Caulleriella fimbriata, Blake, 2018

Blake, James A., 2018, Bitentaculate Cirratulidae (Annelida, Polychaeta) collected chiefly during cruises of the R / V Anton Bruun, USNS Eltanin, USCG Glacier, R / V Hero, RVIB Nathaniel B. Palmer, and R / V Polarstern from the Southern Ocean, Antarctica, and off Western South America, Zootaxa 4537 (1), pp. 1-130 : 48

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4537.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:169CBE5C-3A6E-438B-8A81-0491CBFBAC85

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3798606

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A2CB16-FFDA-A265-FF36-FDBEFCADF952

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Caulleriella fimbriata
status

sp. nov.

Caulleriella fimbriata View in CoL new species

Figure 23 View FIGURE 23

Material examined. Southern Ocean, Powell Basin, R / V Polarstern, ANDEEP III (ANT-XXII/3), Sta. 67/150-8, 20 Mar 2005, 61°48.56ʹS, 47°27.48ʹW, MUC, 1884 m, holotype GoogleMaps ( SMF 24908) .

Description. Holotype small, threadlike, complete in three pieces, 3.4 mm long, 0.1 mm wide, with 60 setigerous segments. Body cylindrical throughout, without dorsal and ventral grooves; anterior segments to about setiger 14 wider than long ( Fig. 23A View FIGURE 23 ), then becoming rounded, moniliform in middle body, becoming narrow again in far posterior segments; body tapering to triangular pygidium bearing a single anal cirrus ( Fig. 23B View FIGURE 23 ). Parapodia of first four setigers close to one another, then these separating with noto- and neuropodia becoming widely separated from one another along rest of body ( Fig. 23A View FIGURE 23 ). Color in alcohol tan with diffuse brown pigment on a few anterior segments.

Prostomium triangular, tapering to rounded tip; with rounded dome-like dorsal crest with glandular band on posterior margin ( Fig. 23A View FIGURE 23 ); eyespots absent; nuchal organs narrow slits anterior to band of glands ( Fig. 23A View FIGURE 23 ). Peristomium enlarged, inflated, about as long as first three setigers, without annular rings ( Fig. 23A View FIGURE 23 ); with two short lobes representing stumps of dorsal tentacles near posterior margin ( Fig. 23A View FIGURE 23 ). First pair of branchiae on setiger 1 posterior to notosetae; subsequent branchiae from same location, continuing to about setiger 20.

Parapodia reduced to simple mounds from which setae arise. Notosetae include 4–6 simple capillaries on first 15–20 setigers; bidentate hooks from setiger 23, with 3–4 hooks and 1–2 thin capillaries per notopodium continuing to posterior end; last 1–2 notopodia with hooks long, acicular, lacking apical tooth. Neurosetae include 3–4 capillaries on setigers 1–5, with bidentate hooks from setiger 6; hooks 2–3 per neuropodium accompanied by 1–2 capillaries. Hooks gently curved, with short, pointed apical tooth surmounting sharply pointed main fang ( Fig. 23C View FIGURE 23 ); hooks without hood or crest on shaft.

Etymology. The epithet is from fimbria, Latin for thread, referring to the threadlike body of this species.

Remarks. Caulleriella fimbriata n. sp., C. antarctica , and C. kacyae n. sp. are three small, threadlike species that all occur in deep-water Antarctic sediments. Caulleriella fimbriata n. sp. is distinguished from the other two species in having only a single peristomial ring instead of two or three, and a single anal cirrus instead of two. Additional details that differ between these three species and others are found in Table 2 in the Discussion.

Habitat. The Powell Basin is known as a dynamic environment based on currents and sedimentation patterns. Surficial sediments collected as part of the ANDEEP III survey at a site near the type-locality of Caulleriella fimbriata n. sp. consisted of dark greyish brown, poorly sorted mud with sand (3%), silt (66%), and clay (31%) ( Howe et al. 2007).

Distribution. Southern Ocean, Powell Basin, 1884 m.

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

SMF

Forschungsinstitut und Natur-Museum Senckenberg

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