Treptopale watsonae ( Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala, 2018 ) Cruz-Gómez, 2021

Cruz-Gómez, Christopher, 2021, A new genus and seven new species of chrysopetalids (Annelida, Chrysopetalidae) from the Tropical Eastern Pacific, Zootaxa 5068 (1), pp. 1-59 : 14-17

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5068.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F0D7412B-5968-4459-9BA4-F1A314BA8EC7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5706133

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/044C3804-716D-EF2C-D7D3-FDC024BC9282

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Treptopale watsonae ( Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala, 2018 )
status

comb. nov.

Treptopale watsonae ( Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala, 2018) View in CoL n. comb.

Figs 7 View FIGURE 7 , 12 View FIGURE 12

LSID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:9A3C9FD2-2DAC-4EC8-BFBF-ACEBD3F97091

Arichlidon watsonae Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala, 2018: 62–65 View in CoL View Cited Treatment , Figs 2A–L View FIGURE 2 , 8 View FIGURE 8 , 14A–D View FIGURE 14 , 15A View FIGURE 15 . — Cruz-Gómez et al. 2021: 179, Fig. 4L View FIGURE 4 (key of chrysopetalids from Tropical America).

Type locality: Coral Beach , Ixtapa Island, Guerrero, México, on dead coral at 1.5 m ( Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala 2018) .

Material examined. Five specimens. Baja California Sur: ECOSUR-3218 , La Marina, La Paz Bay , 24º09.319´N, 110º19.630´W, on pier pilings, 50 cm, 1 spec. / 250 cm 2, August 14, 2011, coll. TVG & ADL GoogleMaps . Guerrero: UMAR-Poly 935, 3 spec. Coral Beach, 17º40´36”N, 101º39´22”W, Ixtapa Island , on dead coral, 1.5 m, September 19, 2007, coll. SGM GoogleMaps et al. Oaxaca: UMAR-Poly 936, Corralero Lagoon, 16º14´11”N, 98º11´36”W, on sand, June 18, 2009, coll. JMM & JRC GoogleMaps .

Description. Based on the best-preserved specimen (UMAR-Poly 935): complete with 82 segments. TL= 5.3 mm, TW= 0.7 mm. Body long, broad, tapered posteriorly ( Fig. 7A View FIGURE 7 ). Body pale orange to bright yellow. Paleae fan translucent, imbricated dorsally.

Prostomium visible among the first five segments. Lateral antennae short, inserted on the antero-ventral prostomial margin, median antenna about the same length of lateral ones. Eyes red-violet, two pairs, fused. Nuchal organ, large, not covering the prostomium ( Fig. 7B View FIGURE 7 ). Palps short, oval, visible in ventral view. Mouth fold wide, placed between segment 2 and 3. Pharynx eversible, not exposed, stylets slender.

Parapodium from segment 22, notochaetae in three main groups ( Fig. 7E View FIGURE 7 ). Notochaetae: lateral group inserted below notaciculum, 4–6 paleae, slender and symmetrical, with 3–6 internal ribs ( Fig. 7F View FIGURE 7 ); subunit 1, 1 palea, broad and symmetrical, with 8–12 internal ribs ( Fig. 7F View FIGURE 7 , arrow). Main group, 6–7 paleae, broad and symmetrical, with 15–17 (19) internal ribs and 3–5 raised ribs ( Fig. 7G View FIGURE 7 ). Median group, 2–3 paleae, curved and asymmetrical, with (7) 8–11, and 1–2 raised ribs ( Fig. 7H–I View FIGURE 7 ). All paleal groups are covered with scattered granules.

Neuropodium conical, slightly longer than notopodium. Neurochaetae: unit 1, 3–4 superior spinigers, blades curved and long, 15 times longer than wide ( Fig. 7J View FIGURE 7 ). Unit 2, 4–6 falcigers, blades curved and medium-sized, 3–4 times longer than wide ( Fig. 7K View FIGURE 7 ). Unit 3, 4–5 falcigers, blades curved and medium-sized, 3–4 times longer than wide ( Fig. 7L View FIGURE 7 ). Unit 4, 2–4 falcigers, blades curved and short, 5 times longer than wide ( Fig. 7M View FIGURE 7 ). Pygidium quadrate, with two anal cirri ( Fig. 7C View FIGURE 7 ). Oocyte size: 8.8–10.9 µm (n=5) ( Fig. 7D View FIGURE 7 ).

Habitat. Intertidal to subtidal (1–4 m). Specimens of this species were collected mostly on dead coral, rocks, algae, as epibiont of bivalves and sponges ( Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala 2018), as well as a member of the fouling community.

Distribution. From La Paz Bay, Baja California Sur to La Tijera, Oaxaca ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 ).

Remarks. Perkins (1985) and Watson (2010; 2015) clarified the differences among Treptopale and similar genera, such as Paleanotus and Arichlidon . This morphological proximity led to a mistake by the author in a previous survey. Here, A. watsonae is recognized and proposed as member of Treptopale under the new combination T. watsonae n. comb.

Treptopale watsonae n. comb. resembles T. rudolphi Perkins, 1985 from Florida Keys, in having broad main paleae, short palps, and neurochaetal blades long. However, specimens T. watsonae n. comb. have a tapered, short body (<7 mm), while specimens of T. rudolphi have an elongated, long body (> 7 mm) ( Perkins 1985; Watson 2010; CCG Pers. Obs.). Furthermore, T. watsonae n. comb. has a distinct large nuchal organ, while T. rudolphi has a barely perceptible nuchal organ ( Perkins 1985: 906, Fig. 26A, C View FIGURE 26 ). Regarding notochaetae, T. watsonae n. comb. has subunit 1 broad and symmetrical, and all groups of notochaetae very ornamented with granules, while T. rudolphi has subunit 1 slender and asymmetrical, and the surface of notochaetae rather smooth ( Perkins 1985: 906, Fig. 27A–D; Watson 2010: 41, Fig. 1A–D View FIGURE 1 ). This is the first record of Treptopale from the TEP.

JMM

Earlham College, Joseph Moore Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Phyllodocida

Family

Chrysopetalidae

SubFamily

Chrysopetalinae

Genus

Treptopale

Loc

Treptopale watsonae ( Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala, 2018 )

Cruz-Gómez, Christopher 2021
2021
Loc

Arichlidon watsonae Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala, 2018: 62–65

Cruz-Gomez, C. & Salazar-Vallejo, S. & Mora-Vallin, Z. G. 2021: 179
Cruz-Gomez, C. & Bastida-Zavala, J. R. 2018: 65
2018
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