Nereididae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from intertidal habitats in the Gulf of Oman, Iran
Author
Yousefi, Shetav
Author
Rahimian, Hasan
Author
Nabavi, Seid Mohammad Bagher
Author
Glasby, Christopher
text
Zootaxa
2011
3013
48
64
journal article
46422
10.5281/zenodo.201773
6a8f27e6-bbb4-4307-b2e6-e1b9f4986a39
1175-5326
201773
Perinereis cultrifera
(
Grube, 1840
)
(
Fig. 4
A–F)
Nereis cultrifera
Grube, 1840
: 74
, fig. 6.
Perinereis cultrifera
. —
Aziz, 1938
: 29
, fig. 28;
Fauvel, 1953
: 208
;
Day, 1962
: 19
;
Day, 1967
: 337
, fig. 14.13 o–q; Ben-Elahiu, 1972: 192;
Hutchings, Reid & Wilson, 1991
: 253
, fig. 8 a–c.
Material examined
.
Iran
, Gulf of
Oman
, Djod,
4 specimens
(
ZUTC
Ann. 1107), Chabahar, Shahid beheshti wharf,
2 specimens
(
ZUTC
Ann. 1147), Ramin,
5 specimens
(
ZUTC
Ann. 1148), Gwater,
5 specimens
(
ZUTC
Ann. 1149).
Description.
Material examined
50–70 mm
long, 90–120 chaetigers,
1.5–3 mm
wide at chaetiger 10 (excluding parapodia), jaws have 4 denticles, prostomium with entire anterior margin. Longest tentacular cirri extending back to chaetiger 7–9. Paragnaths on maxillary ring arranged as follows: I = 2 conical paragnaths, II = 5–7 conical paragnaths, III = 9–12, IV = 10–27 conical paragnaths. Paragnaths on oral ring arranged as follows: V = 3 conical paragnaths, VI = 1 large bar, VII–VIII =
24–26 in
two or three irregular rows (
Fig. 4
A, B). Anterior notopodia have two equal rounded ligules, dorsal cirrus longer than dorsal ligule, anterior neuropodia have equal ligules (
Fig. 4
C). Posterior notopodial ligules become pointed and dorsal cirrus longer than dorsal ligule, posterior neuropodia is similar to anterior neuropodia (
Fig. 4
D). Notochaetae all homogomph spinigers. Neurochaetae are heterogomph falcigers and heterogomph and homogomph spinigers (
Fig. 4
E, F).
Remarks.
Perinereis cultrifera
was originally described from Naples, Mediterranean Sea and has since been reported from most oceans of the world. The
syntypes
were redescribed by Hutchings
et al.
(1991) and the material examined here matches closely the description given by these authors. The present material also resembles Day’s (1967) description of specimens from
Madagascar
to
South Africa
.
Fauvel (1919
,
1932
,
1953
) recorded and described this species from
India
, and introduced varieties of it, including
P
.
cultrifera
var.
typica
, which the present material most closely resembles. This species has also been recorded from the
Israel
coast of the South Red Sea by
Day (1962)
; however, it differs from
P. cultrifera
from the Gulf of
Oman
in having short tentacular cirri, conical paragnaths in area V that are arranged in a line and Area I with 3– 4 paragnaths.
Regional distribution and habitat.
Rocky, coral, sandy, boulder shores and under stones at low tide in Gulf of
Oman
(Djod, Ramin, Chabahar, Gwater). Also Persian Gulf (
Table 2
).
World distribution.
Cosmopolitan. Naples,
Italy
(
type
locality); Mediterranean Sea; English Channel; Red Sea; Indo-west Pacific.