Chloeia rosea Potts, 1909
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5238.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:768E9932-2D18-4115-8359-3FF800328BCD |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7622015 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C79010-FF9F-D774-FF70-7D2C223EFDD6 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Chloeia rosea Potts, 1909 |
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Chloeia rosea Potts, 1909 View in CoL
Fig. 50 View FIGURE 50
Chloeia rosea Potts, 1909: 357–358 View in CoL , Pl. 45, Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ; Fauvel 1932: 57; Fauvel 1953: 97–98, Fig. 46h View FIGURE 46 (partim, RV Investigator, Sta. 242 is C. tumida Baird, 1868 View in CoL ); Hartman 1959: 132.
Chloeia tumida?: Monro 1937: 253 View in CoL (3 small juveniles from Maldives).
Type material. Indian Ocean, Amirante Islands. Holotype ( BMNH 1924.3.1.145), HMS Sealark, station not indicated, associated with a purple alcyonarian, 54 m, Oct. 1905, J.S. Gardiner, coll. (Note: Cooper (1909) recorded three species of Antipathes Pallas, 1766b for the Amiral Islands from the same expedition).
Diagnosis. Chloeia with pinnate branchiae from chaetiger 5, progressively smaller posteriorly; dorsum pink, without pigmentation pattern; anterior eyes slightly larger than posterior ones; caruncle with about 10 folds; notochaetae furcates and harpoon chaetae without spurs; neurochaetae furcates.
Description. Holotype (BMNH 1924.3.1.145), with body fusiform, 10.5 mm long, 3 mm wide, 20 chaetigers.
Holotype whitish, including chaetae ( Fig. 50A View FIGURE 50 ); anterior prostomial margin blackish; dorsal cirri and branchiae pale. Venter brownish, midventral band paler, double; lips inner surface greenish.
Prostomium anteriorly entire. Eyes blackish, anterior eyes slightly larger than posterior ones. Median antenna inserted at anterior caruncular margin, as long as caruncle ( Fig. 50B View FIGURE 50 ), 3× longer than lateral antennae. Lateral antennae bases separate from each other, slightly longer than palps. Mouth ventral on chaetiger 2. Pharynx not exposed.
Caruncle pale, sigmoid, trilobed, tapered, reaching chaetiger 4. Median ridge plicate, with about 12 vertical folds, partially concealing lateral lobes. Lateral lobes narrow, with about 16 vertical folds.
Pinnate branchiae from chaetiger 5, continued throughout body, convergent towards posterior region; progressively smaller posteriorly, longer than following segments in anterior ( Fig. 50C View FIGURE 50 ) and median segments; in posterior segments as long as 1.5× successive segments. Median segments with 6–7 lateral branches (all without secondary branches, hence pinnate, not bipinnate).
Parapodia biramous, notopodia with cirriform branchiae along chaetigers 1–4, ¼–1/2 as long as dorsal cirri. Dorsal cirri slightly longer than bipinnate branchiae along median chaetigers, 2–3× longer in posterior chaetigers. Second ventral cirri with cirrophores slightly longer and wider, and cirrostyle slightly longer than adjacent ones, directed dorsally. Other ventral cirri directed ventrolaterally, as long as one subsequent segment.
Chaetae soft, most complete; distal fragile hoods and chaetal cortex variably eroded. Notochaetae in anterior chaetigers furcates ( Fig. 50D View FIGURE 50 ), major tines 4—5× longer than minor ones. Median chaetigers with 2 types of notochaetae ( Fig. 50F View FIGURE 50 ): furcates with smooth tines, major tines 3× longer than minor ones, and harpoon-chaetae with bifurcation region pigmented, denticulate tine 3—4× longer than smooth ones. Neurochaetae all furcates, anterior chaetigers with major tines 4× longer than minor ones ( Fig. 50E View FIGURE 50 ); median chaetigers with furcates and furcate capillaries ( Fig. 50G View FIGURE 50 ), major tines 3–5× longer than minor ones.
Posterior region tapered; pygidium with anus terminal; anal cirri lost (color, shape and size unknown).
Live pigmentation (from original description). Body reddish including chaetae. No other pigmentation features were given in the description.
Remarks. Chloeia rosea Potts, 1909 was described from the Indian Ocean; it is unique among Chloeia species by having pinnate branchiae, instead of being bipinnate like in the other species. There are three other species having branchiae from chaetiger 5, and without dorsal pigmentation pattern: C. longisetosa Potts, 1909 from the Indian Ocean, C. slapcinskyi sp. n., and C. wangi , the two latter ones from The Philippines. However, these three species have bipinnate branchiae, not pinnate, as in C. rosea .
The species was described with a small specimen (11 mm long, 20 segments) with reddish pink pigmentation, and it was found associated with a purple alcyonarian ( Potts 1909: 358). Regretfully, there were not enough details about the potential symbiont in the narrative for the expedition ( Gardiner & Cooper 1907a, b), nor in the account of the alcyonarians ( Cooper 1909). The relationship between these two species groups is quite interesting because most Chloeia species are regarded as free living, digging in sediments. From the original description, it was indicated that branchiae were convergent and long enough as to touch each other dorsally, and the illustration shows them with lateral branches tapered, clearly separated from each other, and this is confirmed in the holotype.
Distribution. Only known from the Admiral Islands, Indian Ocean, associated with alcyonarians, in substrates at 54 m depth.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Chloeia rosea Potts, 1909
Salazar-Vallejo, Sergio I. 2023 |
Chloeia tumida?: Monro 1937: 253
Monro, C. C. A. 1937: 253 |
Chloeia rosea
Hartman, O. 1959: 132 |
Fauvel, P. 1953: 97 |
Fauvel, P. 1932: 57 |
Potts, F. A. 1909: 358 |