Micronephthys stammeri (Augener, 1932)

(Figs 10–11)

Nephtys stammeri Augener, 1932: 678, fig. 2.

Nephtys inermis Augener, 1932: 663 .

Micronephthys stammeri .— Hartman 1950: 131; Banse 1959: 302, fig. 6. Micronephthys maryae San Martín, 1982: 428 –433, figs 1–3. non Micronephthys maryae .— Rainer & Kaly 1988: 696 –698, fig. 5. non Micronephthys cf. stammeri .— Dixon-Bridges et al. 2014: 515.

Material examined. Queensland, Lizard Island: AM W.44021 (1), MI QLD 2340; AM W.45036 (2), AM W.45157 (4), AM W.45502 (1), MI QLD 2441; AM W.45173 (2), AM W.46972 (many, 2 photographed), MI QLD 2440; AM W.45474 (1), MI QLD 2444; AM W.45501 (2), MI QLD 2443; AM W.46980 (3, 1 on SEM), MI QLD 2432; AM W.46982 (1), MI QLD 2431; AM W.47228 (10), 100 m off Mangrove Beach, 14°40'S, 145°28'E, sand, 3.6 m, 11 Oct 1978.

Comparative material examined. Specimens identified by Rainer & Kaly (1988: 696–698, fig. 5) as Micronephthys maryae: Western Australia, Northwest Shelf, CSIRO North-West Shelf Project, FRV "Soela": AM W. 200668 (1), 19°58'48"S, 117°51'24"E, 41 m, 26 Oct 1983; AM W. 200669 (1), 19°59'12"S, 118°04'00"E, 32 m, 10 Dec 1982; AM W. 200670 (3), 19°04'18"S, 119°00'36"E, 82 m, 1 Sep 1983.

Description. Complete specimens up to 14 mm long, 1.4 mm wide, and> 60 chaetigers for longest specimens. Preserved specimens without pigment. Prostomium subquadrangular to subpentagonal in shape. Antennae and palps equal in length and cirriform with swollen tips (Figs 10 A, 11A–C). Nuchal pits round and situated at posterior corners of prostomium. Two pairs of visible subdermal coalesced eyes present middorsally in chaetiger two (with pharynx everted, Fig. 10 B) or in anterior part of chaetiger 3, (with pharynx not everted, Fig. 10 A); (Fig. 11 B). Pharynx with 9 pairs of terminal bifid papillae with a single middorsal terminal papilla, and 20–22 subdistal longitudinal rows of 5–9 elongate papillae, which diminish in size and continue proximally as rows of minute papillae (Fig. 10 B–C); elongate middorsal and midventral subdistal papillae absent; verrucae absent proximally. Ventral cirri of chaetiger 1 similar in length and form to antennae, dorsal cirri minute, papillae-like (Figs 10 C, 11C– D); subsequent ventral cirri short, ovoid, dorsal cirri larger than those of chaetiger 1, subspherical (Figs 10 C, 11A, 11G–I). Acicular lobes conical, pre- and postchaetal lobes rudimentary (Fig. 11 G–H). Aciculae tips curved. Five types of chaetae: thick, dentate chaetae present on first notopodia only (Fig. 11 D); capillary chaetae present in noto- and neuropodia of first chaetiger only (Fig. 11 D–E); barred chaetae in preacicular position of all following parapodia (Fig. 11 F); spinose chaetae in postacicular position of all following parapodia (Fig. 11 F), and lyrate chaetae with unequal rami in postacicular position (Fig. 11 F) from chaetiger 4. Interramal cirri absent, ciliated patches present between parapodial rami, posteriorly continuous (Fig. 11 H–I). Pygidium with short filiform cirrus, equal in length to last segment.

Remarks. Ravara et al. (2010b), redescribed M. stammeri from specimens collected from the type locality (Adriatic Sea) as the holotype has been lost (Banse 1959). They also synonymised M. maryae San Martin, 1982, with M. stammeri, and assigned Rainer & Kaly’s (1988) Australian specimens identified as M. maryae to M. stammeri, with doubts, due to Rainer & Kaly’s description of the Australian specimens having 14 longitudinal rows of subdistal pharyngeal papillae, instead of 20–22 rows which M. stammeri possesses. After examination of Rainer & Kaly’s specimens from Western Australia, it is impossible to confirm any pharyngeal features, as the three specimens are now badly damaged and the pharynx is missing from all. It is possible that the Western Australian specimens represent another species altogether, as Rainer & Kaly stated that the “proximal region” of the pharynx had “14 rows of subdistal papillae….up to 17 in each row”, a feature that is not consistent with M. stammeri, or with the Lizard Island specimens. The inclusion of M. cf. stammeri in the key to Australian Nephtyidae in Dixon- Bridges et al. (2014, p. 515) was based on Ravara’s synonymy of M. maryae with M. stammeri, and even though the specimens are no longer identifiable, the differences between M. stammeri and the description of Rainer & Kaly’s specimens alone should have discounted the presence of M. stammeri in Australia. However, the specimens from Lizard Island are consistent with the redescription of M. stammeri by Ravara et al. (2010b), except that they are larger, and lyrate chaetae are present from chaetiger 4 rather than 3, so we are tentatively assigning them to this species. As there is a valid uncertainty whether Rainer & Kaly’s specimens from Western Australia are M. stammeri, or may represent another species altogether, we report this species for the first time from Australia, at Lizard Island. With such a geographically disjunct distribution reported for Micronephthys stammeri, it may be, however, that it represents a suite of cryptic species, the identity of which may only be resolved by the use of genetic analysis of “populations” in conjunction with morphological data.

Habitat. In Lizard Island waters, from sand, sandy mud, and sediment associated with seagrass and algae, in intertidal and subtidal shallow water.

Distribution. Adriatic Sea, Mediterranean Sea, Japan, Marshall Islands, Australia (Queensland: Lizard Island).