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 opisthoculata
n. sp.
(
Figs 1
,
7–8
)
Material examined.
Nine specimens in three samples. Holotype: AM W.49296, MI QLD 2414. Paratypes: AM W.49297, MI QLD 2373 (4); AM W.49298, MI QLD 2373 (1, on SEM stub); AM W.45402, MI QLD 2441 (3).
Diagnosis.
Parapodia biramous, with prechaetal lobe and ventral lobe; dorsal cirrus not present; prechaetal lobe asymmetrical provided with well-defined tip pointing ventro-posteriorly; ventral lobe wide, becoming larger in mid-body to posterior chaetigers. Anal tube short, about as long as last 2–3 chaetigers, opening directed posteroventrally; posterior margin provided with up to 9 pairs of digitiform marginal papillae, one pair of basal papillae and unpaired anal cirrus. One pair of large groups of small reddish spots in ventral side of anal tube at both sides of anal cirrus.
FIGURE 7.
Armandia opisthoculata
n. sp.
A–D, G–I, holotype AM W.49296; E–F, paratype AM W.49297. A, anterior end, right side, lateral view. (B–E) Parapodia, right side, anterolateral views: B, CH1; C, CH2; D, CH3; E, CH23; F, CH25. G, anal tube, lateral view. (H–I) Posterior end and anal tube: H, dorsal view; I, ventral view. White short arrows pointing prechaetal lobe tip; B–F, same scale.
FIGURE 8.
Armandia opisthoculata
n. sp.
SEM micrographs (paratype AM W.49298). A, anterior end, right side, ventrolateral view; B, CH11, lateral view; C, CH22, laterodorsal view; D, posterior end, right side; E, anal tube and last chaetigers, right side, lateral view; F, anal tube opening, ventral incision, ventrolateral view. White short arrows pointing prechaetal lobe tip.
Description.
Based on
holotype
. Specimen complete,
5.7 mm
long and
0.5 mm
wide, with 27 chaetigers. Body slender, slightly tapering at anterior end and truncated at posterior end (
Figs 7
A, 8A, D). Prostomium somewhat contracted, longer than wide; palpode well developed, with narrow palpophore and palpostyle conical. One dorsal eye and two reddish lateral eyes embedded in prostomium. One pair of ring-shaped nuchal organs; pharynx eversible, tentacles not seen. Segmental limits among chaetigers poorly defined. Branchiae digitiform, present from
CH
2 to
CH
25, chaetigers
CH
26–
CH
27 abranchiate; branchiae surpassing level of parapodia of following chaetiger or reaching that of second following chaetiger, not meeting at dorsal midline, decreasing in length towards posterior chaetigers. Parapodia biramous, with prechaetal lobe and ventral lobe on each parapodium (
Figs 7
B–F, 8B, C); dorsal cirrus not seen. Prechaetal lobe asymmetrical, provided with conspicuous tip in ventroposterior angle and directed posteriorly; ventral lobe wide, becoming larger in mid-body to posterior chaetigers. Simple capillary chaetae in two bundles of 5–7 each; notochaetae longer than neurochaetae, as long as branchiae in first chaetigers and longer in subsequent ones. Lateral orange eyespots anterior to parapodia on 11 chaetigers (
CH
7–
CH
17); eyespots of
CH
1 and
CH
17 smaller than others. Ventral groove deep, well defined along all body. Anal tube short, as long as last 2–3 chaetigers, somewhat contracted, about as long as wide (
Figs 7
G, H, 8D, E). Anal tube opening directed posteriorly and ventrally; ventral incision extending posteriorly along all ventral side of tube (
Fig. 8
F). Posterior margin provided with 9 pairs of digitiform marginal papillae of different length (0.5–0.8 times length of anal tube); one pair of basal papillae wider at mid-length and narrower basally, about as long as longer marginal papillae; unpaired anal cirrus ringed, about as long as anal tube. One pair of conspicuous, large groups of small reddish spots in ventral side of anal tube at both sides of anal cirrus, resembling eye spots (
Fig. 7
G, I).
Variation
. Paratypes measuring between 4.0 and
7.2 mm
in length,
0.3–0.5 mm
in width and with same number of chaetigers (27) as holotype. Palpode is long and thin in most paratypes. One paratype shows eight digitiform oral tentacles protruding from mouth. Last 2–3 chaetigers may lack branchiae and are much smaller than the precedent ones (
Fig. 8
D, E). Lateral eyes number 10–11 pairs depending on the specimen. Anal tube is contracted in several specimens and bears about 5–9 paired marginal papillae (
Fig. 8
E, F); paired basal papillae may be longer than others; the pair of ventral anal spots can be easily distinguished.
Remarks.
Armandia opisthoculata
n. sp.
is characterised by the features of the anal tube which is about as long as wide and is provided with two conspicuous large pigmented spots in the ventral side. Similarly,
Armandia sampadae
Gopal, Jaleel, Parameswaran and Vijayan, 2016
(Andaman Sea)
also bears two ventral pigmented spots in the anal tube; however,
A. sampadae
differs from the new species in having up to 32 chaetigers and lacking anal cirrus, paired marginal papillae are thin and long, and the paired basal papillae are pigmented, leaf-like, and much larger than other papillae. Other species with similar anal tube dimensions (length of tube/width at base) and bearing paired marginal papillae and one pair of basal papillae are
A. intermedia
(
Senegal
)
,
A. amakusaensis
Saito, Tamaki and Imajima, 2000
(
Japan
)
,
A. laminosa
and
A. paraintermedia
(both also from
Lizard Island
). However,
A. intermedia
has 29 chaetigerous segments (vs 27), the last three abranchiate (vs last 2), 13 pairs of lateral eyes, and the anal tube has a pair of basal papillae much thicker than marginal papillae;
A. amakusaensis
bears an anal tube that is provided with long, thin unpaired cirrus and ventral incision is short (about 1/3 of anal tube length), and most parapodia bear dorsal cirrus ("dorsal small projection"
sensu
Saito
et al
. 2000
);
A. laminosa
has the first three chaetigers with parapodia provided with wide, foliose prechaetal lobe; finally,
A. paraintermedia
have parapodia that bear dorsal cirrus and anal tube has an unpaired cirrus that is not ringed.
Etymology.
The epithet
opisthoculata
(“
opistho
-” G.: “back”, “
oculatus
”, L.: “with eyes”) refers to the pair of conspicuous pigmented spots that resemble eyes in the ventral side of the anal tube.
Habitat / Distribution.
Subtidal (
5–15 m
) in sandy and muddy sand bottoms in three localities north (
Holotype
,
Mermaid Cove
), east (
Watson’s Bay
) and
South
(
Vicki’s Reef
) of LI (
Fig. 1
,
Table
1
).