Namanereis canariarum, Núñez 1 & Glasby 2 & Naranjo 3, 2020

Nunez 1, Jorge, Glasby 2, Christopher J. & Naranjo 3, Manuel, 2020, Groundwater annelids from Gran Canaria and Fuerteventura (Canary Islands), with the description of two new species of Namanereis (Namanereidinae, Nereididae, Polychaeta), Subterranean Biology 36, pp. 35-49 : 35

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/subtbiol.36.55090

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E876880C-8084-4882-BA3B-1AF7396FB4F2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B7836D85-CC52-4284-A34E-F1BA66BB8BC0

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:B7836D85-CC52-4284-A34E-F1BA66BB8BC0

treatment provided by

Subterranean Biology by Pensoft

scientific name

Namanereis canariarum
status

sp. nov.

Namanereis canariarum sp. nov. Figs 1a, b View Figure 1 ; 2 View Figure 2 ; 4a-d View Figure 4

Namanereis hummelincki .- Hartmann-Schröder, 1988: 181-182. Non Augener, 1933. Namanereis sp. nov. 1 Glasby, Fiege & Van Damme, 2014: 28 (Table 1).

Type locality.

Canary Islands, Fuerteventura, Las Playitas (28°13'55.42"N, 13°59'4.92"W) 14 m above sea level, brackish water well.

Type material.

Holotype: TFMCBM-AN/240, coll. J. Núñez, 8-2-2002; 2 Paratypes: TFMCBM-AN/241, 2 spec., Fuerteventura, Las Playitas, Canary Islands, 28°13'56.73"N, 13°59'10.26"W, 18 m above sea level, coll. L. Santos & J.R. Docoito, 28-9-2011.

Additional material.

Fataga water mine (Barranco de Fataga, Gran Canaria, (27°47'59.18"N, 15°35'12.57"W, 160 m above sea level), 12 spec. (6 spec. TFMCBM-AN/242; 6 spec. DBAULL/2020), coll. P. Oromí & M. Naranjo, 6-12-2013.

Comparative material examined.

Material identified by G. Hartmann-Schröder (1988) as Namanereis hummelincki from Canary Islands, Fuerteventura, well S. of Betancuria, 400 m a.s.l., coll. J.H. Stock, 4-5-1987, 8 ex ZMA VPol 2953 (now in Naturalis, Leiden).

Description.

Holotype with 133 chaetigers, 46 mm long and 0.7 mm wide excluding parapodia and chaetae. Two paratypes, fragmented, one with 77 and the other with 88 chaetigers; one paratype female with gametes in the coelom.

Living individuals with depigmented epidermis, highlighting the red dorsal blood vessel over the fleshy pink coloured body. Body slender, with uniform width in the anterior and middle regions, abruptly tapering only near the posterior end; trunk convex dorsally and flattened ventrally (Fig. 1b View Figure 1 ).

Prostomium semi-circular in shape, slightly wider than long; cleft absent, shallow dorsal hollow present; two short conical frontal antennae, smooth, extending beyond tip of palpophore; palps broad and globose, biarticulated, with globular palpostyles; eyes absent (Fig. 2a View Figure 2 ). Tentacular segment as wide as first chaetiger, but half its length, bearing three pairs of short tentacular cirri, cirrophores inconspicuous, cirrostyles smooth and tapering. The longest pair of cirrostyles extends to reach the third chaetiger (Fig. 2a View Figure 2 ). Pharynx divided into a maxillary and an oral region, lacking paragnaths or papillae, but possessing a pair of delta-shaped jaws, dark, with only bifid terminal teeth (Figs 2a, b View Figure 2 , 4a View Figure 4 ).

Parapodia with notopodial branch reduced to the inner acicula; neuropodium well-developed, acicular neuropodial ligule subconical (Fig. 2c, d View Figure 2 ) with prominent acicular lobes (Fig. 4b View Figure 4 ). Dorsal cirri acuminated, similar in length throughout the body and clearly surpassing the parapodial lobe; ventral cirri short and thin, being about a third of the length of the dorsal cirri (Fig. 2c, d View Figure 2 ). Notochaetae absent, neurochaetae arrangement as in Type A ( Glasby 1999), although with slight modifications. Overall, less than 7 chaetae on each parapodium; supraneuroacicular chaetae normally includes 1 sesquigomph spiniger chaeta in the postacicular fascicle (Fig. 2h, i View Figure 2 ) and 1 heterogomph falciger chaeta in the preacicular fascicle throughout the whole body (Fig. 2e, k View Figure 2 ). Subneuroacicular chaetae normally includes 1 heterogomph pseudospiniger chaeta (Figs 2g, j View Figure 2 ; 4c View Figure 4 ) and 2-3 falciger chaetae in the preacicular fascicles (Figs 2f, l View Figure 2 , 4d View Figure 4 ); less frequently 2 pseudospiniger chaetae, and exceptionally up to 3 falciger and no pseudospiniger chaetae might be found. In the posterior region, starting from chaetiger 60, pseudospiniger chaetae are generally longer, resembling spiniger chaetae. Supraneuroacicular falciger chaetae in chaetiger 10 with blades 4.90 × longer than width of shaft head (4.7-5.0), finely serrated, about 30 teeth, length of the teeth decreasing towards the apex. Subneuroacicular falciger chaetae in chaetiger 10 with blades 5.5 × longer than width of shaft head (5.2-5.7), finely serrated (similar to supraneuroacicular falcigers), length of the teeth decreasing towards the apex. Supraneuroacicular sesquigomph spiniger chaetae in chaetiger 10 with boss (vertical length of blade joint opposite collar) of the joint about 1.6 × length of collar. Aciculae dark honey coloured. Pygidium with terminal anus, and two short ventrolateral anal cirri, slender and smooth.

Remarks.

Morphologically, Namanereis canariarum sp. nov. belongs to the bifid-jaw group of Namanereis : this includes N. araps Glasby, 1997 (Arabian Peninsula), N. cavernicola ( Solís-Weiss & Espinasa 1991) (Mexico, Caribbean side), N. christopheri Conde-Vela 2017 (Saint Vincent, Caribbean), N. hummelincki (Augener 1933) (Caribbean), N. minuta Glasby, 1999 (Caribbean), N. llanetensis sp. nov. (Canary Islands), N. serratis Glasby, 1999 (Caribbean), N. socotrensis Glasby, Fiege & Van Damme, 2014 (Socotra Archipelago) and N. stocki Glasby, 1999 (Caribbean). The new species can be distinguished from N. cavernicola , N. minuta and N. stocki by the number and size of teeth on the blades of the supraneuroacicular falciger chaetae. Namanereis canariarum has 20-30 moderate-sized teeth, compared to 35-80 very fine teeth in N. cavernicola , 50-60 fine teeth in N. minuta , and 9-14 moderate-sized teeth in N. stocki . Furthermore, N. canariarum has much shorter antennae and tentacular cirri than the three aforementioned species. On the other hand, N. minuta and N. stocki differ from N. canariarum in having four pairs of tentacular cirri. Namanereis canariarum has shorter tentacular cirri and smooth antennae, unlike N. araps that has faintly jointed and longer tentacular cirri, with the posterodorsal one extending back to chaetiger 5; antennae in N. araps slightly exceed the length of the prostomium. Namanereis canariarum is most similar to N. hummelincki , N. christopheri , and N. llanetensis sp. nov. However, N. canariarum differs from (1) N. llanetensis sp. nov. in the longer tentacular and parapodial dorsal cirri, as well as the absence of pseudospiniger chaetae; (2) from N. christopheri in the absence of long pseudospiniger chaetae, as well as the presence of shorter and most uniform spinulation in the falciger chaetae, with a longer blade with a greater number of denticles than in N. canariarum ; (3) and from N. hummelincki by the shape of the jaws, in N. canariarum they are delta-shaped in the toothless area, and N. hummelincki is oblong in shape; as well as the greater number of pseudospiniger chaetae per parapodium in N. hummelincki . Finally, N. canariarum differs from N. serratis and N. socotrensis because these two species only have heterogomph falcigers setae in subneuroacicular fascicle.

Habitat.

The type material was collected from a brackish water well at 14 metres above sea level and about 400 metres from the coastline, located on the south of Fuerteventura. Additional material comes from the southern sector of Gran Canaria, collected in a water mine about 140 m a.s.l.. The mine had waterlogged sections rich in plant roots and slime. The stygobiont amphipod Pseudoniphargus fontinalis and the diving beetle Bidessus minutissimus (Naranjo & Martín 2016) were also found in this locality.

Distribution.

Type locality: Canary Islands, Fuerteventura, Las Playitas. Other specimens from Fataga water mine, Barranco de Fataga, Gran Canaria.

Etymology.

The species name derives from the Canary archipelago, in plural for being found in two islands.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Phyllodocida

Family

Nereididae

Genus

Namanereis

Loc

Namanereis canariarum

Nunez 1, Jorge, Glasby 2, Christopher J. & Naranjo 3, Manuel 2020
2020
Loc

Namanereis

Chamberlin 1919
1919