Serpula columbiana Johnson, 1901

Figs 9 A–B, 10

Serpula columbiana Johnson, 1901: 432–433, pl. 19, figs 199–204 ( type locality: Alki Point, Puget Sound, Washington, United States).

Serpula splendens Bush, 1905: 230–232, pl. 26, fig. 3, pl. 29, fig. 2, pl. 30, figs 2–3, pl. 33, fig. 31, pl. 35, fig. 18, pl. 37, fig. 31, pl. 39, fig. 33 ( type locality: Orca and Virgin Bay, Prince William Sound, southern Alaska).

Serpula nannoides Chamberlin, 1919b: 270, pl. 2, fig. 8 ( type locality: off Crescent City, California).

Serpula vermicularis ( non Linnaeus 1767) – Chamberlin 1919b: 269 (Mendocino, northern California and Gulf of Georgia (Strait of Georgia), Washington). — Berkeley 1930: 73 (Nanaimo Region). — Berkeley & Berkeley 1941: 55 ( Santa Cruz Island, southern California). — Hartman 1948: 47 (Seldovia, Alaska). — Kupriyanova 1999: 24 (synonymy).

Serpula columbiana – Pixell 1912: 784–786 (Departure Bay, Canada and Puget Sound, Washington; undersides of stones on rocky shores and in rock pools). — Treadwell 1914: 225 (Puget Sound, Washington, to San Diego, southern California). — Kupriyanova 1999: 24–27, figs 1, 3, 4B, D (Alaska, Washington and California). — Bastida-Zavala 2008: 45–46, figs 11A–E (Washington and California; 30–60 m; on bottoms with coralline sand and kelp, on shells, cobble and boulders).

Serpula splendens – Kupriyanova 1999: 24 (synonymy).

Serpula nannoides – Bastida-Zavala 2008: 45 (synonymy).

Material examined

One specimen: KT (1) Sep. 2003.

Diagnosis

Tube missing.Opercular peduncle smooth, white, with marked constriction.Operculum funnel symmetric, with 46 radii with blunt tips, and concave inner surface, with numerous tiny conical tubercles ( Fig. 9A). Collar with bayonet chaetae, with two blunt, short teeth, smooth distal blade. In adult forms, Serpula columbiana has an operculum with 55–160 radii ( Fig. 9B) and a symmetric funnel ( Kupriyanova 1999).

Taxonomic remarks

The status of Serpula columbiana was resolved by Kupriyanova (1999). It is mainly a sublittoral species that is extremely unlikely to belong to the fouling fauna.

Ecology

Intertidal to 60 m. Under stones on the shore-line, in rock-pools ( Pixell 1912), and on bottoms with coralline sand and kelp, on shells, cobble and boulders ( Bastida-Zavala 2008).

Distribution

Northeastern Pacific, from Alaska to southern California (San Diego) ( Kupriyanova 1999; Bastida-Zavala 2008). In this work, only one specimen of Serpula columbiana was found on a fouling plate from Ketchikan Bay, Alaska ( Fig. 10).