anal tube square-shaped, about as long as wide at base (
Figs 9
H, I, 10E, F); tube as long as last 2 chaetigers; posterior and ventral margins open, provided with short, digitiform unpaired anal cirrus, projecting outwardly. Posterior border in
holotype
provided with several elongate paired marginal papillae, apparently lacking some (
Fig. 9
H); two
paratypes
with pair of large basal papillae, slightly shorter than anal tube, provided distally with four protuberances resembling small papillae, one
paratype
also with two large dorsal inflated papillae, distally pointed, shorter than basal pair (
Fig.
9
I).
FIGURE 10.
Armandia parva
n. sp.
SEM micrographs (paratype AM W.44558). A, anterior end, ventral view; B, mouth and ventral groove, detail; C, CH1–3, ventral view; D, CH6–8, ventral view; E, posterior end, lateral view; F, posterior end, ventral view.
FIGURE 11.
Armandia parva
n. sp.
SEM micrographs (paratype AM W.44558). Parapodia, right side: A, CH12, ventral view; B, CH15, anterolateral view; C, CH16, anterolateral view; D, CH21, anterolateral view.
Variation.
Paratypes are shorter than holotype, ranging from 2.0 to
2.75 mm
in length with 25–28 chaetigers. Apart from other features mentioned in the previous section, paratypes show a short prostomium that is truncated anteriorly as it happens in the holotype. Anal papillae (marginal and basal) seem highly deciduous and the anal tube of two paratypes (including that used for SEM,
Fig. 10
E, F) appears somewhat contracted. Ventral groove was detected in the expected place along body but it was usually filled by protruding tissue (
Fig. 10
A, B) (consequence of fixation?).
Remarks.
Armandia parva
n. sp.
is a small-sized species (<
7 mm
in length) and unique among the genus because of the shape and length of the prostomium (short and truncated, with anterior incision), the shape of the prechaetal lobe and the proportions of length/width at base of the anal tube and the features of anal papillae. In general, in
Armandia
species the prostomium is conical, long and is usually continuous with palpode, sometimes showing a constriction corresponding to the palpophore; on the contrary, the prostomium of
A. parva
n. sp.
appears truncated anteriorly with an incision where the palpode is inserted. This feature is shared by all specimens and does not seem to be an artifact derived of contraction of specimens after fixation. On the other hand, the number and shape of anal papillae vary among specimens, perhaps due to state of preservation or development/regeneration of any given specimen at time of collecting; the shape and proportions of the anal tube is, however, mostly similar among specimens. Interestingly, two
paratypes
bear a pair of basal papillae that resemble those of
A. secundariopapillata
and
A. casuarina
n. sp.
(see above) as they are provided with small protuberances resembling secondary papillae, but less numerous (about four) and not as well defined as in the aforementioned species. Anyway,
A. parva
n. sp.
mostly differs from those species because of the shape of the prostomium as it was stated above, and in the shape of the prechaetal lobe that is provided with a tip that is short and conical instead of elongated or triangular.
Etymology.
The epithet
parva
(L.: “small”) refers to the small size of this species when compared to other
Armandia
species.
Habitat / Distribution.
Most specimens were found in the West coast of LI, mostly in front of
Casuarina
Beach and Vicki’s Reef (e.g. holotype), from the intertidal to
15 m
depth in several types of sediments (
Fig. 1
,
Table 1
).