Paradalhousia oculata ( Treadwell, 1906 ), 2020
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4739.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:544B9C82-BF33-4EA1-9411-E1A307137466 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3680223 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2D1987E4-FFB6-737B-FF23-FDE2F72B60A5 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi (2020-02-18 08:17:59, last updated 2024-11-26 01:34:51) |
scientific name |
Paradalhousia oculata ( Treadwell, 1906 ) |
status |
comb. nov. |
Paradalhousia oculata ( Treadwell, 1906) View in CoL n. comb., reinstated
Figs 49 View FIGURE 49 , 50 View FIGURE 50
Castalia oculata Treadwell 1906: 1148 , Figs 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 .
? Leocrates oculatus: Hartman 1956: 278 View in CoL .
Leocrates oculatus: Hartman 1966: 191–192 View in CoL (n. comb.).
Leocrates giardi: Pettibone 1970: 219-221 View in CoL , Figs 17–19 View FIGURE 17 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 (only Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 ); Bailey-Brock & Hartman 1987: 263–264, Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 .II.34 (non Gravier, 1900).
Type material. Hawaii. Holotype ( USNM 5200 About USNM ), Maui Island, South of Puhielele Point (21°36’35” N, 156°05’10” W), Aleunihana Channel , between Hawaii and Maui Islands , USFC Steamer Albatross , Sta. 4066, 88– 317 m, rocky bottom, 18 Jul. 1902. GoogleMaps
Additional material. Hawaii. One specimen ( AMNH 476 About AMNH ), no further data [labelled as syntype; 7.1 mm long, 2.3 mm wide] .
Description. Holotype (USNM 5200) complete, bent ventrally, breaking into two ( Fig. 49A View FIGURE 49 ), pharynx fully exposed; left parapodia of chaetigers 6–9, and right parapodia of chaetigers 6–7 previously removed (all in container). Body colorless, 11 mm long, 2 mm wide, 16 chaetigers; eyes brownish, middorsal peristomial tubercle pale; most cirri broken.
Prostomium slightly longer than wide, slightly wider anteriorly ( Fig. 49B, C View FIGURE 49 ). Lateral antennae with ceratophores distinct, longer than prostomium, slightly longer than palps; palpophores slightly longer than palpostyles. Median antenna broken, inserted between anterior eyes.
Eyes brownish, round; anterior eyes emarginate anterolaterally, slightly larger and slightly more distant to each other than posterior round ones; in lateral view anterior and posterior eyes fused ( Fig. 49B, C View FIGURE 49 ).
Nuchal organs lobes U-shaped, parallel, prostomial posterior projections pale; middle furrow deep. Lateral ciliated bands visible dorsally. Tentacular cirri mostly broken or without tips, longest one reaching chaetiger 6. Lateral cushions low, entire, longitudinal striae visible.
Pharynx fully everted; anterior margin with 24 denticles, middorsal and midventral areas bare ( Fig. 49D View FIGURE 49 ). Upper and lower jaws single, visible, exposed, brownish in frontal view.
Dorsal cirri without tips, about as long as body width (excluding parapodia). Chaetigers 1–3 without notochaetae, notochaetae present along chaetigers 4–16, about 50 per bundle, as long as neurochaetae, subdistally denticulate, denticles fine, small. Notacicular and neuracicular lobes tapered, blunt ( Fig. 49E View FIGURE 49 , insets); notacicular lobes twice longer than wide, neuracicular ones as long as wide. Neurochaetae about 50 per bundle, blades decreasing in size ventrally, 6–7 times longer than wide; blades bidentate, guard approaching subdistal tooth ( Fig. 49E View FIGURE 49 insets).
Posterior region tapered. Prepygidial segment without dorsal cirri, ventral cirri medially broken. Pygidium tubular, anal cirri missing.
Oocytes about 100 µm.
Remarks. Castalia oculata Treadwell, 1906 must be reinstated and newly combined. Pettibone (1970: 219) regarded it as a junior synonym of Leocrates giardi Gravier, 1900 , but they belong to different genera. Further, C. oculata deserves a new combination into Paradalhousia because it has U-shaped nuchal organs, single upper and lower jaws, and pale neurochaetae. On the other hand, P. oculata ( Treadwell, 1906) n. comb., resembles P. papillosa ( Monro, 1926) reinst., n. comb. but they differ in the number of neurochaetae and in the orientation of their teeth. In P. oculata there are about 50 neurochaetae per bundle, and their distal teeth are slightly falcate, whereas in P. papillosa neurochaetae number about 20(–30) per bundle, and their distal teeth are straight.
The specimen deposited in New York (AMNH 476) is labeled as syntype. However, it was not included in the original description, which is the requisite in order to be included as a syntype ( ICZN 1999, Art. 72.4.1), and consequently it is herein regarded as an additional specimen. However, it completely matches the holotype in body shape ( Fig. 50A View FIGURE 50 ), anterior end appendages ( Fig. 50B View FIGURE 50 ), and pharynx features ( Fig. 50C View FIGURE 50 ), rendering it enigmatic why it was not included in the original description.
Distribution. Hawaii, rocky bottoms in 88–317 m depth.
Bailey-Brock, J. H. & Hartman, O. (1987) Polychaeta. In: Devaney, D. M. & Eldredge, L. G. (Eds.), Reef Shore Fauna of Hawaii. Section 2. Platyhelminthes through Phoronida & Section 3. Sipuncula through Annelida. Bishop Museum Special Publication, 64, pp. 216 - 454.
Gravier, C. (1900) Contribution a l'etude des annelides polychetes de la Mer Rouge. Nouvelles Archives du Museum d'Histoire Naturelle, 4 eme Serie, 2 (2), 137 - 282. [http: // www. biodiversitylibrary. org / item / 113551 # page / 149 / mode / 1 up]
Hartman, O. (1956) Polychaetous annelids erected by Treadwell, 1891 to 1948, together with a brief chronology. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural Hislory, 109, 245 - 310. [http: // digitallibrary. amnh. org / handle / 2246 / 1145]
Hartman, O. (1966) Polychaetous annelids of the Hawaiian Islands. Occasional Papers of the Bernice P. Bishop Museum, 23, 163 - 252.
ICZN (International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature). (1999) International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. 4 th Edition. International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature in association with the British Museum (Natural History), London, 306 pp. [http: // www. iczn. org / iczn / index. jsp]
Monro, C. C. A. (1926) Polychaeta of the H. M. S. Alert Expedition, 1881 - 1882. Families Hesionidae and Nereidae. Journal of the Linnaean Society, Zoology, 36, 311 - 323. [http: // onlinelibrary. wiley. com / doi / 10.1111 / j. 1096 - 3642.1926. tb 02172. x / epdf] https: // doi. org / 10.1111 / j. 1096 - 3642.1926. tb 02172. x
Pettibone, M. H. (1970) Polychaeta Errantia of the Siboga Expedition, 4. Some additional polychaetes of the Polynoidae, Hesionidae, Nereidae, Goniadidae, Eunicidae, and Onuphidae, selected as new species by the late Dr. Hermann Augener with remarks on other related species. Siboga Expeditie Monographie, 24 (1 d), 199 - 270.
Treadwell, A. L. (1906 [1903]) Polychaetous annelids of the Hawaiian Islands collected by the steamer Albatross in 1902. Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission, 23 (3), 1145 - 1181. [http: // docs. lib. noaa. gov / rescue / Fish _ Commission _ Bulletins / BFC 1903 - v 23. pt 3. pdf]
FIGURE 1. Anterior end in dorsal view and exposed pharynx in frontal or oblique ventral view, rearranged after Pettibone (1970). A. Leocrates claparedii (Costa in Claparède, 1868), anterior end. B. Same, exposed pharynx. C. Leocrates oculatus (Treadwell, 1906), anterior end. D. Same, exposed pharynx. E. Leocrates diplognathus (Monro, 1926), anterior end. F. Same, exposed pharynx. G. Leocratides filamentosus Ehlers, 1908. H. Same, exposed pharynx. Scale bars: A, B: 0.4 mm, C, D, F: 0.8 mm, E: 0.3 mm, G, H: 1.0 mm (asterisk indicates nuchal organ; De: denticles; DJ: double jaw; DT: dorsolateral tubercles; LV: lateral vesicle, SJ: single jaw; TJ: transverse jaw) (Images produced by Marian Pettibone; reproduced with permission of the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution).
FIGURE 2. A. Leocrates claparedii (Costa in Claparède, 1868), non-type specimens (USNM 5131), anterior end, dorsal view, pharynx everted. B. Another specimen, anterior end, dorsal view, pharynx fully everted. C. Same, pharynx and jaws, left lateral view (1: Pharynx ring I, 2: Pharynx ring II, AM: anterior margin, DT: dorsolateral tubercle, LJ: lower jaw, LV: lateral vesicle, Pe: peristomium, TB: tentacular belt, UJ: upper jaw). D. Lamprophaea poupini n. sp., holotype (UF 858), anterior end, right lateral view, after SAS (1–8: tentacular cirri, Ch: chaetiger, LA: lateral antenna, NO: nuchal organ lobe, Pa: palp, TB: tentacular belt). Scale bars: A, C: 0.5 mm, B: 0.7 mm, D: 0.3 mm.
FIGURE 3. Lamprophaea longicirrata (Treadwell, 1902), new combination, non-type specimens, Florida (ECOSUR 3075), prostomia, dorsal view. A. Smallest specimen, 13x2 mm. B. Medium-sized specimen, 32x3.5 mm. C. Large specimen, pharynx slightly exposed, 32x4 mm. D. Small specimen, pharynx exposed, 20x3 mm. Scale bars: A: 0.25 mm, B–C: 0.4 mm, D: 0.30 mm.
FIGURE 17. Lamprophaea cuprea Grube, 1867, reinstated, largest non-type specimen (USNM 19194). A. Anterior region, dorsal view. B. Anterior end, dorsal view. C. Chaetiger 8, right parapodium, anterior view, MGS (insets: notacicular and neuracicular lobes). D. Same, neurochaetae. Scale bars: A: 1.4 mm, B, C: 0.3 mm, D: 80 µm.
FIGURE 18. Lamprophaea longicirrata (Treadwell, 1902), new combination, holotype (USNM 15915), MGS. A. Anterior region, dorsal view. B. Anterior end, dorsal view. C. Anterior end, ventral view. D. Chaetiger 10, right parapodium, anterior view (insets: longest and shortest neurochaetal blades, and notacicular lobe). Scale bars: A: 0.7 mm, B, C: 0.6 mm, D: 0.9 mm.
FIGURE 19. Lamprophaea ockeri n. sp., holotype (LACM 10143). A. Anterior region, dorsal view. B. Anterior end, dorsal view. C. Chaetiger 8, left parapodium, anterior view, MGS. D. Same, neurochaetal blades including longest and shortest ones. Scale bars: A: 1.2 mm, B: 0.8 mm, C: 0.5 mm, D: 0.1 mm.
FIGURE 49. Paradalhousia oculata (Treadwell, 1906), new combination, reinstated, holotype (USNM 5200). A. Dorsal view, depressed by glass slide. B. Anterior end, dorsal view (*: denticle). C. Same, MGS (*: denticle). D. Pharynx, frontal view, MGS, denticles slightly darker than surrounding areas. E. Middle chaetiger, left parapodium, anterior view (insets: (left) notacicular and (right) neuracicular lobes tips, and medium- and small neurochaetal blades). Scale bars: A: 1 mm, B, C: 0.3 mm, D: 0.5 mm, E: 0.4 mm.
FIGURE 50. Paradalhousia oculata (Treadwell, 1906), new combination, reinstated, non-type specimen (AMNH 476). A. Dorsal view. B. Anterior region, dorsal view (*: left dorsolateral tubercle). C. Anterior region, oblique left lateral view (*: left dorsolateral tubercles). Scale bars: A: 1.7 mm, B, C: 0.4 mm (photos: V.M. Conde-Vela).
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.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
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SubFamily |
Hesioninae |
Genus |
Paradalhousia oculata ( Treadwell, 1906 )
Salazar-Vallejo, Sergio I. 2020 |
Leocrates giardi: Pettibone 1970: 219-221
Bailey-Brock, J. H. & Hartman, O. 1987: 263 |
Pettibone, M. H. 1970: 221 |
Leocrates oculatus:
Hartman, O. 1966: 192 |
Leocrates oculatus:
Hartman, O. 1956: 278 |
Castalia oculata
Treadwell, A. L. 1906: 1148 |
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