Published January 4, 2018 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Exogone sophiae Langeneck & Musco & Busoni & Conese & Aliani & Castelli 2018, n. sp.

Description

Exogone sophiae Langeneck, Musco & Castelli n. sp.

(Figures 3–4)

Material examined. Holotype (MSNP: P/3879): St. 8, Northern Tyrrhenian Sea, 110 m. Paratypes: St. 8: 1 individual (MSNP: P/001/SEM); St. 10: 2 individuals (MSNP: P/242/V; P/246/V). Additional material: St. 8: 1 individual.

Description. Holotype complete specimen, 6 mm long for 47 chaetigers, 0.30 mm wide. All paratypes incomplete. Prostomium short, rectangular, distinctly broader than long, with four rounded, small eyes in trapezoidal arrangement, reddish, sometimes difficult to distinguish in preserved material. Antennae absent in all examined individuals (Fig. 4a). Palps long, broad, fused for their total length, with barely noticeable distal notch. Dorsal cirri very small, oval, slightly longer in the posterior region, lacking at chaetiger 2 (Fig. 3a). First four parapodia with 2 compound spiniger-like chaetae and 3–4 falcigers, after chaetiger 5 only 1 spiniger-like and 3 falcigers (Fig. 4c). Anterior spiniger-like compound chaetae with thick, distally spinulous shaft (Figs 3c, 4d), and thin, elongated blades 25–35 µm long; blades sometimes slightly curved with several long teeth on basal part (Figs 3c, 4d), difficult to see with the light microscope. Posterior spinigers-like chaetae similar but shorter and thinner, 15–20 µm long blades. Anterior falcigers with 7.5–10 µm long blade, with very small distal tooth, massive, strong proximal tooth, and relatively short, coarse serration along ventral edge (Figs 3d, 4e). Posterior falcigers shorter, blades 3.8–5 µm long, with thicker basal part. Anterior dorsal simple chaetae unidentate, smooth; posterior dorsal simple chaetae become distinctly thicker, with a subdistal notch (Fig. 3e). Ventral simple chaetae absent. Pharynx long, relatively wide, extending through six chaetigers, with a large, triangular distal tooth. Proventricle barrelshaped, as long as pharynx, with 20–23 muscle cell rows. Pygidium sub-triangular with two very long, tapering anal cirri (Fig. 3b).

Etymology. This species is dedicated to Sophie Langeneck, sister of the first author.

Distribution. Tyrrhenian Sea, at a depth between 100 and 110 m.

Remarks. Exogone sophiae n. sp. is chiefly characterised by the absence of antennae; albeit preservation may cause the loss of antennae in some syllid species, we believe that this character is not a preservation artefact, as all the sampled individuals do not show any trace of antennae, nor of scars indicating the lost of antennae. Moreover, dorsal cirri are perfectly preserved, suggesting that preservation should not have altered the soft appendages of the collected specimens. Until now two species of Exogone without prostomial antennae have been described, namely Exogone acerata San Martín & Parapar, 1990, and Exogone oculata (Hartman & Fauchald, 1971) (San Martín, 1991). E. sophiae differs from E. acerata in the absence of dorsal cirri at chaetiger 2 (present in E. acerata), in the less pronounced spinulation on shafts of spiniger-like chaetae and in the longer spines on blades of spiniger-like chaetae (San Martín & Parapar, 1990). Exogone sophiae appears closer to E. oculata, as both species lack the dorsal cirrus at chaetiger 2, but E. oculata lacks spiniger-like chaetae on the first four chaetigers. Moreover, both species are provided of ventral simple chaetae, that are absent in all examined individuals of the new species.

Among Mediterranean species, E. sophiae appears particularly close to Exogone verugera (Claparède, 1868) and Exogone dispar (Webster, 1879) in size and overall body shape and number of proventricle cell rows. Apart from the absence of antennae, this species differs from E. verugera as E. sophiae has smaller, non-coalescent eyes, longer blades of falciger chaetae, with a higher number of marginal teeth, and slightly shorter blades of spinigerlike chaetae with a more pronounced spinulation along the ventral edge; moreover E. sophiae lacks ventral simple chaetae. Exogone dispar has similar blades of falciger chaetae, and a more pronounced spinulation along the ventral edge of spiniger-like blades (San Martín, 2003); however, in E. sophiae such spinulation is even more pronounced (Fig. 3d). Moreover, E. dispar has dorsal cirri at the second chaetiger. Lastly, E. sophiae might resemble Exogone lopezi San Martín, Ceberio & Aguirrezabalaga, 1996, since this last species apparently lacks ventral simple chaetae, and has very small antennae that are difficult to see. However, E. lopezi has falciger chaetae with long, thread-like marginal teeth that outgrow the chaetal tip, whereas in E. sophiae the marginal serration of falcigers is coarser and less developed.

Notes

Published as part of Langeneck, Joachim, Musco, Luigi, Busoni, Giulio, Conese, Ilaria, Aliani, Stefano & Castelli, Alberto, 2018, Syllidae (Annelida: Phyllodocida) from the deep Mediterranean Sea, with the description of three new species, pp. 197-220 in Zootaxa 4369 (2) on pages 202-204, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4369.2.3, http://zenodo.org/record/1135678

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Syllidae
Genus
Exogone
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Phyllodocida
Phylum
Annelida
Scientific name authorship
Langeneck & Musco & Busoni & Conese & Aliani & Castelli
Species
sophiae
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Exogone sophiae Langeneck, Musco & Castelli, 2018

References

  • San Martin, G. & Parapar, J. (1990) Exogone acerata n. sp. (Exogoninae: Syllidae: Polychaeta), a new species without antennae from the Mediterranean Sea. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 103, 687 - 690.
  • Hartman, O. & Fauchald, K. (1971) Deep-water benthic polychaetous annelids off New England to Bermuda and other North Atlantic Areas. Part II. Allan Hancock Monographs in Marine Biology, 6, 1 - 327.
  • Claparede, E. (1868) Les annelides chetopodes du Golfe de Naples. Memories de la Societe de Physique et d'Histoire Naturelle de Geneve, 19, 313 - 584.
  • Webster, H. E. (1879) The Annelida Chaetopoda of the Virginian coast. Transactions of the Albany Institute, 9, 202 - 269.
  • San Martin, G. (2003) Anelidos Poliquetos. Familia Syllidae Grube, 1850. Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, Madrid, 554 pp.
  • San Martin, G., Ceberio, A. & Aguirrezabalaga, F. (1996) Exogone species (Polychaeta: Syllidae: Exogoninae) from the Capbreton Canyon (Bay of Biscay, NE Atlantic). Cahiers de Biologie Marine, 37, 249 - 258.