Paleaequor nicoyensis Watson Russell, 1986

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 : 24-26

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.5706123

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/044C3804-7177-EF25-D7D3-FAFF212F9478

treatment provided by

Plazi (2021-11-15 07:29:26, last updated 2024-11-26 06:14:06)

scientific name

Paleaequor nicoyensis Watson Russell, 1986
status

 

Paleaequor nicoyensis Watson Russell, 1986 View in CoL

Figs 11 View FIGURE 11 , 12 View FIGURE 12

Paleaequor nicoyensis Watson Russell, 1986: 170–172 View in CoL , Figs 25 View FIGURE 25 –28.

Type locality: Gulf of Nicoya , Costa Rica, on sand at 44 m ( Watson Russell 1986) .

Material examined. Seven specimens. Costa Rica: Two spec. Puntarenas: UMAR-Poly-OH-018, cruise pier, on pier piles, 1.5 m, November 22, 2012, coll. TVG. Guanacaste: UMAR-Poly-OH-027, Cabuyal beach, on dead coral, 0.5 m, November 3, 2012, coll. TVG. Perú: Five spec. Piura: UMAR-Poly 953, 3 spec. Vichayo , 5°47´56”S, 80°56´48”W, on shells, 0.5 m, 2014, coll. IC. Tumbes: UMAR-Poly 954, 2 spec. Corvina , 3°62´76”S, 80°70´76”W, in mud, 15 m GoogleMaps , 2012.

Description. Based on the best-preserved specimens (UMAR-Poly 954): complete with 57 segments. TL= 6.3 mm, TW= 0.8 mm. Body long, slender, tapered posteriorly ( Fig. 11A View FIGURE 11 ). Body pale orange. Paleae fan translucent, imbricated dorsally.

Prostomium visible among the first four segments. Lateral antennae short, inserted on the antero-ventral prostomial margin, median antenna about the same length of lateral ones, inserted in front of the first pair of eyes. Eyes red-violet, two pairs. Nuchal organ, small, partially covering the prostomium ( Fig. 11B View FIGURE 11 ). Palps long, cylindrical, visible in ventral view. Mouth fold small, placed between segment 2 and 3. Pharynx eversible, not exposed, stylets thick.

Parapodium from segment 20, notochaetae in three main groups ( Fig. 7E View FIGURE 7 ). Notochaetae: lateral group inserted below notaciculum, 2–6 paleae, slender and symmetrical, with 5–8 internal ribs ( Fig. 11E View FIGURE 11 ); subunit 1, 1 palea, slender and symmetrical, with 9–15 internal ribs, and margins finely serrated ( Fig. 11F View FIGURE 11 ). Main group, 20–26 paleae, broad and symmetrical, with (14) 16–19 internal ribs, and 4–5 raised ribs ( Fig. 11G View FIGURE 11 ). Median group, 3–4 paleae shorter, broad, symmetrical, with (12) 13–20 internal ribs and 2–4 raised ribs ( Fig. 11H View FIGURE 11 ).

Neuropodium conical, slightly longer than notopodium. Neurochaetae: unit 1, 2–4 superior spinigers, blades straight and long, 12–14 times longer than wide ( Fig. 11I View FIGURE 11 ). Unit 2, 2–4 falcigers, blades straight and medium-sized, 6–7 times longer than wide ( Fig. 11J View FIGURE 11 ). Unit 3, 4–5 falcigers, blades straight and medium-size, 4–5 times longer than wide ( Fig. 11K–L View FIGURE 11 ). Unit 4, 2–3 falcigers, blades straight and short, 3 times longer than wide ( Fig.11M View FIGURE 11 ). Pygidium rounded with two anal cirri, and a reduced ventral cone ( Fig. 11C View FIGURE 11 ). Oocytes not seen.

Habitat. Intertidal to subtidal (0.5– 15 m). Specimens of P. nicoyensis were collected in mud, shells, dead coral, among the fouling communities; also, previously recorded on coarse sand ( Watson Russell 1986).

Distribution. From Gulf of Nicoya, Costa Rica to Corvina, Perú ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 ).

Remarks. Examined specimens of P. nicoyensis agree with the original description by Watson Russell (1986); however, intraspecific differences were detected. Specimens from Perú have a lower number of paleae on every group of paleae, possibly associated with the size, since these specimens were smaller than those collected from Costa Rica.

Watson Russell, C. (1986) Paleaequor, a new genus of polychaete worm (Chrysopetalidae). Records of the Australian Museum, 38, 153 - 174. https: // doi. org / 10.3853 / j. 0067 - 1975.38.1986.180

Gallery Image

FIGURE 7. Treptopale watsonae (Cruz-Gómez & Bastida-Zavala 2018), non-type specimen (UMAR-Poly 935). A) Complete fragmented body, arrow indicates anterior end. B) Drawing of prostomium, dorsal view. C) Drawing of pygidium, ventral view. D) Oocyte. E) Parapodium from segment 22. F) Lateral paleae, arrow indicates subunit 1. G) Main palea. H–I) Median paleae. J) Unit 1. K) Unit 2. L) Unit 3. M) Unit 4. Scales: 5 µm (D), 50 µm (BCFGHIJKLM), 200 µm (E), 500 µm (A).

Gallery Image

FIGURE 11. Paleaequor nicoyensis Watson Russell, 1986, non-type specimen (UMAR-Poly 954). A) Complete body. B) Drawing of prostomium, ventral view. C) Drawing of pygidium, ventral view. D) Parapodium from segment 20. E) Lateral paleae. F) Subunit 1. G) Main palea. H) Median palea. I) Unit 1. J) Unit 2. K) Unit 3. L–M) Unit 4. Scales: 20 µm (EFGHI- JKLM), 50 µm (BC), 200 µm (D), 1 mm (A).

Gallery Image

FIGURE 12. Previous and new records of chrysopetalids in the Tropical Eastern Pacific. Empty symbols indicate historic records.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 25. Apex of main paleae of some Chrysopetalum species from the Tropical Eastern Pacific, and the southernmost part of Warm Temperate Northeast Pacific. Chrysopetalum elegantoides Aguado, Capa & San Martín, 2003 (ECOSUR-3001). A) Main palea, lateral-most. B) Schematic of A. C) Schematic of D. D) Main paleae, midline-most. Chrysopetalum mexicanum n. sp. (ECOSUR-270). E) Main palea, lateral-most. F) Schematic of E. G) Schematic of H. H) Main paleae, midline-most. Chrysopetalum tovarae n. sp. (ECOSUR-273). I) Main palea, lateral-most. J) Schematic of I. K) Schematic of L. L) Main paleae, midline-most.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Phyllodocida

Family

Chrysopetalidae

SubFamily

Chrysopetalinae

Genus

Paleaequor