Cabira thailandica, Plathong & Dean & Plathong, 2021
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5071.4.4 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5C61473A-9E6A-4CFE-BCD6-1AE7CF093AE9 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5727747 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6050E603-1541-FF8C-FF2E-801AF4A1FD04 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Cabira thailandica |
status |
sp. nov. |
Cabira thailandica View in CoL sp. nov.
Figs 13–15 View FIGURE 13 View FIGURE 14 View FIGURE 15
Material examined. 76 specimens, collected from the Songkhla Sea , Gulf of Thailand, Western Pacific. Coll. MEM (Marine Ecosearch Management Co., Ltd.) mud mixed with sand and shells. Details of geographic positions and environmental characteristics of sampling stations are in Table 2. Holotype: PSUZC-POL-0200 (1 spec.), S52 (7°42’05”N, 100°40’15”E), 11 Feb 2015 GoogleMaps , 23.0 m. Paratypes: PSUZC-POL-0201 (1 spec.), S09-10 (7°31’56”N, 100°42’47”E), 3 Jul 2014, 24.3 m; PSUZC-POL-0202 (1 spec.), S09-6 (7°32’13”N, 100°42’21”E), 20 Feb 2015, 23.6 m; PSUZC-POL-0203 (1 spec.), S02 (7°31’44”N, 100°28’15”E), 5 Feb 2015, 10.0 m; PSUZC-POL-0204 (7 specs., 4 specs. on SEM stubs), S03 (7°21’02”N, 100°31’45”E), 2 Dec 2015, 9.0 m; PSUZC-POL-0205 (1 spec.), S46 (7°40’58”N, 100°29’39”E), 22 Feb 2015, 14.5 m; PSUZC-POL-0206 (1 spec.), S19 (7°21’01”N, 100°36’54”E), 17 Jul 2015, 14.0 m; PSUZC-POL-0207 (1 spec.), S08 (7°29’10”N, 100°47’06”E), 16 Mar 2016, 25.0 m; PSUZC- POL-0208 (1 spec.), S14 (7°26’14”N, 100°36’13”E), 20 Sep 2017, 15.5 m; PSUZC-POL-0209 (1 spec.), S11-2 (7°31’01”N, 100°36’39”E), 27 Mar 2017, 18.9 m; PSUZC-POL-0210 (1 spec.), S11-9 (7°31’11”N, 100°36’18”E), 27 Mar 2017, 18.7 m; PSUZC-POL-0211 (1 spec.), S10-8 (7°28’44”N, 100°36’11”E), 5 May 2018, 18.5 m; PSUZC-POL-0212 (1 spec.), S09-3 (7°32’01”N, 100°42’41”E), 16 Aug 2018, 24.0 m; AM W.52912 (1 spec.), S05 (7°34’03”N, 100°33’57”E), 13 Oct 2015, 16.5 m GoogleMaps ; AM W. 52913 (1 spec.), S06 (7°20’10”N, 100°36’59”E), 13 Oct 2015, 15.5 m GoogleMaps .
Additional Material. S02 (7°31’44”N, 100°28’15”E), 6 May 2014 (3 specs.), 21 May 2015 (1 spec.), 10 m; S03 (7°21’02”N, 100°31’45”E), 6 May 2014 (1 spec.), 2 Dec 2015 (6 specs.), 13 Oct 2015 (1 spec.), 9.0 m; S04 (7°49’22”N, 100°29’11”E), 20 May 2015 (2 specs.), 14 Oct 2015 (1 spec.), 17.5 m; S05 (7°34’03”N, 100°33’57”E), 6 May 2014 (4 specs.), 21 May 2015 (5 specs.), 13 Oct 2015 (3 specs.), 2 Dec 2015 (2 specs.), 15 Mar 2016 (1 spec.), 18 Oct 2016 (1 spec.), 16.5 m; S06 (7°20’10”N, 100°36’59”E), 6 May 2014 (2 specs.), 10 Sep 2014 (1 spec.), 2 Dec 2015 (1 spec.), 15 May 2016 (1 spec.), 17 May 2016 (1 spec.), 15.5 m; S07 (7°44’01”N, 100°43’02”E), 6 May 2014 (1 spec.), 26 Jan 2015 (2 specs.), 14 Oct 2015 (3 specs.), 18 May 2016 (2 specs.), 26.5 m; S08 (7°29’10”N, 100°47’06”E), 16 Mar 2016 (1 spec.), 18 May 2016 (1 spec.), 19 Oct 2016 (1 spec.), 25.0 m; S09-3 (7°32’01”N, 100°42’41”E), 2 Mar 2016 (1 spec.), 24.0 m; S09-7 (7°32’19”N, 100°42’24”E), 1 Mar 2016 (1 spec.), 23.7 m; S10-4 (7°28’14”N, 100°36’39”E), 15 Feb 2015 (1 spec.), 19.0 m; S14 (7°26’13”N, 100°36’12”E), 20 Feb 2015 (3 specs.), 15.5 m; S17 (7°36’16”N, 100°34’48”E), 7 Oct 2015 (2 specs.), 18.0 m; S18-1 (7°21’38”N, 100°37’01”E), 3 Jun 2015 (4 specs.), 16.0 m; S18-2 (7°21’34”N, 100°37’06”E), 3 Jun 2015 (2 specs.), 16.0 m; S19 (7°21’01”N, 7°21’01”E), 17 Jul 2015 (5 specs.), 14.0 m; S21 (7°33’16”N, 100°46’43”E), 17 Feb 2015 (1 spec.), 24.0 m; S23 (7°49’20”N, 100°33’17”E), 14 Jul 2015 (3 specs.), 20.5 m; S25 (7°16’28”N, 100°48’46”E), 13 Jul 2015 (1 spec.), 6 Oct 2015 (1 spec.), 22.0 m; S38 (7°37’29”N, 100°42’53”E), 3 Jun 2015 (3 specs.), 22.0 m; S40 (7°26’50”N, 100°44’49”E), 26 Sep 2011 (1 spec.), 21.0 m; S45 (7°47’46”N, 100°28’10”E), 22 Feb 2015 (1 spec.), 14.3 m; S47 (7°34’04”N, 100°31’37”E), 22 Feb 2015 (11 specs.), 14.0 m; S48 (7°47’38”N, 100°42’29”E), 22 Feb 2015 (1 spec.), 24.6 m; S50 (7°35’01”N, 100°46’58”E), 21 Feb 2015 (2 specs.), 22.5 m; S53 (7°27’59”N, 100°31’47”E), 23 Feb 2015 (1 spec.), 14.3 m.
Type locality. Songkhla Sea , Gulf of Thailand ( Fig. 1D View FIGURE 1 ) .
Diagnosis. Cabira thailandica sp. nov. is characterized by the presence of minute papilliform lateral antennae and tentacular cirri; median antenna absent; dorsal cirri begin on chaetiger 1 and ventral cirri from chaetiger 3. Notopodial hooks occur from chaetiger 7. Single type of neurochaetae, long, slender, non-limbate capillary chaeta with bidentate tips.
Description. A small species, holotype complete, 14.4 mm long and 0.3 mm wide for 53 chaetigers. Body papillose, whitish, transparent with brown and light tan eggs visible in the body cavity, widest anteriorly. Paratypes, one complete about 48 chaetigers (13.8 mm long, 0.9 mm wide), one with the last six chaetigers regenerating (350 μm long, 126 μm wide), no hooks present in the regenerating region but with two small digitate anal cirri about 57 μm long (others incomplete, 1.6–21.1 mm long, 0.37–0.74 mm wide with 14–80 segments).
Prostomium bilobed, short, broad, wider than long (163 µm length and 355 µm wide); median antenna and eyespots absent. One pair of lateral antennae; short, small, conical and papillose. Palps posterior on prostomium with longitudinal folds. Pair of nuchal organs on the posterolateral margin of the prostomium ( Fig. 13C View FIGURE 13 ). Peristomium fuse with prostomium, two pairs of short, conical, papillose tentacular cirri insert laterally ( Fig. 11A–C View FIGURE 11 ). Dorsal tentacular cirri slightly shorter than ventral cirri.
Parapodia sub-biramous; notopodia reduced, each with very short papillated dorsal cirri, single acicular, and strongly curved notopodial hooks start from chaetiger 7 ( Figs 13A–B View FIGURE 13 , 14B View FIGURE 14 , 15A–B View FIGURE 15 ). Dorsal cirri present from first chaetiger, continue throughout body. Ventral cirri present from chaetiger 3 ( Fig. 13A View FIGURE 13 ). Neuropodia short, reduced, all long narrow, non - limbate capillary chaetae with bidentate tips, vary in length, up to six chaetae per fascicle ( Figs 14A, B, D, E View FIGURE 14 , 15C View FIGURE 15 ).
Pygidium with two long, digitate and papillose anal cirri.
Etymology. The new species is named after Thailand, the country where the specimens were collected.
Habitat. Found at 10 – 27 m depth, in mud mixed with sand and shells.
Distribution. Widely present in the Songkhla Sea, Gulf of Thailand, Western Pacific.
Remarks. Cabira thailandica sp. nov. is characterized by the absence of both eyespots and a median antenna, the presence of two short, papillate lateral antennae, dorsal cirri from the first chaetiger, ventral cirri from chaetiger 3 and notopodial hooks from chaetiger 7. All neurochaetae are narrow, non - limbate chaetae with bidentate tips. It belongs to group I of Cabira species by having only a single type of neurochaetae ( Table 2).
Cabira thailandica sp. nov. resembles C. incerta Webster, 1879 from Western Atlantic and C. rangarajani Mandal, Harkantra & Salazar - Vallejo, 2007 from Indian Ocean (Arabian Sea) in that all three species have a single type of neurochaetae and the first notopodial hooks beginning on chaetiger 7 ( Webster 1879; Mandal et al. 2007). However, C. thailandica sp. nov. can be distinguished from C. incerta and C. rangarajani by having bidentate neurochaetae which are lacking in C. incerta and C. rangarajani .
Cabira thailandica sp. nov. differs from C. saithipae sp. nov. by having a single type of long, non - limbate chaeta with bidentate tips, the first ventral cirri occur at chaetiger 3 and first notopodial hooks begin on chaetiger 7. Cabira saithipae sp. nov. has three types of neurochaetae, ventral cirri begin at chaetiger 1 and notopodial hooks start from chaetiger 8.
AM |
Australian Museum |
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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Pilarginae |
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