Review of Orbiniidae (Annelida, Sedentaria) from Australia
Author
Zhadan, Anna
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-10-14
4860
4
451
502
journal article
8231
10.11646/zootaxa.4860.4.1
1f5ee6c2-2635-44a8-8469-49319b7a8c62
1175-5326
4414137
876F1085-5296-4340-A951-41420C011917
Leodamas australiensis
(
Hartmann-Schröder, 1979
)
comb. nov.
Figure 11
Not
Scoloplos dubia:
Tebble, 1955: 123–124
, fig. 26a–c.
Scoloplos (Leodamas)
?
dubia
:
Gallardo, 1968: 93–94
, Pl. XXXIX, figs. 4–5, Pl. XL, figs. 1–3.
Scoloplos (Leodamas) rubra australiensis
Hartmann-Schröder, 1979: 131–132
, figs 276–282.
Scoloplos (Leodamas) dubia
:
Eibye-Jacobsen, 2002: 89–91
, fig. 8A–D.
Leodamas dubia:
Zhadan
et al
. 2015: 789-792
, figs 7A–K, 8A–K.
Leodamas dubius
:
Blake, 2017: 50
, 53, 56.
FIGURE 11.
Leodamas australiensis
, A–E: stereomicroscope, F–J: compound microscope. A–E, I–J: AM W.30590, F–H: AM W.43434. A. General view; B. Anterior end, dorsal view; C. Anterior end, lateral view; D. Thorax-abdomen transition, lateral view; E. Abdomen, dorsal view; F. Parapodium of chaetiger 10; G. Parapodium of chaetiger 16; H–J. Abdominal parapodia. a, acicula; br, branchia; cc, crenulated capillaries; fc, forked chaeta; ne, neuropodium; no, notopodium; u, uncini.
Material examined.
Queensland
:
Weipa
,
South Channel
,
12°40’S
,
141°57’E
,
AM
W.30590,
01.10.1999
, coll. CRC
Reef Research
Centre
Ltd
, benthic grab,
1 specimen
;
Lizard Island
,
August 2013
: off
Casuarina Beach
,
14°40’46”S
,
145°26’49”E
, snorkeling, depth 0.5 m, sand, seagrass, coll.
K. Meissner
,
N. Budaeva
,
A. Murray
,
AM
W.45480,
1 specimen
;
off
Casuarina Beach
, in front of
Lizard Island Research Station
,
14°40’46”S
,
145°26’49”E
, intertidal, sand, coll.
J. Parapar
,
Q. Parapar
,
P.A. Hutchings
,
P. Rodgers
,
AM
W.44579,
3 specimens
;
Casuarina Beach
,
14°40’46”S
,
145°26’49”E
, intertidal, sand, coll.
P.A. Hutchings
,
P. Rodgers
,
J. Zanol Silva
,
N. Budaeva
,
AM
W.46094,
10 specimens
;
AM
W.44762,
5 specimens
;
AM
W.44765,
1 specimen
;
Mangrove Beach
, close to mangroves,
14°40’48”S
,
145°27’46”E
, intertidal, muddy sand, coll.
N. Budaeva
,
T
.
Alvestad
,
AM
W.45479,
1 specimen
,
AM
W.44941, posterior fragments;
Mangrove Beach
,
14°40’47”S
,
145°27’44”E
, intertidal, sand, coll.
N. Budaeva
,
T
.
Alvestad
,
AM
W.46098,
7 specimens
;
AM
W.45478,
1 specimen
;
Halifax Bay
,
19°10’S
,
146°38’E
,
Jan 1977
, depth
5 m
, coll
.
Queensland
Nickel Pty Ltd
, van
Veen
grab,
AM
W.43434,
4 specimens
;
Halifax Bay
,
19°10’S
,
146°38’E
,
Jan 1977
, depth
5 m
, coll
.
Queensland
Nickel Pty Ltd
, van
Veen
grab,
AM
W.43437,1 specimen;
Halifax Bay
,
19°07’S
,
146°33’E
,
Jan 1977
, depth
2 m
, coll
.
Queensland
Nickel Pty Ltd
, van
Veen
grab,
AM
W.43438,
1 specimen
.
Additional material examined:
Scoloplos dubia
Tebble, 1955
,
Holotype
(
NHM
1953.3.1.1230) and four
paratypes
(
NHM
1953.3.1.1231-1234), off
Accra
,
Ghana
,
West Africa
, depth 3.6–
11 m
.
Type
locality.
Port Hedland
,
Western Australia
.
Description.
Small worms, thoracic width 0.6–0.9 mm. Body long and slender, thorax flattened, abdomen cylindrical (
Fig. 11
A–C). Prostomium sharply conical (
Fig. 11B
). Thoracic chaetigers numbering 15–18 (
Fig. 11A
). Branchia from chaetiger 6, triangular with broad base and tapering tips; in abdomen becoming longer, same length or slightly shorter than notopodia (
Fig. 11A, C, E, H, J
). Thoracic postchaetal notopodial lobes developed from chaetiger 2, digitate; in abdomen becoming long, narrow foliaceous (
Fig. 11A, C, E, H, J
). Thoracic postchaetal neuropodial lobes as low ridges, in one specimen (AM W.30590) with single papilla in last thoracic chaetiger (
Fig. 11A, C, D
). No subpodal papillae. Abdominal neuropodia with outer lobe cirriform, inner lobe reduced; no subpodal notch and flange (
Fig. 11E, H
). Thoracic neurochaetae represented by almost straight uncini with pointed tips arranged in 3–5 rows and few capillaries in posterior row; anterior and superior uncini thicker than posterior and inferior; anterior row present only in dorsal part, and posterior only in ventral part of neuropodia (
Fig. 11C, D, F, G
). In abdomen both rami supported by thick aciculae; usually 2–3, thinner, straight and not projected in notopodia; thick, strongly projecting and hooked in neuropodia; degree of curvature of neuropodial aciculae differs between segments and even in two sides of one segment; it varies from almost straight to 180° (
Fig. 11
H–J). Abdominal chaetae crenlated capillaries in both rami, abdominal notopodia also bearing forked chaetae (
Fig. 11I
). Pygidium with four short cirri.
Distribution
. (based on literature) Andaman Sea, South
China
Sea.
Australia
,
Western Australia
,
Queensland
.
Habitat.
Intertidal and upper subtidal, sand, muddy sand, seagrass.
Remarks:
Leodamas australiensis
was described from Port Hedland (Western Australia) as
L. rubra australiensis
Hartmann-Schröder, 1979
. The main differences between the stem species
L. rubra
Webster, 1879
, described from Virginia (West Atlantic), are the smaller number of thoracic chaetigers (23 vs 24–25) and strongly curved abdominal neuropodial aciculae. Later,
L. rubra australiensis
was synonymised with
Leodamas dubius
(
Tebble, 1955
)
described from
Ghana
, West Africa (
Eibye-Jacobsen 2002
). Earlier,
Gallardo (1968)
, with some doubt, referred the posterior ends of
Leodamas
specimens from
Vietnam
to
L. dubius
, because of the characteristic strongly curved abdominal aciculae. These projecting neuroaciculae were regarded as a diagnostic character distinguishing
L. dubius
and
L. rubra australiensis
from other
Leodamas
species. The important difference between these species is the starting-point of the branchiae segment: from 6
th
chaetiger in
L. rubra australiensis
and from 7
th
chaetiger in
L. dubius
.
Zhadan
et al
. (2015)
redescribed
L. dubius
based on material from Lizard Island, Queensland; they also followed the synonymy with
L. rubra australiensis
, although they noticed that specimens from the West African and Indo-Pacific regions likely represent different species. This position was supported by
Blake (2017)
. Even within one specimen, the shape of the abdominal neuropodial aciculae varies greatly, as noted by
Eibye-Jacobsen (2002)
,
Zhadan
et al.
(2015)
, and
Blake (2017)
; it can be less curved and does not always have the characteristic appearance. We investigated
type
and non-type specimens of
L. dubius
from West Africa which aligned with Tebble’s description. All specimens have branchiae starting from the 7
th
chaetiger. The shape and distribution of the thoracic neuropodial uncini are similar in both species, the
type
specimens of
L. dubius
have fewer rows of uncini. Forked chaetae were not found in the abdominal notopodia in
L. dubius
, as indicated in the original description. Similarly, forked chaetae were not found in specimens from
Thailand
(
Eibye-Jacobsen 2002
), whereas they were present in specimens from
Vietnam
(
Gallardo, 1968
) and
Australia
(
Hartmann-Schröder 1979
;
Zhadan
et al
. 2015
; present study).
Blake (2017)
indicated the absence of abdominal notoacicula in
L. dubius
, despite its inclusion in the original species description. In the specimens from West Africa, very thin notoacicula could be seen when parapodia are examined in detail. The presence of 2–3 notoaciculae has been reported in
Hartmann-Schröder (1979)
and in the present study; they were not mentioned in Gallardo (1967) or
Zhadan
et al
. (2015)
. From the above information, it can be concluded that
L. australiensis
should be raised to a full species. The main difference between
L. australiensis
and
L. dubius
is the starting-point of the branchiae at 6
th
chaetiger in
L. australiensis
instead of 7
th
in
L. dubius
. The characteristics of both species are given in
Table 1
. The specimens studied in the present work differ from the descriptions by
Hartmann-Schröder (1979)
and
Eibye-Jacobsen (2002)
owing to the fewer number of thoracic chaetigers (max 18 instead of 21–23) and absence of podal papillae in most specimens. These differences could probably be attributed to the smaller size of the specimens studied here.