Published December 31, 2017 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Califia chilensis Hartman 1967

Description

Califia chilensis Hartman, 1967

Califia chilensis Hartman, 1967: 102 –103, pl. 32; Rozbaczylo 1985: 128.

Material examined. Western Chile, off Chiloe Island, Eltanin Sta. 6-333, 27 Nov 1962, 42.93°S, 75.58°W, 3655– 3651 m, holotype (USNM 55530).

Remarks. The holotype is the only known specimen of C. chilensis and is incomplete. The thorax consists of 13 setigers with branchiae from setiger 9. The species was originally differentiated from related species by the presence of three types of setae in the first three thoracic setigers: (1) crenulated capillaries, (2) short thin uncini sometimes with tips appearing bristled, and (3) larger, thicker uncini, also sometimes appearing bristled. The bristled appearance of these uncini is due to fraying of a sheath that encompasses part of the shafts best seen in SEMs of the new species, C. bilamellata described below. While the details of bristling and ribbing of these setae may be specifically unique to C. chilensis, the presence of three types of setae in setigers 1–3 has also been reported for C. calida Hartman, 1957 and C. schmitti (Pettibone, 1957). Capillaries are lacking in C. mexicana Fauchald, 1972. One feature overlooked by Hartman (1967), which may make C. chilensis specifically unique in the genus, is the presence of a row of shorter and thinner uncini among the numerous capillaries of setigers 4–5. Pettibone (1957) reported the presence of some uncini on setiger 4 in C. schmitti, but there have been no reports of such setae beyond setigers 1–3 in C. calida and C. mexicana. The posterior end of the holotype of C. chilensis is not well preserved and it is not clear if several fragments in the same vial belong to the holotype specimen. Nevertheless, abdominal setae may prove to be diagnostic for Califia species. Posterior notopodia of C. chilensis have a type of flail seta with a thickened shaft and finely tapered, ribbed capillary tip. Flail setae were not observed in specimens of C. schmitti collected by the author from the continental slope off the North Carolina. It would be useful to study the abdominal setae in the other species in order to determine specific differences.

Distribution. Off western Chile, 3651–3655 m.

Notes

Published as part of Blake, James A., 2017, Polychaeta Orbiniidae from Antarctica, the Southern Ocean, the Abyssal Pacific Ocean, and off South America, pp. 1-145 in Zootaxa 4218 (1) on page 82, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.245827

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
USNM
Event date
1962-11-27
Family
Orbiniidae
Genus
Califia
Kingdom
Animalia
Material sample ID
USNM 55530
Phylum
Annelida
Scientific name authorship
Hartman
Species
chilensis
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Verbatim event date
1962-11-27
Taxonomic concept label
Califia chilensis Hartman, 1967 sec. Blake, 2017

References

  • Hartman, O. (1967) Polychaetous annelids collected by the USNS Eltanin and Staten Island cruises, chiefly from Antarctic seas. Allan Hancock Monographs in Marine Biology, 2, 1 - 387, 51 plates.
  • Rozbaczylo, N. (1985) Los Anelidos Poliquetos de Chile. Indice Sinonimico y distribucion geografica de especies. Facultad de Ciencias Biologicas Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Monografias Biologicas, No. 3, 1 - 284.
  • Hartman, O. (1957) Orbiniidae, Apistobranchidae, Paraonidae and Longosomidae. Allan Hancock Pacific Expeditions, 15 (3), 211 - 393, plates 20 - 44, 1 chart.
  • Pettibone, M. H. (1957) North American genera of the family Orbiniidae. Journal of the Washington Academy of Science, 47, 159 - 167, 4 figures.
  • Fauchald, K. (1972) Benthic polychaetous annelids from deep water off western Mexico and adjacent areas in the eastern Pacific Ocean. Allan Hancock Monographs in Marine Biology, 7, 1 - 575, 69 plates.