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 casuarina
n. sp.
(
Figs 1
,
5
)
Material examined:
Two specimens in two samples. Holotype: AM W.49293, MI QLD 2433. Paratype: AM W.45932 (Patch Reef off Research Pt., LI, lagoon; shining torch in surface waters; 0
2 Dec 1985
).
Diagnosis.
Parapodia biramous, with prechaetal lobe, ventral lobe and small dorsal cirrus; prechaetal lobe asymmetrical; first two chaetigers with conspicuous elongated tip, directed postero-dorsally; subsequent chaetigers with shorter, rounded tip, ventrally displaced. Anal tube about 2.3 times longer than width at base, laterally compressed, as long as last five chaetigers; opening directed posteriorly, slightly oblique, lacking ventral incision. Posterior margin with about 6 pairs of digitiform marginal papillae of different sizes; one pair of large basal papillae, about 0.33 times length of tube, each provided with about 15 short, digitiform papillae; long unpaired anal cirrus, about 0.8 times length of anal tube.
Description.
Based on
holotype
. Specimen complete,
7.4 mm
long and
0.3 mm
wide, with 39 chaetigers. Body slender, slightly tapering towards anterior end and truncated at posterior end (
Fig. 5
A). Prostomium conical; palpode well-developed, palpostyle bullet-shaped. Prostomium with one dorsal eye and two lateral small eyes. One pair of ring-shaped nuchal organs; oral tentacles not seen. Segmental limits among chaetigers not defined. Branchiae present from
CH
2 to last chaetiger (
CH
39); branchiae long, surpassing parapodium of second following chaetiger, decreasing in length from
CH
34, last two chaetigers with much short branchiae. Parapodia biramous, with prechaetal lobe and ventral lobe, small dorsal cirrus from
CH
2 (
Fig. 5
D–I). Prechaetal lobe asymmetrical;
CH
1–2 with conspicuous elongated tip, directed postero-dorsally, about 0.4 times length of prechaetal lobe; subsequent chaetigers with rounded tip, much shorter than prechaetal lobe, directed posteriorly and ventrally displaced. Ventral lobe rounded, increasing in size backwards. Lateral reddish eyespots anterior to parapodia on 11 chaetigers (
CH
7–17); those of
CH
7 and
CH
15–17 smaller than others. Ventral groove deep, well defined along all body (
Fig. 5
C). Simple capillary chaetae in two bundles, of about 7–9 each, 5–7 chaetae longer than other 2–3; notochaetae longer than neurochaetae, those of first three chaetigers longer than those of subsequent chaetigers. Anal tube about 2.3 times longer than width at base, rectangular, laterally compressed, as long as last five chaetigers (
Fig. 5
B, C); opening directed posteriorly, slightly oblique, lacking ventral incision. Posterior margin provided with at least 6 pairs of alternating short and elongate digitiform marginal papillae (some of any given pair lacking in right side); one of the dorsalmost papilla inflated and longer than others, about 0.25 times length of anal tube; one pair of basal papillae, cylindrical, narrower at base and distally pointed, about 0.33 times length of tube, each provided with about 15 small, digitiform papillae; long unpaired anal cirrus, about 0.8 times length of anal tube, thick at base and slightly tapered distally, inserted distally in anal tube.
Variation.
The only
paratype
was collected in
1985 in
an area close to the
type
locality, and is currently housed in the collections of the AM. This specimen is
5.25 mm
long with 39 chaetigers; it is mostly similar to the
holotype
but its tegument is encrusted by some kind of crystals probably deposited during preservation. However, the parapodia are like those of the
holotype
and the anal tube still bears the pair of basal papillae with several distal secondary papillae.
Remarks.
Armandia casuarina
n. sp.
is unique among the genus because of the combination of two characters, i.e. the shape of the prechaetal lobe of the first two chaetigers and the pair of basal papillae of anal tube that are provided in turn with small papillae.
The
only known species from the
Indo-Pacific
(see key below) with similar body appearance, parapodia features and presence of basal papillae is
A. secundariopapillata
from SW
Australia
. This species also presents a prechaetal lobe with elongated tip in several chaetigers of the anterior part of the body (at least up to CH8) and paired marginal papillae of different sizes, including at least one larger dorsal papilla similarly to the new species.
Nevertheless
, both species differ in the size and proportions of the anal tube; in
A. secundariopapillata
the anal tube is much wider at base than total length both in the
holotype
and
paratypes
(cfr.
Figs
46–47 in
Hartmann-Schröder, 1984
) while in
A. casuarina
n. sp.
is at least twice as long as wide at base. Furthermore, in
A. casuarina
n. sp.
the insertion of unpaired anal cirrus is at distal end instead of being clearly within the tube, the prechaetal lobe is not elongated in chaetigers following
CH
1–2 and total number of chaetigers is 39 instead of 30 as it happens in
A. secundariopapillata
for specimens with a similar length range.
Armandia parva
n. sp.
also described herein also presents similar paired basal papillae but differs from
A. casuarina
n. sp.
in a number of features, e.g. the prostomium is short and truncated with anterior incision, and the prechaetal lobe of parapodia in
CH
1–2 is much shorter and not conspicuously elongated.
Etymology.
The name of the new species refers to
Casuarina
Beach that is the
type
locality of the species.
Habitat / Distribution.
Holotype
was collected in low tide sand in
Casuarina
Beach
, in front of Lizard
Island
Research Station
.
Paratype
belongs to a previous sampling campaign at LI; the label of the vial reads “Patch Reef off Research Pt., Lizard Is., lagoon” which corresponds to an area near Palfrey
Island
, in the Blue Lagoon, very close to the area where the
holotype
was found (
P. Hutchings
pers. comm.) (
Fig. 1
,
Table 1
). The
paratype
was collected in the water column near surface using a shining torch.