Nereididae (Annelida: Phyllodocida) from intertidal macroalgae in Western Australia
Author
Hadiyanto, Hadiyanto
0000-0001-8911-8141
School of Biological Sciences, the University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia & Research Center for Oceanography, National Research and Innovation Agency, Jakarta, Indonesia hadiyanto. hadiyanto @ research. uwa. edu. au; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 8911 - 8141
hadiyanto.hadiyanto@research.uwa.edu.au
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-02-09
5239
2
151
203
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5239.2.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5239.2.1
1175-5326
7624123
CE60488D-EE58-41E5-9FB1-C34D82E795D6
Perinereis helleri
(
Grube, 1878
)
Figs 12A–F
,
20A–B
Nereis (Perinereis) helleri
Grube, 1878: 81–82
.
Perinereis helleri
.—Monro 1931: 14–15, fig. 8a–c; Russell 1962: 7;
Wu 1967: 66
; Rozbaczylo & Castilla 1973: 220–221;
Hartmann-Schröder 1979: 116
, figs 199–202; Hutchings
et al.
1991: 254–255, fig. 9a–c;
Pamungkas & Glasby 2015:
15–17, fig. 6A–B.
Type
locality
.
Bohol
,
Philippines
.
Material examined
.
Western Australia
:
Lighthouse Bay
,
Ningaloo
,
21°48′19.86″S
114° 7′48.61″E
,
26 September 2020
, 1 (
WAM
V11664
)
.
Three Mile
,
23°52′32.41″S
113°29′38.72″E
,
23 September 2020
,
1 specimen
(
WAM
V11665
)
.
Comparative material
.
Perinereis helleri
,
det.
C. Glasby
,
Fishermans Wharf
,
Darwin Harbour
,
Northern Territory
,
12°29′S
130°52′E
, intertidal, under rocks and in crevices, coll.
C.J. Glasby
&
P. Schroeder
,
3 August 2004
, 1 (
NTM
W19020
)
.
Description
. Incomplete specimens with 33–35 chaetigers, posterior end missing, remaining body
9.3–27.2 mm
long and
0.9–2.8 mm
wide; cream yellow in alcohol.
Prostomium as long as wide. Eyes black, two pairs, equal sizes, in trapezoidal arrangement. Palps one pair, palpophores globose, palpostyles conical. Antennae one pair, shorter than palps. Tentacular cirri four pairs with basal articulation, longest ones extending to chaetiger 5. Pharyngeal jaws reddish black, curved at tips, with eight teeth on each jaw. Paragnaths reddish black, present on maxillary and oral rings, arranged as follows: Area I= 5–6 cones, Area II= 10–12 cones in three curved rows, Area III= 9–13 cones with 2 cones at lateral of main group, Area IV= 17–20 cones, Area V= 3 cones in a triangle, Area VI= 1 smooth bar, Areas VII–VIII= 42–44 cones in two rows (
Fig. 12A–B
).
FIGURE 12.
Perinereis helleri
(
Grube, 1878
)
(WAM V11664); A, head, dorsal view; B, head, ventral view; C, parapodium, chaetiger 35, posterior view; D, neurochaetae, dorsal fascicle, heterogomph falciger, chaetiger 7; E, neurochaetae, dorsal fascicle, homogomph spiniger, chaetiger 7; F, neurochaetae, ventral fascicle, heterogomph spiniger, chaetiger 22. Scale: A–B, 0.5 mm; C, 0.1 mm; D–F, 0.02 mm.
Apodous segment slightly longer than first chaetiger. First two chaetigers uniramous. Notopodia present with subconical dorsal and ventral ligules in anterior chaetigers, become digitiform in posterior chaetigers. Notopodial ligules not greatly expanded posteriorly. Dorsal cirri cirriform, attached on middle of dorsal parapodia, as long as dorsal ligules. Neuropodia with subconical ventral ligules, acicular ligules, and rounded postchaetal lobes extending to same level of acicular ligule tips; ventral ligules become digitiform in posterior chaetigers. Ventral cirri cirriform, attached basally on ventral parapodia, shorter than ventral ligules, similar length throughout chaetigers (
Fig. 12C
).
Notochaetae present with homogomph spinigers. Neurochaetae heterogomph falcigers (
Fig. 12D
) and homogomph spinigers (
Fig. 12E
) in dorsal fascicles, heterogomph falcigers and spinigers (
Fig. 12F
) in ventral fascicles. Homogomph spinigerous blades long, with fine serrations, longer than heterogomph spinigerous blades. Falcigerous blades long, with fine serrations. Acicula black.
Remarks
. The specimen examined here fits the description of the species by Hutchings
et al.
(1991), except for the shorter posterodorsal tentacular cirri (only extending to chaetiger 5 vs. to chaetiger 8–16 and having more paragnaths in Area I (5–6 vs. 1–2). However, comparative material from Darwin Harbour,
Northern Territory
showed intermediate numbers of paragnaths in Area I (3), while having the longer posterodorsal tentacular cirri (at least to chaetiger 12) (
Fig. 20A–B
), thus we view the differences as intraspecific variation. Our specimens from Ningaloo and Three Mile extend to the southerly distribution of this species, which was previously reported only as far south as Enderby Island (
20°36′S
).
Distribution
. Indo-Pacific:
Taiwan
,
Philippines
,
Indonesia
,
Australia
,
Chile
(
Table 2
).
Habitat
. Intertidal, subtidal, mudflat, rocky shores.