Microphthalmus Mecznikow, 1865

Georgieva, Magdalena N., Wiklund, Helena, Ramos, Dino A., Neal, Lenka, Glasby, Christopher J. & Gunton, Laetitia M., 2023, The Annelid Community of a Natural Deep-sea Whale Fall off Eastern Australia, Records of the Australian Museum (Rec. Aust. Mus.) 75 (3), pp. 167-213 : 177-180

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3853/j.2201-4349.75.2023.1800

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:32014E75-6253-41C0-BEDC-7A461321A0A1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10997980

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E679B631-FFB9-FF94-87A8-F9E1FAEAF8F2

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Microphthalmus Mecznikow, 1865
status

 

Microphthalmus Mecznikow, 1865 View in CoL

Microphthalmus sp.

Fig. 11 View Figure 11

Material examined. NHMUKANEA 2022.434 , NHMUK ANEA 2022.412 420 View Materials , NHMUKANEA 2022.437 438 View Materials , IN2017_ V03 _100; 9 June 2017; off Byron Bay , NSW, Australia, beam trawl, start: 28.05°S 154.08°E, 999 m, end: 28.10°S 154.08°E, 1013 m. GoogleMaps DNA vouchers: NHMUK ANEA 2022.434 ( COI, 16 S, 18 S) GoogleMaps , WF_SYL_2 (COI, 16S), same locality .

Description. Complete specimens 1.1–1.8 mm long with 18–42 segments, appearingbiannulate ( Fig. 11A View Figure 11 ). Body width is similar throughout, with its mid-body chaetigers 0.14–0.24 mm wide, not including the parapodia, only slightly taperingon both ends. Ethanol-preserved specimens appearing white to light brown.

Prostomiumsemicircular, anteriorly slightly cleft, broader thanlong ( Fig. 11B View Figure 11 ). Prostomialappendagesare all cirriform. One pair of dorsal antennae and one pair of shorter palps terminally located. Median antenna inserted near posterior end of prostomium. Eyes absent.

First three segments shorter than others andlack chaetae, bearing six pairs of cirriform tentacular cirri ( Fig 11B View Figure 11 ). Dorsal and ventral cirri present from segment 4. Dorsal cirri shorter on segment 4 than those on segment 5 onwards. Ventral cirri triangular, shorter, and thicker than cirriform dorsal cirri. Body width similar along most of the length (0.14–0.24 mm).

Parapodia uniramous. Neuropodia with a pointed prechaetal lobe ( Fig. 11C View Figure 11 ) and blunt postchaetal lobe ( Fig. 11D View Figure 11 ). Length of prechaetal lobe equal to or exceeds that of dorsal cirri. Neurochaetae all heterogomph falcigers with blades of different lengths having serrated edges ( Fig. 11E View Figure 11 ).

Pygidium short, with two short anal cirri with swollen bases. Ventral anal lamellae bilobed, with smooth margins and lacking papillae ( Fig. 11F View Figure 11 ).

Distribution. IN2017_V03, Station 100. Pilot whale carcass, off Byron Bay, New South Wales, Australia in 999–1013 m.

Remarks. The genus Microphthalmus has been identified in previous studies of whale-fall annelids in the Atlantic ( Sumida et al., 2016) and the Pacific ( Dahlgren et al., 2004) but no descriptions or molecular data for these have been published to date. This genus is also difficult to place phylogenetically ( Fig. 12 View Figure 12 ). Sumida et al. (2016) indicatedthat the Microphthalmus collected from the Atlantic whale fall wasanew species, howeverwhether ourspecimens represent the same species cannot be determined at present due to the lack of information from previous studies. Male copulatory organs were not examined, which have been suggested to be the most suitable morpho-anatomical character for differentiating between species ( Westheide, 2013).

NHMUKANEA

Natural History Museum, London

NHMUK

Natural History Museum, London

COI

University of Coimbra Botany Department

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