Boccardiella hamata (Webster, 1879)

Abe, Hirokazu & Sato-Okoshi, Waka, 2021, Molecular identification and larval morphology of spionid polychaetes (Annelida, Spionidae) from northeastern Japan, ZooKeys 1015, pp. 1-86 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1015.54387

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F6BD9213-9DB7-4564-AA00-3C61B2F43B2D

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CF836F52-0098-5EA1-ACF8-638134F28A46

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Boccardiella hamata (Webster, 1879)
status

 

Boccardiella hamata (Webster, 1879) View in CoL Fig. 7H, I View Figure 7

Larval morphology.

Thick and fusiform in overall shape, widest at middle part of body. Prostomium broad and anteriorly rounded, usually dusky brown anteriorly. Three pairs of black eyes present, most median pair rounded, lateral pairs usually double-eyes, occasionally divided into respective eyes. Black pigmentation usually presents ventrally on each lateral lip, occasionally absent. Dorsal pigmentation basically consists of a pair of medial bands, lateral branching melanophores, and small pigment patch at the base of notopodia in each chaetiger from chaetiger III onwards (Fig. 7H View Figure 7 ). These melanophores undergo expansion and contraction, sometimes coalescing to cover almost the whole of the dorsal surface as ramified pigmentation (Fig. 7I View Figure 7 ). Four transverse lines of black pigmentation sometimes fused as a single transverse band in chaetiger I. One or two pairs of lateral black pigmentation on chaetiger II. Two rows of band-shaped ventral pigmentation usually located on posterior edges of some chaetigers posterior to second chaetiger. A pair of black pigment patches on pygidium. Gastrotrochs on chaetigers III, V, VII, X, and XIII.

Remarks.

Adults of this species were non-boring and collected from mud deposits in crevices of shells of living C. gigas oysters in Sasuhama in May 2011 and February 2016. Adult morphology agrees with the description of B. hamata by Sato-Okoshi (2000). Therefore, this species was referred to B. hamata . The larvae and adults were confirmed to match (18S: 1772/1772, 16S: 480/481 bp) using molecular data (Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ).

Planktonic larvae of this species were frequently collected from Onagawa Bay, Gobu-ura, and Sasuhama in July and August. The larval morphology of this species agrees with that of B. hamata described by Dean and Blake (1966, as Boccardia ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Spionida

Family

Spionidae

SubFamily

Spioninae

Genus

Boccardiella