Revision of Therochaeta Chamberlin, 1919 (Polychaeta: Flabelligeridae)
Author
Salazar-Vallejo, Sergio I.
El Colegio de la Frontera Sur CONACYT Chetumal, Quintana Roo (Mexico)
savs551216@hotmail.com & ssalazar@ecosur.mx
text
Zoosystema
2013
2013-06-28
35
2
227
263
http://dx.doi.org/10.5252/z2013n2a7
journal article
163589
10.5252/z2013n2a7
240f297d-c280-4a16-a171-22f1bebdf852
1638-9387
5165233
Paratherochaeta africana
(
Rullier, 1965
)
n. comb., n. stat.
(
Fig. 8
)
Stylarioides plumosa africana
Rullier, 1965: 47
, 48, fig. 9a–e. —
Fauchald 1972: 413
.
Stylarioides scutigerioides
–
Tebble 1955: 127, 128
, fig. 28 (
partim
, Stat. 55, not fig. 28;
non
Augener, 1918
).
TYPE MATERIAL. — Equatorial Eastern Atlantic Ocean.
Holotype
of
Stylarioides plumosa africana
(
MNHN 1443
)
, off Cotonou,
Benin
, Stat. 33 (
06°10’N
,
02°08’E
),
45 m
, muddy sand,
3.X.1963
,
A. Crosnier
coll.
Paratype
of
S. p. africana
(
MNHN 1444
)
, off Cotonou,
Benin
, Stat. 38 (
06°07’N
,
02°4.5’E
),
91 m
, gray mud,
3.X.1963
,
A. Crosnier
coll. (
16 mm
long,
3 mm
wide, cephalic cage
6 mm
long, 38 chaetigers; some parapodia removed previously)
.
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL. — Eastern Tropical Atlantic Ocean.One anterior fragment (
BMNH
1953.3.1.901), damaged, anteriorly depressed, dissected midventrally, off Accra,
Ghana
, Stat. 55, 7 km WSW
Accra Lighthouse
,
12 m
,
15.I.1951
,
R. Bassindale
coll. (
6 mm
long,
1.5 mm
wide, cephalic cage
3 mm
long, 13 chaetigers)
.
DISTRIBUTION. — Western Africa, from
Senegal
to
Angola
, in
20-91 m
depth.
DESCRIPTION
Holotype
of
Stylarioides plumosa africana
(MNHN 1443)
complete, swollen anteriorly, tapered caudally (
Fig. 8A
);
22 mm
long,
3 mm
wide, cephalic cage
8 mm
long, 68 chaetigers. Body with cemented sand grains on anterior end forming sediment tubercles, smoother along chaetigers 1-2, constriction before chaetiger 3, large tubercles in chaetigers 3-8, reducing in size posteriorly. Median and posterior chaetigers with globular tubercles made with fine sediment particles; prepygidial region with papillae almost without adherent sediment. Tunic thin, with adherent sediment grains. Body papillae long, capitate, from chaetiger 3 making large tubercles, larger in chaetigers 3-8 with sand grains, posteriorly papillae forming individual tubercles with fine sediment particles; posterior end with almost naked papillae.
Anterior end not exposed.No dissection attempted to avoid further damage.
Cephalic cage chaetae as long as 1/3 body length, or almost three times longer than body width (
Fig. 8A
). Chaetigers 1-2 involved in cephalic cage; chaetiger 3 with long chaetae but not reaching anterior end, directed laterally (
Fig. 8B, C
). Cephalic cage chaetae arranged in short series, five-six chaetae per bundle. Anterior dorsal margin of first chaetiger with a median, long papillae making a triangular lobe, projected anteriorly, with two(-three) papillae on its tip. Chaetigers 1-2 with long papillae restricted to base of chaetal lobes. Chaetiger 1 very short, chaetiger 2 markedly longer, constricted on its posterior margin, chaetiger 3 shorter than 2, about as long as chaetiger 1. Sand cemented anterior shield surrounding chaetigers 1-2. Chaetal transition from cephalic cage to body chaetae abrupt; neurohooks start in chaetiger 8. Gonopodial lobes not seen.
FIG. 8. —
Paratherochaeta africana
(
Rullier, 1965
)
n. comb., n. stat.
:
A-D
,
holotype
(
MNHN
1443);
A
, lateral view;
B
, anterior end, oblique dorsal view;
C
, anterior end, lateral view;
D
, posterior region, oblique lateral view;
E, F
,
paratype
(
MNHN
1444);
E
, chaetiger 6, right parapodium, neurochaeta;
F
, chaetiger 10, left parapodium neurochaetae. Scale bars: A,
2.5 mm
; B,
0.7 mm
; C, D,
1 mm
; E, 120 µm; F, 60 µm.
Parapodia poorly developed, except along chaetigers 1-4, flat lobes making large tubercles, projected anteriorly, carrying five-six basal papillae in chaetigers 1-2, only two in chaetiger 3; subsequently chaetae emerge from the body wall. Parapodia lateral, median neuropodia ventrolateral. Notopodia and neuropodia without chaetal lobes, or associated papillae. Noto- and neuropodia distant to each other.
Median notochaetae arranged in short longitudinal series; all notochaetae multiarticulated capillaries, articles long, becoming shorter and less defined distally; three notochaetae per fascicle, about 1/6 as long as body width. Neurochaetae multiarticulated capillaries in chaetigers 1-7 (
Fig. 8E
), becoming progressively smaller, with long articles; falcate blunt neurohooks from chaetiger 8, arranged in transverse series, three-four per fascicle (
Fig. 8F
).
Posterior region tapered, more or less cylindrical; pygidium with anus terminal, hemispherical, no anal cirri (
Fig. 8D
).
REMARKS
Rullier (1965)
described
S.p. africana
as a
variety and
as such, would not be regulated by the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (
ICZN 1999
, Art. 15.2). However, because it was listed as a subspecies by
Fauchald (1972)
the name became available (
ICZN 1999
, Art. 45.6.4.1) with the original author and year.
Despite listing four main differences, Rullier decided to retain his
variety under
S. plumosa africana
,
resting on a previous record for this northern species (p. 48): “… a été signalé jusqu’à la latitude du
Maroc
” (Transl.: … has been recorded up to the
Morocco
latitude). This record was not cited by Rullier but corresponds to
Fauvel (1936: 76)
. The
holotype
has a clear constriction after chaetiger 2, large dorsal tubercles with sand particles, but does not have pseudocompound neurohooks and consequently it does not belong in
Therochaeta
but has to be transferred to
Paratherochaeta
n. gen.
Paratherochaeta africana
n. comb., n. stat.
, resembles
P. scutigera
n. comb.
because both species have sediment tubercles continued beyond chaetiger 5. They differ mainly on the relative curvature of neurohooks because they are almost straight, but distally curved in
P. africana
n. comb., n. stat.
, whereas they are markedly sigmoid in
P.scutigera
n. comb.
Other differences must be sought once some specimens of
P. scutigera
n. comb.
become available.