Onuphis uschakovi, Wu, Xuwen & Xu, Kuidong, 2017

Wu, Xuwen & Xu, Kuidong, 2017, Neotypification of Onuphis fukianensis Uschakov & Wu, 1962 and description of a new species of Onuphis (Annelida: Onuphidae) from China seas, Zootaxa 4291 (2), pp. 347-360 : 355-360

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4291.2.7

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:90053977-230B-4EEC-98B8-073FF62CAB7B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6049011

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A48565-955F-DC2E-FF20-F910FB95FD49

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Onuphis uschakovi
status

sp. nov.

Onuphis uschakovi View in CoL sp. nov.

Figures 1 View FIGURE 1 , 7–9 View FIGURE 7 View FIGURE 8 View FIGURE 9 ; Table 2

Type material. Holotype: MBM 009427 View Materials , East China Sea near the southern Yellow Sea , 31°30'N, 124°00'E, coarse sand and shell fragments, coll. Yuheng Cui, 15 January 1959 GoogleMaps . Paratypes: MBM 009434 View Materials (n=2), southern Yellow Sea , 32°30'N, 122°45'E, brown silt and shell fragments, 35 m, coll. Liren Cheng, 23 January 1959 GoogleMaps ; MBM 009439 View Materials (n=1), southern Yellow Sea near the East China Sea, 31°45′N, 122°45′E, coarse sand and shell fragments, 34.6 m, coll. GoogleMaps

Liren Cheng, 23 October 1959; MBM 009444 View Materials (n=1), southern Yellow Sea , 32°00'N, 122°45′E, silt and shell fragments, 34 m, coll. Liren Cheng, 13 May 1959 GoogleMaps .

Type locality. East China Sea, near border with the southern Yellow Sea , coarse sand and shell fragments (31°30'N, 124°00'E). GoogleMaps

Diagnosis. Peristomium and anterior 20 chaetigers each with a faint transverse band. Ceratophores long with 27–32 rings on lateral antennophores. One or two eyespots present near bases of palpophores. Branchiae starting from chaetiger 1 as single branchial filament, branched from chaetiger 23–29, with a maximum of 3 or 4 filaments. Subulate ventral cirri present in first six chaetiger, distinctly subulate postchaetal lobes in first 22–29 chaetigers. Interramal papillae present from chaetiger 5 to 12. Pseudocompound hooks tridentate, present in first four chaetigers; slender long-appendage hook absent. Subacicular hooks from chaetiger 12 or 13. Pectinate chaetae flat, distally oblique with 8–10 teeth.

Description. Mainly based on holotype, complemented with data from paratypes.

Holotype well-preserved, 29 mm long with 78 chaetigers (without posterior end), maximum width 2.1 mm excluding parapodia. Peristomium and anterior 5 chaetigers cylindrical, becoming dorsoventrally flattened from chaetiger 6. Body light yellow or pale in alcohol, epithelium slightly iridescent. Peristomium and anterior 20 chaetigers each with an indistinct transverse band ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 A–E).

Prostomium small, subtriangular, anterior margin rounded with a pair of subulate frontal lips ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 H–K). Palps situated on anterolateral region of prostomium, extending posteriorly to chaetiger 3 with 24 basal rings ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 A). Antennae arranged on median part, lateral antennae reaching chaetiger 21 with 32 basal rings, median antenna reaching chaetiger 13 with 18 basal rings ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 A). Eyespot observed near base of left palpophores in holotype ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 H), and on both sides in three paratypes ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 J, K). Nuchal grooves straight. Peristomium slightly shorter than chaetiger 1, possessing a pair of slender peristomial cirri inserted at anterior margin, slightly longer than peristomium ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 A–E).

Maxillae well sclerotized, yellow to brown. Carriers triangular, about 2/3 as long as Mx I. Maxillary formula: Mx I = 1+1, Mx II = 8+7, Mx III = 7+0, Mx IV = 6+11, Mx V = 1+1. Posterior teeth smaller posteriorly in both Mx II and Mx III. Mx V reduced to an edentate plate ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 E). Mandibles shorter than maxillae with slender and less sclerotized shafts; cutting plate (slightly broken) smooth in frontal edge ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 F).

Anterior 4–6 chaetigers distinctly longer than followings. Chaetiger 1 longest, about 2 times as long as chaetiger 6, gradually becoming shorter posteriorly to normal length by chaetiger 12 ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 A). First 4 pairs of parapodia modified, directed anterolaterally, slightly larger than following. Dorsal cirri long and thick in anterior chaetigers ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 A–F), gradually diminishing thereafter and becoming short and narrow for majority of body ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 G–I). Ventral cirri subulate in first 6 chaetigers ( Figs 7 View FIGURE 7 F, G; 9A–F), modified to glandular pads in subsequent chaetigers ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 G–I). Postchaetal lobes distinctly subulate in first 29 chaetigers ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 A–F), then reduced as small knobs posteriorly ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 G–I). Interramal papillae present in chaetigers 5–12, distinct in chaetigers 5–8, becoming short and thick in following ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 D).

Branchiae as single filament from chaetiger 1 to chaetiger 27, two filaments occurring from chaetiger 28, three from chaetiger 31, maximum 4 filaments by chaetiger 35, gradually decreasing in number thereafter. Branchial filaments subulate in anterior chaetigers, becoming short and digitiform in pectinate branchiae, longer than corresponding dorsal cirri ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 A–I).

Chaetigers 1–4 each consisting of 2–4 upper limbate chaetae with narrow wings and 3–4 pseudocompound hooks per parapodium ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 A–C, F, M). Pseudocompound hooks distally tridentate; distal tooth curved, longest; second one triangular, slightly smaller than distal tooth; proximal one smallest, slightly robust in large median hooks ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 J, K); slender long-appendage hook absent. Limbate chaetae from unmodified parapodia simple and slender with wings on both sides ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 L, N). Lower limbate chaetae replaced by two hooded subacicular hooks from chaetiger 13 ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 O). Pectinate chaetae flat and oblique with 8–10 teeth ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 P). Aciculae tapering with pointed tips, as many as 5 per parapodium in anterior chaetigers ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 A–C, F).

Methyl green staining pattern. Based on a single paratype (MBM009439; Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 A–C). Prostomium including palps and antennae lightly stained. Frontal lips, upper and lower lips stained evenly to deep blue. Dorsum of peristomium and first 4 chaetigers stained to deeper color than following. Dorsum of following chaetigers with only median areas stained. Venter with two parallel transverse stripes per chaetiger. Branchiae, dorsal cirri and postchaetal lobes deeply stained. Ventral cirri and ventral glandular pads lightly stained.

Variations. Morphological comparison of a total of five specimens is provided ( Table 2). Maximum width ranged from 1.0 to 2.1 mm. The transverse bands were usually faint on the dorsum but not observed in the specimens with pale epidermis ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 D, E) probably due to the poor fixation. Eyes were present as one or two dots on the anterolateral side of the prostomium but not observed in only one specimen (MBM009434-spec.1) ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 I). Branched branchiae started from chaetiger 23–29 with a maximum of 3 or 4 filaments. The number of chaetigers with subulate postchaetal lobes varied from 22 to 29, showing a positive relationship with the Size Index (y = 0.7175x + 19.241, R² = 0.8003, P <0.05). Interramal papillae usually started from chaetiger 5 and in only one specimen they started from chaetiger 7 (MBM009434-spec.1); the last chaetiger with interramal papillae varied from chaetiger 9 to 12. Subacicular hooks generally started from chaetiger 13 and in only one specimen (MBM009439) they started from chaetiger 12.

MBM009434-spec. 2 52 16 /3.0/1.0 16 29 16 1 pair faint Etymology. Onuphis uschakovi is named to honor the late Russian Professor P. V. Uschakov, in recognition of his contribution to the taxonomy of Chinese polychaetes, as well as the traditional friendship with Chinese colleagues.

Distribution. Southern Yellow Sea and East China Sea, near Changjiang (Yangtze River) Estuary (water depth 34–44 m) ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ).

Remarks. Onuphis uschakovi sp. nov. can be distinguished from its congeners by a combination of characters as follows: long ceratophores with up to 27–32 rings; pseudocompound hooks tridentate, present in first 4 chaetigers; subulate ventral cirri present in first 6 chaetiger; branchiae present from chaetiger 1, branched from chaetiger 23–29, with up to 3–4 filaments; interramal papillae located from chaetiger 5 to 12; and subacicular hooks started from chaetiger 12 or 13.

Like O. fukianensis , Onuphis uschakovi sp. nov. has long ceratophores and tridentate pseudocompound hooks in the first 4 chaetigers. However, the two species can be easily separated by the distribution of subulate ventral cirri (chaetigers 1–6 vs. 1–5), the start of branched branchiae (chaetiger 23–29 vs. 43–54) and subacicular hooks (chaetiger 12 or 13 vs. 10), and the presence of interramal papillae in O. uschakovi (vs. absent in O. fukianensis ).

Onuphis uschakovi sp. nov. highly resembles O. eremita parva Berkeley & Berkeley, 1941 in possessing tridentate pseudocompound hooks in the first 4 chaetigers and subulate ventral cirri in the first 6 chaetigers. In addition, they are similar in the branchial characters, distributions of interramal papillae and subulate postchaetal lobes. However, O. uschakovi sp. nov. differs from O. eremita parva in the start of subacicular hooks (chaetiger 12 or 13 vs. 8), the maximum number of ceratophoral rings (27–32 vs. 21), and the shape of pectinate chaetae (oblique with 8–10 teeth vs. transverse with 15 teeth). Besides, O. uschakovi sp. nov. was found from the East China Sea and southern Yellow Sea, while O. eremita parva was recorded off California.

MBM

San Jose State University, Museum of Birds and Mammals

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Eunicida

Family

Onuphidae

SubFamily

Onuphinae

Genus

Onuphis

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