Osedax westernflyer, Rouse & Goffredi & Johnson & Vrijenhoek, 2018

Rouse, Greg W., Goffredi, Shana K., Johnson, Shannon B. & Vrijenhoek, Robert C., 2018, An inordinate fondness for Osedax (Siboglinidae: Annelida): Fourteen new species of bone worms from California, Zootaxa 4377 (4), pp. 451-489 : 465

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4377.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C36D839B-A704-41A8-AC2C-2A75AE39F23C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5978284

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/15DC4445-67A1-488F-8F88-6F96CBA58DF6

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:15DC4445-67A1-488F-8F88-6F96CBA58DF6

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Osedax westernflyer
status

sp. nov.

Osedax westernflyer View in CoL n. sp.

Figure 5 View FIGURE 5

‘nude-palp-D’ ( Rouse et al. 2011; Rouse et al. 2015; Vrijenhoek et al. 2009) ‘Sagami 8’ (GenBank COI sequence FM998110 View Materials ; Pradillon et al. unpublished)

Material examined. Holotype: SIO-BIC A 1645 , Female (GenBank COI sequence MG262303 View Materials ), fixed in formalin preserved in ethanol, collected from a whale carcass ( Eschrichtius robustus ) deployed at 1820 meters depth in Monterey Submarine Canyon , California (36°42.496’N; 122°6.316’W), ROV Doc Ricketts dive number 12, March 13, 2009. GoogleMaps Paratypes: All females, fixed in formalin preserved in ethanol, SIO-BIC A7802, A7803 (GenBank COI sequence MG262302 View Materials , MG262304 View Materials ), same locality and date as holotype.

Diagnosis and description. Holotype female ( Fig. 5C View FIGURE 5 ); in life trunk 2.8 mm long, 0.5 mm wide; crown of four palps, 3.5 mm long. Tube gelatinous, thin, fitting about trunk and base of crown, 3 mm long ( Fig. 5C View FIGURE 5 ). Oviduct among palps 2.3 mm long ( Figs 5 View FIGURE 5 A-C). In life, palps with white patches with no visible blood vessels, without obvious pinnules ( Figs 5 View FIGURE 5 A-C). Trunk with demarcation into upper and lower trunk ( Fig. 5C View FIGURE 5 ), white pigment patch mid-ventrally on anterior tip of trunk ( Figs 5B, C View FIGURE 5 ). Ovisac 1.5 mm by 1 mm with lobate greenish roots extending outwards ( Figs 5B, C View FIGURE 5 ). Males not found.

Distribution. Known from Monterey Bay, California from 1820 meters depth and Sagami, Bay Japan ( Table 2). It has been found in cow and whale bones.

Etymology. This species is named (noun in apposition) for the Research Vessel Western Flyer, which has been critical to Osedax studies.

Remarks. Osedax westernflyer n. sp. is part of Osedax Clade II and is closest relative to O. knutei n. sp., with a minimum divergence of 16 % for COI, though it shows a smaller distance, 14% to O. docricketts n. sp. ( Table 4). The four available COI sequences for Osedax westernflyer n. sp. from California ( Table 3) are less that 1% divergent. The holotype and two paratypes all showed distinct white pigment on the palps, though these were all collected from one patch of bone and the color may have been caused by a bacterial coating. A single COI sequence on GenBank ( FM998110 View Materials ), referred to Osedax sp. Sagami-8 (Pradillon et al., unpublished), is less than 1% divergent from the four California COI sequences ( Table 4), leading us to propose that Osedax westernflyer n. sp. is also found in Japan. There is little to distinguish Osedax docricketts n. sp. from other Clade II species, apart from the white pigmentation at the anterior end of the trunk and on the pigmentation on palps.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Sabellida

Family

Siboglinidae

Genus

Osedax

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