Sigambra sundarbanensis, Bhowmik & Ghoshal & Salazar-Vallejo & Mandal, 2021

Bhowmik, Moumita, Ghoshal, Priya, Salazar-Vallejo, Sergio I. & Mandal, Sumit, 2021, Sigambra sundarbanensis sp. nov. (Annelida, Pilargidae) from the Indian sector of Sundarbans Estuarine System, with remarks on parapodial glands, European Journal of Taxonomy 744, pp. 49-66 : 51-60

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.744.1301

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EDDD49AC-27AE-459F-BC48-95A64BDC1BDD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4672212

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D315C406-6F83-413C-BFCA-E00A8D83070C

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:D315C406-6F83-413C-BFCA-E00A8D83070C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Sigambra sundarbanensis
status

sp. nov.

Sigambra sundarbanensis View in CoL sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:D315C406-6F83-413C-BFCA-E00A8D83070C

Figs 2–5 View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig ; Table 2 View Table 2

Diagnosis

A species of Sigambra with median antenna reaching up to chaetigers 3–4, 2–3 times as long as lateral antennae; tentacular segment 3–4 times as wide as long. Pharynx with 14 prismatic projected lobes. Dorsal cirri larger than ventral ones, largest in chaetiger 1. Ventral cirri absent in chaetiger 2. Notopodial hooks start in chaetiger 8, accompanied by notoacicula; neuropodia with various types of capillary chaetae. Parapodial spaces with glandular, tubular structures.

Etymology

The type locality (river Thakuran) is a tidal estuarine river of the Sundarbans Estuarine System. The epithet of this new species refers to the entire estuarine system, i.e., Indian Sundarbans.

Type material

Holotype INDIA • complete spec.; river Thakuran, stn T8; 21°39′3.73″ N, 88°30′25.17″ E; depth 26 m; Aug. 2019; Moumita Bhowmik and Sumit Mandal leg.; in sediment; PUZ 501 . GoogleMaps

Paratypes INDIA • 4 complete specs; river Thakuran , stn T6; 21°45′35.90″ N, 88°29′8.53″ E; depth 10 m; Aug. 2019; Moumita Bhowmik and Sumit Mandal leg.; in sediment; PUZ 502 to PUZ 505 GoogleMaps 3 complete specs; river Thakuran , stn T8; 21°39′3.73″ N, 88°30′25.17″ E; depth 26 m; Aug. 2019; Moumita Bhowmik and Sumit Mandal leg.; in sediment; PUZ 506 to PUZ 508 GoogleMaps 6 complete specs; river Thakuran , stn T8; 21°39′3.73″ N, 88°30′25.17″ E; depth 26 m; Dec. 2019; Moumita Bhowmik and Sumit Mandal leg.; in sediment; PUZ 514 to PUZ 519 GoogleMaps 2 incomplete specs; river Matla , stn M5; 21°45′18.20″ N, 88°38′25.20″ E; depth 11 m; Jan. 2019; Moumita Bhowmik and Sumit Mandal leg.; in sediment; PUZ 490 to PUZ 491 GoogleMaps .

Sampling site and type locality

Various environmental factors that characterize the sampling sites are in Table 1 View Table 1 . Bottom water salinity ranged from 17.0 in August to 23.42 in January 2019. Sediment temperature was found to be at its maximum in August 2019. Organic enrichment in sediment was moderate, ranging from 0.78 to 1.78%. In terms of granulometry, the study sites are mostly silty with comparatively finer and coarser particles that vary seasonally. The lowest proportion of clay was represented in the soil texture during the monsoon (0.15–0.35%). The sediment texture of the type locality was characterized by a high silt percentage and a lower sand percentage that further decreased in the post-monsoon season (Dec. 2019). Bottom water salinity level varied from 17 to 21 ( Table 1 View Table 1 ). Morphological and morphometric data are in Table 2 View Table 2 and the comparison of the new species with all other accepted species of Sigambra is in Table 3 View Table 3 .

The holotype of Sigambra sundarbanensis sp. nov. was collected from the river Thakuran (station T 8) and paratypes were collected from both the rivers Thakuran and Matla in January 2019, August 2019 and December 2019. A morphometric analysis was performed for all the collected specimens. Moreover, a global map ( Fig. 2 View Fig ) has been presented for all the accepted species of Sigambra based on their type locations.

Description

Holotype ( PUZ 501 )

MEASUREMENTS. Complete, 5.63 mm long, 0.32 mm wide at chaetiger 8–9 (average width 0.28 mm), 64 chaetigers ( Fig. 3A View Fig ).

BODY. Obconic, sub cylindrical along anterior end, depressed thereafter.

PROSTOMIUM. Blunt, bilobed, three times as wide as long. Palps biarticulated directed ventrally; palpophores large, palpostyles small. Pharynx exposed with 14 prismatic marginal papillae, tips distinct

( Fig. 3C View Fig ). Antennae cirriform, lateral antennae subdistally located, smaller than median one ( Fig. 3B View Fig ). Median antenna 2.3 times as long as laterals, reaching up to chaetiger 4.

TENTACLES. Tentacular segment 3–4 times as wide as long; two pairs of tentacular cirri, dorsal tentacular cirri slightly larger than ventral ones.

CIRRI. Parapodial cirri triangular, tapered, foliose, longer than wide. Dorsal cirri longer than ventral cirri throughout, largest in chaetiger 1, reaching up to chaetiger 5 ( Fig. 3D View Fig ). Chaetiger 2 with smallest dorsal cirri, without ventral cirri. Parapodia with reduced notopodia and well developed neuropodia.

NOTOPODIA. Include distally curved dorsal hooks from chaetiger 8 ( Fig. 3D View Fig ), head of hook not exposed outside body wall to chaetiger 22, fully exposed from chaetiger 23, continued along body ( Fig. 3E View Fig ) up to last 2 pre-pygidial chaetigers ( Fig. 3G View Fig ). From chaetiger 8 onwards, hooks accompanied with acicula ( Fig. 5A–B View Fig ). Neurochaetae include 2–4 short wide pectinate chaetae with variable number of spinulose or serrated capillaries ( Figs 3F View Fig , 5A View Fig ).

GLANDS. Parapodial glands starting from chaetiger 5, developed gradually up to chaetiger 60. Each gland with 2–6 large tubular cells, varying in shape and size ( Fig. 4B View Fig , 5D View Fig ). These tubular structures converge ventrally from wide base of coelomic ramus. Tubular structures rudimentary (L: 19 µm, W: 11 µm) or fully developed (L: 50 µm, W: 8 µm); inner features unknown.

PYGIDIUM. Laterally expanded with 2 ventral cirri, as long as 3–4 median chaetigers ( Fig. 3G View Fig ).

OOCYTES. Not seen.

Paratypes

A total of 13 complete and 2 incomplete paratypes show a minor characteristic variation. They were 2.18–8.91 mm long (5.09 ± 2.29 mm), 0.08–0.41 mm wide (0.15 ± 0.08 mm); median antennae were 0.2–0.57 mm long (0.36 ± 0.11 mm) reaching up to chaetigers 3–4. Oocytes ( Figs 4A View Fig , 5C View Fig ) 12–36 µm in diameter (23.33 ± 6.90 μm). Glandular structures in parapodial spaces have been found in most paratypes, they were 14–74 µm long (43.88 ± 17.69 µm) ( Table 2 View Table 2 ). Large tubular glandular cells in chaetigers 47–49 of paratype PUZ 506 are shown in Fig. 4C–D View Fig . In other parapodia (chaetigers 12 and 13), tubular cells invade into coelomic space ( Fig. 4E–F View Fig ).

Remarks

Following the redescription of S. parva by Moreira & Parapar (2002), it can be stated that S. sundarbanensis sp. nov. resembles S. parva Day, 1963 . They have similar characteristics, such as median antenna longer than lateral ones, reaching chaetigers 3–4, and pharynx with 14 marginal papillae. However, they differ in several features, the most notable ones being the starting point of the dorsal hooks and the absence of capillary chaetae in the notopodia. In S. sundarbanensis sp. nov., the first appearance of dorsal hooks from chaetiger 8 remains constant in all 16 specimens, irrespective of specimen size. The hooks are accompanied by a single acicula, and the last two chaetigers are hookless. The notopodia are devoid of any capillary chaetae, neuropodia with 2–4 short pectinate chaetae with a variable number of spinulose or serrated capillaries, and the relative size of the median antenna is 2.3 times as long as the lateral ones. In comparison with S. parva , the median antenna is 1.5 times as long as the lateral ones, the notopodial hook starts from chaetigers 4–5 and is accompanied by single capillary chaetae in the posterior parapodial segments, neuropodia with 1–2 pectinate chaetae, but the number of hookless chaetigers is not mentioned in the literature ( Day 1963; Moreira & Parapar 2002).

Distribution

Sigambra sundarbanensis sp. nov. is only known from the rivers Matla and Thakuran of the Indian Sundarbans.

Ecology

All specimens of this new species were found in mangrove habitats with silty sand sediments, in depths of 11 to 26 m. Mature specimens, with developed oocytes, were recorded in August and December 2019 from Thakuran River. Among all the abiotic factors, salinity plays a pivotal role in ecology and

distribution of species across the globe, as this acts as a physiological barrier for both stenohaline and euryhaline species. Sigambra parva was recorded from Cape Province, South Africa ( Day 1963) and the Mediterranean coast of Spain ( Moreira & Parapar 2002), where the water salinity remains higher than30%, whereas the localities of S. sundarbanensis sp. nov. had a salinity of 17–23.42%. Additionally, S. parva had a comparatively higher range of depth variation from 2 to 97 meters ( Day 1963; Moreira & Parapar 2002).

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Phyllodocida

Family

Pilargidae

Genus

Sigambra

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