Kirkegaardia fragilis, Blake, James A., 2016

Blake, James A., 2016, Kirkegaardia (Polychaeta, Cirratulidae), new name for Monticellina Laubier, preoccupied in the Rhabdocoela, together with new records and descriptions of eight previously known and sixteen new species from the Atlantic, Pacific, and Southern Oceans, Zootaxa 4166 (1), pp. 1-93 : 50-52

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4166.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A4410AB2-6624-48A2-81D2-4746C24189D7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5612232

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/277D879E-2E43-8973-05E1-29E7FB802D8D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Kirkegaardia fragilis
status

sp. nov.

Kirkegaardia fragilis new species

Figure 25 View FIGURE 25

Material examined. North equatorial Pacific Ocean , abyssal plain, Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone , NOAA BIE Sta. DDT-07-94, 12°55.023′N, 128°35.451′W, 0.25 m 2 box core, 4879 m, 29 July 1994, coll. D.T. Trueblood, holotype and 2 paratypes ( USNM 1407165–6 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; Sta. 02-93, 12°56.166′N, 128°35.520′W, 4869 m, coll. 10 August 1993, fragments and tessellated tubes (JAB); Sta. 06-93, 12°55.780′N, 128°35.881′W, 4858 m, coll. 0 1 September 1993, 1 posterior fragment (JAB).

Description. A small fragile species with elongate, narrow body, cylindrical throughout; without dorsal or ventral grooves. Holotype in two parts, collectively measuring 4.2 mm long, 0.17 mm wide across thoracic segments, with 40 setigerous segments. One paratype a larger anterior fragment, 0.3 mm wide, 2.1 mm long, with 12 setigerous segments. Color in alcohol opaque white; largest paratype with black pigment spots on ventrolateral sides of peristomium and anterior margin of setiger 1.

Pre-setigerous region of holotype elongate, 1.7x as long as wide and as long as first four setigerous segments; prostomium conical, tapering to narrow, rounded apex ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A); eyes absent; nuchal organs not observed. Peristomium relatively smooth, with thin lateral lines suggesting 2–3 annulations, but these not distinct; no achaetous segments evident ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A). Setiger 1 distinct from peristomium. Dorsal tentacles arise near posterior end of peristomium, with one intact tentacle present on holotype ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A); first pair of branchiae on setiger 1, dorsal to notosetae ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A); holotype with one branchia retained on setiger 5; other branchiae identified by scars when stained with Shirlastain A ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A). Branchiae located dorsal to notosetae throughout.

Thoracic region of holotype with five segments, each about 3.5x as wide as long ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 A); paratypes with 5– 7 thoracic segments of similar proportions. Transition to long narrow abdominal region abrupt, with first segments as long as wide, becoming beadlike in middle abdominal segments, about 1.3x as long as wide ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 B); posterior abdominal segments less bead-like, transitioning to short far posterior region with about eight segments becoming weakly expanded, flattened ventrally, terminating in narrow, elongate, conical, unsegmented pygidial lobe ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 C).

Parapodia low mounds, shifted somewhat dorsal in thoracic segments and first few abdominal segments, thereafter lateral ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 B). Setae all capillaries, consisting of narrow setae with smooth blades in thoracic segments and shorter setae with broad base tapering to narrow capillary tip, with fine denticles along one edge of expanded base in middle and posterior segments, denticles not evident along narrow apex; denticles present on both noto- and neurosetae from about setiger 20, or middle of body; denticles not visible on capillaries of last 4–5 setigers. Denticles weakly visible at 400x, best observed at 1000x; individual denticles numerous, with sharp points directed basally ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 D); notosetae with denticles directed ventrally and denticles of neurosetae directed dorsally, vis-à-vis. Setae numbering 6–8 in both noto- and neuropodia in thoracic segments, 5–7 in middle body segments; and 4–5 in posterior segments.

Methyl Green stain. Prostomium staining light green, rest of body not retaining stain after differentiation.

Etymology. The species name fragilis , is from Latin, and refers to the narrow fragile nature of this species.

Remarks. Kirkegaardia fragilis belongs to a group of species in which the parapodia are not elevated over the dorsum of the thoracic region and no dorsal groove is produced; further, the first pair of branchiae occur on setiger 1 and, apart from some retention of stain on the prostomium, there is effectively no distinctive MG staining pattern for this species.

This species has no close congeners except perhaps K. carolina n. sp., which is another small, threadlike deepwater species that occurs in upper slope depths off North Carolina and that also has tessellated tubes and branchiae from setiger 1. K. fragilis n. sp. differs from K. carolina n. sp. in having instead of lacking denticulate notosetae, in lacking instead of having annular rings on the peristomium, and by having a more expanded posterior end.

Biology. The type specimens were isolated from the 0–2 mm profile of 10-cm subcores from the box core, suggesting that this species inhabits sediments near the surface. Thin membranous tessellated tubes were found with non-type specimens in a sample from Sta. 2-93 suggesting that this species extends its branchiae into the overlying water from within the tube. The holotype is a male with sperm packets in the coelom that contain numerous sperm with small rounded nuclei.

Distribution. Known only from the Pacific Ocean in abyssal depths 4858–4879 m.

NOAA

National Oceanic and Atmospeheric Administration

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

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