Syllis rosea ( Langerhans, 1879 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4237.2.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:494C759E-107E-4C5E-A8DC-3CE3DED035AF |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6021627 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A36887B9-5A7B-FFE5-FF12-D16F1FBCFB9E |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Syllis rosea ( Langerhans, 1879 ) |
status |
|
Syllis rosea ( Langerhans, 1879) View in CoL
Figure 20 View FIGURE 20
Ehlersia (Syllis) rosea Langerhans, 1879: 538 View in CoL , fig. 5.
Ehlersia rosea View in CoL . Langerhans 1881: 98.
Langerhansia rosea View in CoL . Imajima 1966: 259, text-fig. 52 a–m; Campoy 1982: 395, pls. 41–43. Langerhansia rosea curticirris Ben-Eliahu, 1977: 44 View in CoL , figs 18 a–h. Typosyllis rosea View in CoL . Licher 1999: 44, fig. 21a–o.
Syllis rosea View in CoL . San Martín 2003: 358, fig. 194A–I.
Material examined. AUSTRALIA, WESTERN AUSTRALIA: Kimberley, west side of Cassini Island , St. 59, 13° 57' S, 125° 37' E, AM W.48558, 1 specimen, 18 July 1988, coll. P. Hutchings; south side of North Slate Island , St. 5, 15° 32' S, 124° 24' E, AM W.48559, 2 specimens, coll GoogleMaps . 9 July 1988, by P. Hutchings; Condillac Island, St. 54, 14° 6' S, 125° 33' E, AM W.48563, 5 specimens, coll GoogleMaps . 16 July 1988 by P. Hutchings; Houtman Abrolhos , Beacon Island, Goss Passage, WA 511, 28° 25' 30" S, 113° 47' E, AM W.48560, 1 specimen, 10 m, coll GoogleMaps . 18 May 1994; off south end of Long Island, Beacon Island , WA 539, 28° 28' 48" S, 113° 46' 18" E, AM W.48561, 18 specimens, coll GoogleMaps . 4–5 m, May 1994; south end of Long Island, Beacon Island , WA 524, 28° 28' 48" S, 113° 46' 30" E, AM W.48562, 5 specimens, coll GoogleMaps . 30 m, 22 May 1994; Goss Passage , Beacon Island, WA 511, 28° 28' 48" S, 113° 46' 30" E, AM W.48560, 1 specimen, coll GoogleMaps . 10 m, 22 May 1994; Beacon Island, Goss Passage, WA 518, 28° 25' 30"S, 113° 47' E, AM W.48564, 9 specimens, coll GoogleMaps . 8 m, 22 May 1994; Warnbro Sound , West of Penguin Island, 32° 20’S, 115° 43’E, AM W.29518, 1 specimen, coll. from reef substrate, algal sponge, 5 m, 21 March 1993 by P. Hutchings. NORTHERN TERRITORY: Darwin Harbour, off Nightcliff, Old Man's Rock, NT 318, AM W.48565, 2 specimens, coll GoogleMaps . 17 July 1993.
Description. Longest complete specimen examined 15 mm long, 0.175 mm wide, with 117 chaetigers. Body long and slender, filiform, without colour pattern; segments well marked, with deep intersegmental constrictions in midbody segments. Prostomium rounded; 4 eyes in open trapezoidal arrangement. Palps elongated, longer than prostomium ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 A). Median antenna arising on middle of prostomium, with 18 articles, distinctly longer than combined length of prostomium and palps; lateral antennae about half of length of median one, with 12–13 articles. Peristomium distinctly shorter than subsequent segments ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 A). Dorsal tentacular cirri shorter than median antenna, with about 14–15 articles; ventral tentacular cirri, with 10–11 articles. Dorsal parapodial cirri of chaetiger 1 long, with 20–21 articles, distinctly longer than body width ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 A), subsequent dorsal parapodial cirri shorter than body width, with few articles, alternating in length, 13–10 articles on anterior segments ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 A), 9–10 articles in midbody, with articles of different sizes ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 B); dorsal parapodial cirri relatively thick, with numerous and distinctly coiled hyaline inclusions on articles ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 B). Ventral parapodial cirri digitiform, shorter than parapodial lobes. Compound chaetae of anteriormost and posterior parapodia elongated, bidentate falcigers; after few anterior parapodia, blades of dorsalmost compound chaetae distinctly elongated, short spiniger-like, about 62 µm long throughout, anteriorly bidentate ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 C), becoming indistinctly bidentate to unidentate in midbody, with tip broad and rounded, ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 F). Each anteriormost parapodium with 10 falcigers; anterior and midbody parapodia each with 1 spiniger-like and 4 falcigers, bidentate, with short to moderate spines on margin, 16 µm long above, 9 µm long below ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 D); far posterior parapodia each with 1 spiniger-like chaeta and 2–4 falcigers, similar to those of midbody ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 G); posteriormost parapodia with 4–5 falcigers. Dorsal simple chaetae on posterior parapodia only, truncate, slightly bifid, with few, short subdistal spines ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 H). Ventral simple chaetae on far posterior segments only, bidentate, with short spines on margin ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 I). Aciculae distally bent at right angle ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 E, J), usually solitary, two aciculae in anterior parapodia of longer specimens. Pharynx extending through about 10 segments; pharyngeal tooth on anterior margin of pharynx ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 A). Proventricle through 4–5 segments, with about 28–30 muscle cell rows. Pygidium with 2 anal cirri, with 10–11 articles, and median stylus.
Remarks. The specimens from Australia agree well with the descriptions of S. rosea from other areas of the world, except in the tip of midbody spiniger-like chaetae of some specimens, which are markedly less rounded and broad than in specimens from other areas. However, the general characters of body, aciculae and chaetae agree perfectly with the accepted diagnosis of the species, so the difference observed is not considered to be important enough to describe a new species.
Syllis rosea is very similar to S. erikae described above; both species have long and slender body, truncate dorsal simple chaeta, and posterior “foot-like” aciculae, as well as the same kind of stolon (Tetracerous) (not observed in Australian specimens but described from Mediterranean material, San Martín 2003); however, S. rosea has spiniger-like chaetae, which are lacking in S. erikae .
Habitat. Biogenic concretions (calcareous algae, vermetid reefs, dead corals) algae, rhizomes of seaweeds, coarse sand, among mussels, corals and inside sponges (San Martín, 2003).
Distribution. Eastern Atlantic, from NW of Iberina Peninsula to Canary Islands. Warm areas of the Mediterranean Sea, Red Sea, Pacific Ocean ( Japan, Solomon Islands). Australia (Western Australia and Northern Territory). This is a new record for Australia.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
SubFamily |
Syllinae |
Genus |
Syllis rosea ( Langerhans, 1879 )
Martín, Guillermo San, Álvarez-Campos, Patricia & Hutchings, Pat 2017 |
Langerhansia rosea
Licher 1999: 44 |
Campoy 1982: 395 |
Ben-Eliahu 1977: 44 |
Imajima 1966: 259 |
Ehlersia rosea
Langerhans 1881: 98 |
Ehlersia (Syllis) rosea
Langerhans 1879: 538 |