Bathyvermilia challengeri Zibrowius, 1973

Kupriyanova, Elena K., Bailey-Brock, Julie & Nishi, Eijiroh, 2011, New records of Serpulidae (Annelida, Polychaeta) collected by R / V " Vityaz " from bathyal and abyssal depths of the Pacific Ocean, Zootaxa 2871, pp. 43-60 : 49-50

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.203385

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6189943

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/442A9B63-3B05-8328-FF0D-FCA3CC5EFD9B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Bathyvermilia challengeri Zibrowius, 1973
status

 

Bathyvermilia challengeri Zibrowius, 1973 View in CoL

( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 )

Placostegus ornatus McIntosh, 1885: 522 View in CoL –524, pl. 55, fig. 5–6, pl. 30A, fig. 25–27. Bathyvermilia challengeri Zibrowius, 1973: 428 View in CoL –430, fig. 1a-e.

Material examined. Newly examined material. SIO: R/V “ Vityaz ” Stn. 3156, 39 º57’N, 165º07.8’E, 5535 m, trawl, 28 Sept 1954 (1 tube); Stn. 3499, 25 º27.1’N, 143º22’E, 4892-5022 m (1 spec.); Stn. 6334, 11 º06.2’S, 159º99’W, 5240-5300 m, trawl, 31 Jul 1970 (1 spec.).

Additional material. BPBM: Acc. No. 1983.252, 16 °41.5’N, 169°34.3’W, Johnston Atoll, 380 m, Hawaii Undersea Research Laboratory ( HURL) submersible dive 83–208 (1 spec.).

Description. Tube: white opaque, about 0.8 mm in diameter (portion shown in Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A, B 27 mm long), with very regularly closely arranged smooth transverse ridges; longitudinal groove cutting transverse ridges ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A, B).

Branchial crown: with ten pairs of radioles not joined by inter-radiolar membrane. Branchial eyes not visible in preserved material. Stylodes absent.

Peduncle: inserted as dorsal 2nd radiole, about same thickness as rest of radioles, smooth, circular in cross-section ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 C); slightly enlarged at base of operculum; constriction present. Pair of lateral wings proximal to opercular bulb and pseudoperculum absent.

Operculum: inverted conical, slightly longer than wide, with simple almost flat calcareous distal plate ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 C) about 1 mm in diameter (specimen from Stn. 6334 with a calcareous granule inside operculum).

Collar and thoracic membranes: collar trilobed. Thoracic membranes reaching up to 4th chaetiger.

Thorax: with seven thoracic chaetigers, six of which uncinigerous ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 D). Collar chaetae simple longer limbate ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 E) and shorter capillaries with poorly discernable limbate blade ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 F), special chaetae absent. Apomatus chaetae present ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 G). Uncini saw-shaped with seven-eight teeth ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 I) and simple pointed anterior peg (SEM details not available).

Abdomen: anterior abdominal uncini similar to thoracic ones, but smaller ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 J, SEM details not available), posterior rasp-shaped ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 K). Chaetae flat narrow geniculate with blunt teeth ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 H, SEM details not available) anteriorly and long slender capillaries posteriorly ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 I, SEM details not available).

Size: body 6 mm long, branchial crown 7 mm long.

Colour: unknown.

Distribution. Mid-Pacific Ocean, 4246–5719 m, and Johnston Atoll (about 1400 km west of Hawaii), 380 m.

Remarks. This species has a very characteristic tube with numerous, close to each other, conspicuous transverse ridges (not anteriorly directed peristomes) encircling the tube interrupted by a longitudinal groove cutting transverse ridges near the base. Zibrowius (1973) mentions that the thoracic membranes in the type material are very short, ending at about 2nd chaetiger, however, the material is in such poor state of preservation that the details of collar structure remain unknown.

Previous records of this species came from three R/V “ Challenger ” stations in the North and South Pacific Ocean at 4246–5719 m ( Zibrowius 1973). The specimen collected off Johnston Atoll near Hawaii is currently the shallowest record for this species. Although the specimen from the upper bathyal off Johnston Atoll fits the original description of B. challengeri and is morphologically very similar to the specimens collected from the lower abyssal zone, such a disjunct bathymetric distribution is unusual. Further collecting and additional taxonomic studies of deep-sea serpulids are needed to determine whether B. challengeri does have disjunct or wide bathymetric distribution or whether at least two morphologically similar species are present in the Pacific.

SIO

Scripps Institution of Oceanography

BPBM

Bishop Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Sabellida

Family

Serpulidae

Genus

Bathyvermilia

Loc

Bathyvermilia challengeri Zibrowius, 1973

Kupriyanova, Elena K., Bailey-Brock, Julie & Nishi, Eijiroh 2011
2011
Loc

Placostegus ornatus

Zibrowius 1973: 428
McIntosh 1885: 522
1885
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