Published February 13, 2019 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Ophelina abranchiata

Description

Ophelina abranchiata (Støp-Bowitz, 1948)

Figure 10 (D–E)

Ophelia abranchiata Støp-Bowitz, 1948: 22.

Ophelina abranchiata: Eliason 1962: 73; Hartman 1965: 186; Parapar & Moreira 2008: 121; Parapar et al. 2011: 88 –89, fig. 4; Blake & Maciolek 2016a: fig. 7.20.1.6C.

Ophelina farallonensis Blake, 2000: 159 –160, fig. 7.6.

Material examined. Oahu, Hawaii: Mamala Bay, Jun/1995, Sta. 15.1.B, 21°14'53.88" N, 157°58'44.94" W, 417 m (1 spm); Sta. 13.2.A, 21°14'55.80" N, 157°57'45.66" W, 426 m (2); Sta. 16.1.B, 21°14'54.12" N, 157°59'31.98" W, 397 m (1); Sta. 11.2.B, 21°13'00.66" N, 157°56'59.82" W, 507 m (1); Sta. 17.2.A, 21°14'23.94" N, 157°53'00.59" W, 502 m (1); Sta. 14.2.A, 21°14'55.14" N, 157°58'14.34" W, 426 m (3, BPBM-R3890); Sta. 6.1.B, 21°13'19.68" N, 157°57'05.70" W, 498 m (1); Sta. 12.2.B, 21°13'50.21" N, 157°57'00.18" W, 481 m (1); Sta. 1.1.B, 21°15'08.61" N, 157°56'51.07" W, 428 m (1).

Diagnosis. Branchiae absent. Anal tube long, narrow, roughly 1/5 of total body length, with 25–40 transversal markings; unpaired anal cirrus long, convoluted and slender, arising from near posterior border.

Description. Specimens complete, ranging from 2.5–5.5 mm long and 0.2 mm wide, with 15–19 chaetigers. Body cylindrical and glossy tapering towards posterior end (Fig. 10D). Prostomium elongate with terminal clavate palpode, not conspicuous. Nuchal organs oval and postero-lateral. Eyespots not observed. Pharynx not everted in any specimen. Preserved specimens pale yellow to transparent, lacking any distinct body pigmentation. Branchiae absent.

Parapodia biramous, chaetae emerging from discrete parapodial lobes throughout. Chaetiger 1 emerging from a distance from anterior end and a number of achaetous segments may be present. Simple capillary chaetae in two bundles; 2–4 capillaries in each noto- and neuropodia anteriorly reducing to 1–3 posteriorly; notochaetae 1.5x longer than neurochaetae.

Anal tube long, narrow, roughly 1/5 of total length of specimens, with 25–40 transversal markings, without ventral groove (Fig. 10E). Unpaired anal cirrus long, convoluted and slender, arising from near posterior border (Fig. 10E).

Remarks. Several authors considered Ophelina farallonensis as a synonym of O. abranchiata Støp-Bowitz, 1948, mostly based on the absence of branchiae in both species (Parapar et al. 2011; Barroso & Paiva 2013). Blake (2000) raised O. farallonensis for Ophelina abranchiata specimens from the Pacific Ocean having a long anal tube (1/5 of the worm’s body length) and lacking distinct lobes. The original description of O. abranchiata was based on specimens lacking an anal tube and this has led to further comparative confusions. The anal tube of specimens identified as O. abranchiata from the Atlantic Ocean has been described and illustrated as being long and easily detachable (Parapar et al. 2011; Barroso & Paiva 2013) but more details on the number of transversal markings and presence and number of lobes are lacking. The material from Hawaii is herein identified as O. abranchiata although it fully agrees with the description proposed by Blake (2000). All ten specimens from Hawaii collected in 1995 were preserved with intact anal tube.

Distribution. This species was originally described from cold water of the Atlantic North where it has been reported at multiple locations (see Parapar et al. 2011). Pacific records of O. abranchiata include those from off California in slope depths of 1,020–3,060 m (Blake 2000) and Peru (Borowski & Thiel 1998; Borowski 2001). This is a new record for this species in the western Pacific Ocean, and material from Hawaii was collected from depths of 397– 507 m.

Notes

Published as part of Magalhães, Wagner F., Rizzo, Alexandra E. & Bailey-Brock, Julie H., 2019, Opheliidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from the western Pacific islands, including five new species, pp. 209-235 in Zootaxa 4555 (2) on page 228, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4555.2.3, http://zenodo.org/record/2624293

Files

Files (4.3 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:aeb71febe94e9dd1289beccba4fe84ce
4.3 kB Download

System files (30.2 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:6af6e1bb6926bc25ac7a61a21c528c97
30.2 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
BPBM-R
Family
Opheliidae
Genus
Ophelina
Kingdom
Animalia
Material sample ID
BPBM-R3890
Order
Opheliida
Phylum
Annelida
Scientific name authorship
Stop-Bowitz
Species
abranchiata
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Ophelina abranchiata (Stop-Bowitz, 1948) sec. Magalhães, Rizzo & Bailey-Brock, 2019

References

  • Stop-Bowitz, C. (1948) Sur les polychetes arctiques des familles des Glyceriens, des Opheliens, des Scalibregmiens et des Flabelligeriens. TromsO Museums Arshefter, 66, 3 - 58.
  • Eliason, A. (1962) Die Polychaeten der Skagerrak-Expedition 1933. Zoologiska Bidrag fran Uppsala, 33, 207 - 293.
  • Hartman, O. (1965) Deep-water benthic polychaetous annelids off New England to Bermuda and other North Atlantic areas. Occasional Papers of the Allan Hancock Foundation, 28, 1 - 378.
  • Parapar, J. & Moreira, J. (2008) Sobre la presencia del genero Ophelina Orsted, 1843 (Polychaeta, Opheliidae) en el litoral de la peninsula Iberica. Nova Acta Cientifica Compostelana (Bioloxia), 17, 117 - 134.
  • Parapar, J., Moreira, J. & Helgason, G. V. (2011) Distribution and diversity of the Opheliidae (Annelida, Polychaeta) on the continental shelf and slope of Iceland, with a review of the genus Ophelina in northeast Atlantic waters and description of two new species. Organisms Diversity & Evolution, 11 (2), 83 - 105.
  • Blake, J. A. & Maciolek, N. J. (2016 a) Opheliidae Malmgren, 1867. In: Westheide, W. & Purschke, G. (Eds), Handbook of Zoology. pp. 10, De Gruyter, Available from: https: // www. degruyter. com / view / Zoology / bp _ 029147 - 6 _ 74 (accessed September 2018)
  • Blake, J. A. (2000) Family Opheliidae Malmgren, 1867. In: Blake, J. A., Hilbig, B. & Scott, P. V. (Eds.), Taxonomic Atlas of the Benthic Fauna of the Santa Maria Basin and Western Santa Barbara Channel. 7 - The Annelida Part 4. Polychaeta: Flabelligeridae to Sternaspidae. Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History. Santa Barbara, pp. 145 - 168.
  • Barroso, R. & Paiva, P. C. (2013) Deep sea Ophelina (Polychaeta: Opheliidae) from southern Brazil. Marine Biodiversity Records, 6 (e 51), 1 - 5. https: // doi. org / 10.1017 / S 1755267213000201
  • Borowski, C. & Thiel, H. (1998) Deep-sea macrofaunal impacts of a large scale physical disturbance experiment in the south east Pacific. Deep-Sea Research II, 45, 55 - 81. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / S 0967 - 0645 (97) 00073 - 8
  • Borowski, C. (2001) Physically disturbed deep-sea macrofauna in the Peru Basin, southeast Pacific, revisited 7 years after the experimental impact. Deep-Sea Research II, 48, 3809 - 3839. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / S 0967 - 0645 (01) 00069 - 8