Nothria digitata, Paxton & Budaeva & Gunton, 2023

Paxton, Hannelore, Budaeva, Nataliya & Gunton, Laetitia M., 2023, Amazing Diversity of Nothria (Annelida, Onuphidae) in the Australian Deep Sea, Records of the Australian Museum (Rec. Aust. Mus.) 75 (3), pp. 215-247 : 227-229

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3853/j.2201-4349.75.2023.1802

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10988793

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C99027-FF80-A616-E836-F9C4FDB4F8DF

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Nothria digitata
status

sp. nov.

Nothria digitata View in CoL sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:02457FA3-9067-4E97-B6EE-94AB977859D0

Figs 1 View Figure 1 , 9–11 View Figure 9 View Figure 10 View Figure 11 , Tables 2 View Table 2 , S 1 View Table 1

Holotype. SAMA E8969 About SAMA , IN2015 _C02_174; 8 Dec 2015; Australia, Southern Ocean , Great Australian Bight, 34.25– 34.24°S 132.62°E; 400 m depth GoogleMaps . Paratypes (3): SAMA E8970 About SAMA , IN2015 _C02_174 (1); AM W.49953, IN2015 _ C02_174 (1, anterior part on SEM pin, posterior part wet specimen); AM W.49954, IN2015 _C02_174 (1).

Description. All specimens lacking posterior ends. Length of holotype 18 mm for 22 chaetigers, width 2.3 mm; paratypes 9–19 mm (13–24 chaetigers) long, 2.2–2.3 mm wide.

Alcohol-stored specimens overall whitish without any pigmentation. Prostomium anteriorly rounded, wider than long, with 2 ovoid frontal lips separated by small space ( Fig. 9A,B View Figure 9 ). Palpo- and antennophores with 3–4 proximal rings and longer distal ring. Palpostyles tapering, extending to chaetiger 1, antennostyles tapering gradually, lateral antennostyles extending to chaetiger 8 (7–8), median antennostyle generally longest, extending to chaetiger 9 (7–9); slightly shorter one in W.49953 ( Fig. 9A View Figure 9 ) atypical. Nuchal grooves straight, with small middorsal separation. Small anterior eyespots on anterior part of prostomium between palps and lateral antennae (only left one visible in holotype), large posterior eyes between bases of palps and lateral antennae next to peristomium. Ventral upper lip squared with median section, lower lip subtriangular ( Fig. 9B View Figure 9 ). Peristomium short, peristomial cirri inserted subdistally on peristomium, about twice as long as peristomium ( Fig. 9A View Figure 9 ).

First chaetiger enlarged, slightly more than twice as long as peristomium, chaetiger 3 similar in length to following chaetigers. Anterior three pairs of parapodia modified ( Fig. 9A,B View Figure 9 ). First pair greatly enlarged, directed forward, extending beyond anterior margin of prostomium, with large auricular prechaetal lobes and subulate postchaetal lobes. Parapodia 2 and 3 similar but smaller, with smaller prechaetal lobes. Third pair similar to subsequent parapodia, with small tongue-like prechaetal lobes present into posterior region, last postchaetal lobes on chaetiger 12 (11–12). Ventral cirri of first two chaetigers subulate, becoming rounded on chaetiger 3 as transitioning to glandular pads ( Fig. 9B View Figure 9 ). Dorsal cirri subulate from chaetiger 1, becoming cirriform, gradually thinner and shorter. Branchiae starting from chaetiger 9, 10 (9–10) as short filament ( Fig. 9C View Figure 9 ), increasing to length of dorsal cirrus by chaetiger 12–14 ( Fig. 9D View Figure 9 ); branchiae retaining length, dorsal cirrus becoming smaller and slenderer, by chaetiger 22–24 (end of largest types) branchia about 2–3 times as long as dorsal cirrus.

First pair of parapodia with 2 robust bidentate simple ( Fig. 10A View Figure 10 ) and 1–2 very slender bidentate pseudocompound hooks ( Fig. 10B View Figure 10 ). Second pair of parapodia with 2 slender ( Fig. 10C View Figure 10 ) and 1–2 very slender bidentate pseudocompound hooks ( Fig. 10D View Figure 10 ). Third pair of parapodia with 2–3 upper limbate chaetae, 3–5 scoop-shaped pectinate chaetae with 14–16 teeth, and 2–3 bidentate pseudocompound to compound hooks ( Fig. 10E View Figure 10 ). Anterior hooks absent from chaetiger 4, upper and lower limbate chaetae and pectinate chaetae present to end of fragments (presumably end of body). Subacicular hooks present singly from chaetiger 11 (10–11), as pairs from chaetiger 13 (11–13). Pygidium unknown.

Mandibles ( Fig. 10F View Figure 10 ) highly calcified, white, except for short darkly sclerotized protomandibles; shafts long and slender, cutting plates high with weakly defined median and large distal tooth. Maxillae ( Fig. 10G View Figure 10 ) overall whitish, fangs and teeth light brown, ligaments and attachment lamellae more sclerotized, appearing dark brown. Maxillary formula (based on holotype): MI = 1+1, MII = 9+10; MIII = 10+0, MIV = 8+9, MV = 2+2. Ratio of mandibles/maxillae = 1.2. Flattened tube, lining transparent, covered with pieces of shells (often larger than width of worm), laterally filled in with foraminiferans and other small fragments ( Fig. 11A View Figure 11 ) .

Remarks. Nothria digitata sp. nov. resembles N. otsuchiensis in having eyes, long branchiae from chaetiger 9–10 and subacicular hooks from chaetiger 10 ( Table 2 View Table 2 ). The two species differ in that N. digitata sp. nov. has digitate rather than flat branchial filaments, 11–12 postchaetal lobes rather than 14–17, pseudocompound hooks on chaetiger 2 rather than simple and pseudocompound hooks. Furthermore, the new species displays no pigmentation pattern while N. otsuchiensis has a brown spot on each segment.

Etymology. The name of the new species is suggested by its long, digitate branchiae.

Distribution. Nothria digitata sp. nov. was collected from the GAB, in 400 m depth ( Fig. 11B View Figure 11 ).

SAMA

South Australia Museum

AM

Australian Museum

MIV

Universita' degli Studi di Milano, Medicina Veterinaria, Sez. Parassitologia

MV

University of Montana Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Eunicida

Family

Onuphidae

SubFamily

Hyalinoeciinae

Genus

Nothria

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF