Amaeana dampierensis, Nogueira, João Miguel De Matos, Carrerette, Orlemir & Hutchings, Pat, 2015
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3994.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:093B124E-58AE-4303-8C07-2D7B27E6AC38 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6094923 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DD7687BB-FF95-FFB2-FF66-FED2D9DBF85F |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Amaeana dampierensis |
status |
sp. nov. |
Amaeana dampierensis View in CoL sp. nov.
Figures 24 View FIGURE 24 D–E, 25
Material examined: Holotype: AM W.47405, coll. King Point, East Lewis Island, Western Australia, Australia, 03.Mar.2001, 13 m. Paratypes: AM W.27469, same locality as holotype, 3 specimens in poor condition, one (AM W.47405) dissected for the preparation of slides; slides: notochaetae, segment 7; neurochaetae, segment 29. AM W.21872 (coll. 31–33 km NW Kurumba, Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia, 17°17'18"S, 140°36'30"E, Apr.1994): 3 specimens in poor condition, incomplete and damaged. AM W.21871 (coll. 31–33 km NW Kurumba, Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia, 17°17'15"S, 140°36'36"E, Apr.1994): 1 specimen in poor condition, incomplete and damaged.
Type locality. King Point, East Lewis Island, Western Australia, Australia, 20°38'17.4"S, 116°38'23.4"E, 13 m.
Description: Holotype incomplete, 7 mm long, 2 mm wide at segment 8, maximum width of body.
Prostomium at base of upper lip, both basal and distal parts developed, basal part as thickened crest, distal part with large, flaring lobes, prostomial process not clearly delineated; prostomium covering segment 1 laterally and terminating laterally to lower lip, near mouth ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A–F). Few buccal tentacles remaining, of two types, both relatively short, short ones thin, uniformly cylindrical, intermediate tentacles distally spatulate, long tentacles apparently absent ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 F).
Peristomium restricted to lips, upper lip higher than broad, elliptical, slightly convoluted; lower lip short, rounded to rectangular ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A–F). Body progressively broader until segment 5, then of uniform width through segment 10, progressively tapering on segments 11–14, and again of relatively uniform width through posterior body, narrower than anterior segments ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A–F); achaetous gap between termination of notopodia and beginning of neuropodia, corresponding to segments 14 through 26–27, twice as long as region with notopodia, with poorly marked segmentation and fragile, with thin body wall dorsally.
Segments biannulated, segment 1 short, visible dorsal and ventrally, laterally covered by expanded prostomium; segment 2 narrower and shorter than following segments, with large pentagonal mid-ventral shield at beginning of mid-ventral groove, extending anteriorly through segment 1 to near ventral edge of lower lip ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A–F). Ventrum highly glandular, covered with small papillae, arranged on paired ventro-lateral pads on segments 2–13; papillae larger and more numerous on anterior segments, until segment 8, covering both segmental annulations, papillae progressively less conspicuous on segments 9–13, only present on posterior annulation of each segment and progressively less numerous, then smooth body wall, with paired longitudinal crests bordering mid-ventral groove through posterior body ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A–E).
Notopodia extending through 11 segments, until segment 13, last pair distinctly shorter; elongate, cylindrical notopodia, with equal sized lobes and elongate and distally blunt tips ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A–D, F). Acicular, narrowly-winged notochaetae in both rows, wings not visible under higher magnifications of light microscopy ( Figs 24 View FIGURE 24 D; 25G).
Neuropodia present from segments 26–27, laterally to mid-ventral groove, on outer margins of longitudinal crests. Neurochaetae as 4–5 thin, distally tapered spines, apparently with thinner, flattened tip ( Fig. 24 View FIGURE 24 E).
Nephridial and genital papillae at anterior bases of all notopodia, all short ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 B–D). Pygidium unknown.
Remarks. The number of pairs of notopodia is one of the most important characters to distinguish between species of Amaeana , and among the currently known species in this genus there is only one other with 11 pairs of notopodia, A. brasiliensis sp. nov., described below. The differences between members of A. dampierensis sp. nov. and A. brasiliensis sp. nov., are discussed in the Remarks of the latter species.
Members of this species were first identified as A. antipoda because of having 11 pairs of notopodia, but in this species the achaetous gap between termination of notopodia and beginning of neuropodia extends for 6–8 segments, neuropodia beginning from segments 19–21 and with 2–3 spines each ( Hutchings & Glasby 1986), while in A. dampierensis sp. nov., the achaetous gap is far longer, extending for 13–14 segments, neuropodia beginning from segments 26–27, and each bearing 4–5 spines. As said above, we tried to examine the type material of A. antipoda to compare with A. dampierensis sp. nov., but we could not locate it or any material from the type locality.
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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