Sthenelais limicola ( Ehlers, 1864 )

Barnich, Ruth & Haaren, Ton Van, 2021, Revision of Sthenelais Kinberg, 1856, Fimbriosthenelais Pettibone, 1971 and Eusthenelais McIntosh, 1876 (Polychaeta, Sigalionidae) in the Northeast Atlantic, European Journal of Taxonomy 740, pp. 138-171 : 145-148

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.740.1287

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A1E7F84F-49D0-4DA8-94E6-77E8CA68098F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4650575

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FC87CE-1A26-165E-FDCE-F233FAC9F815

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Sthenelais limicola ( Ehlers, 1864 )
status

 

Sthenelais limicola ( Ehlers, 1864) View in CoL (emended)

Figs 1–2 View Fig View Fig

Sigalion limicola Ehlers, 1864: 120 View in CoL .

Sthenelais leiolepis Claparède, 1868: 406–409 View in CoL , pl. 4 fig. 3, pl. 6 fig. 1 (description sufficient; see also Barnich & Fiege 2003).

Sthenelais haddoni McIntosh, 1897a: 403 View in CoL . Syn. nov.

Sthenelais filamentosus Ditlevsen, 1917: 50 View in CoL , pl. 4 fig. 6, pl. 5 fig. 9. Syn. nov.

? Aphrodita arcta Dalyell, 1853: 170 , pl. 24 fig. 14 (see McIntosh 1900; however, description insufficient).

Sthenelais limicola View in CoL – Pruvot & Racovitza 1895: 473, pl. 20 figs 122–123. — McIntosh 1900: 417, pl. 29 fig. 3, pl. 31 fig. 6, pl. 34 figs 9–11, pl. 42 figs 1–4. — Fauvel 1923: 113, fig. 42a–g. — Chambers 1985: 29–30, figs 1b, 2a, 15b–c, 21b–e. — Hartmann-Schröder 1996: 83 fig. 28. — Chambers & Muir 1997: 158, fig. 51. — Barnich & Fiege 2003: 132, fig. 65. — Gil 2011: 947. — Núñez et al. 2015: 244, fig. 98.

Diagnosis

Dorsal cirri absent on segment 3. Ventral body surface smooth. Outer elytral margin with irregular extensions (anterior elytra) or notched (posterior elytra); elytral surface smooth, except for some microtubercles near anterior margin. Parapodial stylodes smooth, slender, cirriform; notopodia with few long dorsal papillae; margins of anterior neuropodial bracts smooth. Notochaetae tapering to simple capillary tip.

Type material (examined)

The types of Sthenelais filamentosus were available for study:

ICELAND • 5 syntypes; Northeast Atlantic , S Iceland , Medelland Bugt ; 19 Jul. 1903; EtOH preserved; depth 70–90 fathoms (128–165 m); NHMD 658820 .

The type material of the following species is probably lost or was never deposited (type localities in brackets): Sigalion limicola ( Croatia, Quarnero, Adriatic Sea), Sthenelais leiolepis ( Italy, Gulf of Naples, W Mediterranean Sea) and Sthenelais haddoni (off SW Ireland, Northeast Atlantic).

Other material (examined)

UNITED KINGDOM • 2 specs; NW Irish Sea ; stn CEFNWIS04 154a; 28 Jul. 2004; EtOH preserved; TUM 37563 ( Figs 1B–C View Fig , 2 View Fig ) 1 spec.; Irish Sea, Liverpool Bay ; stn CEFSZ07 Z02a; 19 Feb. 2008; EtOH preserved; TUM 43034 3 specs; S England , Hastings ; stn CEFAY04 L6Ya; 30 Aug. 2004; EtOH preserved; TUM 33648 .

Further Mediterranean material, see Barnich & Fiege (2003).

Description

PROSTOMIUM. Median antenna with long, smooth, tapering style; ceratophore with large auricles. Lateral antennae fused to inner dorsal side of tentaculophores, very short, not reaching half the length of the dorsal tentacular cirri. Two pairs of eyes present ( Fig. 1A View Fig ).

TENTACULOPHORES. Dorsal tentacular cirri shorter than median antenna, of similar shape.Ventral tentacular cirri shorter than dorsal ones ( Fig. 1A View Fig ).

ELYTRA. Outer lateral margin with irregular extensions (anterior elytra) or notched (posterior elytra); surface smooth, except for some microtubercles near anterior margin (usually disappearing in posterior elytra) ( Fig. 1B–C View Fig ).

CIRRI. Dorsal cirri absent from segment 3. Ventral cirri without basal knob and without long basal papillae ( Fig. 2A–B View Fig ).

PARAPODIA. Stylodes without papillae, slender, cirriform. Parapodia of anterior body with stylodes present on anterior side of notopodial bract, on neuropodial acicular lobe and distally on upper and lower parts of large bilobed posterior bracts; number and length of distal stylodes decreasing along body. Margins of anterodorsal and anteroventral bracts smooth. Additional long, dorsal papillae on notopodia, a single papilla on anteriormost segments, up to 5 more posteriorly ( Fig. 2A–B View Fig ).

CHAETAE. Notochaetae slender, spinous, tapering to simple capillary tip. Upper neurochaetae slender compound spinigers with multi-articled blade; slender compound falcigers with multi-articled blade and minutely bidentate tip; and few simple, spinous chaetae. Middle neurochaetae stout compound falcigers with short single- or bi-articled blade and bidentate tip. Lower neurochaetae slender compound falcigers with multi-articled blade and minutely bidentate tip ( Fig. 2C–G View Fig ).

SIZE. Length up to 100 mm, width up to 3 mm for 200 segments (see Chambers & Muir 1997). Specimen figured, TUM 37563 ( Figs 1B–C View Fig , 2 View Fig ): complete specimen, length 50 mm, width 1.5 mm for 128 segments. Syntypes of S. filamentosus, NHMD 658820: 5 anterior fragments ranging in length from 10 mm to 25 mm, width all about 3 mm for 23 to 52 segments.

Remarks

The description above is emended for the terminology used in describing the neuropodial bracts, for the presence of long, dorsal papillae on the notopodia and for the length and number of stylodes along the body: they are very long on segment 2 (some nearly reaching the length of the chaetae), becoming shorter on the following parapodia; this character led Ditlevsen (1917) to name his new species filamentosus .

The syntypes of S. filamentosus are in good condition and our examination revealed that they also show the other diagnostic characters of S. limicola as described above. Sthenelais limicola ( Ehlers, 1864) predates S. filamentosus Ditlevsen, 1917 , which becomes its junior synonym.

The type material of Sthenelais haddoni is probably lost; it consisted of a posterior fragment with completely smooth elytra presenting the typical lateral notch of S. limicola (see description in McIntosh 1897a). Sthenelais limicola has priority and S. haddoni becomes its junior synonym.

Compared to other species of the genus, Sthenelais limicola presents a number of remarkable characters:

The compound neurochaetae include not only falcigers, but also spinigers. The anteriormost segments of Sthenelais articulata Kinberg, 1856 also show some compound spinigers (see Pettibone 1971), but this type of chaetae was not listed as a diagnostic generic character by Pettibone or any subsequent workers. Compound spinigers in addition to falcigers are found in other sigalionid genera, for example in Eusthenelais hibernica , the type species of Eusthenelais (see below). However, this genus clearly differs by the presence of a pair of dorsal cirri on segment 3.

The presence of additional long papillae dorsally on the notopodia is another remarkable character. So far, such papillae have not been described for any other species of Sthenelais . Similar papillae are found ventrally on the neuropodia of some, but not all, species of Willeysthenelais (see Pettibone 1971). All members of this genus are characterised by additional long papillae on the bases of the ventral cirri.

Consequently, these remarkable characters (presence of spinigers in addition to falcigers and long dorsal papillae on notopodia) might justify the erection of a new genus.

In their phylogenetic study of Aphroditiformia combining molecular and morphological data, Gonzalez et al. (2018) found that Sthenelais limicola formed a clade with Fimbriosthenelais longipinnis and Willeysthenelais diplocirrus (Grube, 1875) , while Sthenelais boa formed a clade with Pholoides asperus (Johnson, 1897) and Pholoides dorsipapillatus (Marenzeller, 1893) . This seems to confirm our opinion that the current generic assignment of Sigalion limicola should be reconsidered. A more detailed study combining molecular data of a larger number of Sthenelais species with the emended diagnostic characters described herein would be desirable to justify the erection of a new genus for Sigalion limicola . However, in a personal comment B. Gonzalez stated that there are currently not enough suitable specimens available to conduct a more detailed molecular study.

Distribution and habitat

Widely reported throughout the area. In the Northeast Atlantic present around the British Isles (RB data, based on TUM reference collection, and Chambers 1985), Northern and Central North Sea (RB and TvH data), in the Skagerrak, Kattegat and northern Öresund ( Hartmann-Schröder 1996), along the French Atlantic coast ( Fauvel 1923), and around the Iberian Peninsula ( Núñez et al. 2015). In the Mediterranean Sea confirmed for the Western Mediterranean and the Adriatic Sea and reported from other areas ( Barnich & Fiege 2003). Also recorded from the Northwest and Southeast Atlantic; however, these records require confirmation. Occurring on muddy substrates at depths of 20 to 1550 m.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Phyllodocida

Family

Sigalionidae

Genus

Sthenelais

Loc

Sthenelais limicola ( Ehlers, 1864 )

Barnich, Ruth & Haaren, Ton Van 2021
2021
Loc

Sthenelais filamentosus

Ditlevsen H. 1917: 50
1917
Loc

Sthenelais haddoni

McIntosh W. C. 1897: 403
1897
Loc

Sthenelais limicola

Nunez J. & Barnich R. & Brito M. & Fiege D. 2015: 244
Gil J. C. 2011: 947
Barnich R. & Fiege D. 2003: 132
Chambers S. J. & Muir A. I. 1997: 158
Hartmann-Schroder G. 1996: 83
Chambers S. J. 1985: 29
Fauvel P. 1923: 113
McIntosh W. C. 1900: 417
Pruvot G. & Racovitza E. G. 1895: 473
1895
Loc

Sthenelais leiolepis Claparède, 1868: 406–409

Claparede E. 1868: 409
1868
Loc

Sigalion limicola

Ehlers E. 1864: 120
1864
Loc

Aphrodita arcta

Dalyell J. G. 1853: 170
1853
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