Amage imajimai Reuscher 2015, sp. nov.

Amage imajimai sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: CCA76C94-C953-418D-AFC9-DDBBD7D99C6D Fig. 1 A–G Diagnosis Four pairs of branchiae. Twelve thoracic uncinigers. Notopodia without ventral cirri. Eleven abdominal uncinigers. Etymology The species is dedicated to the distinguished Japanese polychaete t...

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Main Author: Reuscher, Michael G.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2015
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3793624
https://zenodo.org/record/3793624
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3793624
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Terebellida
Ampharetidae
Amage
Amage imajimai
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Terebellida
Ampharetidae
Amage
Amage imajimai
Reuscher, Michael G.
Amage imajimai Reuscher 2015, sp. nov.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Terebellida
Ampharetidae
Amage
Amage imajimai
description Amage imajimai sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: CCA76C94-C953-418D-AFC9-DDBBD7D99C6D Fig. 1 A–G Diagnosis Four pairs of branchiae. Twelve thoracic uncinigers. Notopodia without ventral cirri. Eleven abdominal uncinigers. Etymology The species is dedicated to the distinguished Japanese polychaete taxonomist Minoru Imajima. Specimens examined Holotype JAPAN: SMF 24087, Sagami Bay, 35°00.9’ N, 139°35.7’ E – 35°00.7’ N, 139°36.0’ E, 990–1060 m, KT-66-12, St. 7, Jul. 1966 (1 cs). Paratypes JAPAN: SMF 24086, same locality as holotype (3 cs); NSMT-Pol. P-600, same locality as holotype (3 cs, 1 af). Description Length of holotype 3.2 mm, width 0.4 mm. Prostomium with middle lobe bearing anterolateral frontal horns, delimited by incision from inflated surrounding lobe (Fig. 1A); prostomium without glandular ridges or eyes. Single tip of smooth buccal tentacle visible in buccal cavity. Four pairs of branchiae in L-shaped arrangement in segments II–IV (Fig. 1B), separated by wide median gap; all branchiae detached from specimen, cirriform, without conspicuous ciliation or annulations; innermost branchiae of anterior transverse row (1) originating from segment II, outermost branchiae of anterior transverse row (2) originating from segment III, median branchiae of longitudinal row (3) originating from segment IV, posterior branchiae of longitudinal row (4) originating from segment V (Fig. 1B). Segment II without chaetae. Notopodia with capillary chaetae from segment III, present in 15 chaetigers; first three notopodia in close succession due to shortness of segments and slightly elevated above following notopodia (Fig. 1C); first notopodia small, increasing in size from first to third pair; notopodial cirri absent. Neuropodial tori with uncini from segment VI, present in 12 thoracic uncinigers; tori without cirri. Continuous ventral shields conspicuous from anterior thorax to thoracic unciniger 9. Modified notopodia or segments absent. Intermediate uncinigers absent. Eleven abdominal uncinigers with small tuberculate rudimentary notopodia. Pinnules with minute tuberculate dorsal cirrus. Rudimentary notopodia and pinnules connected by glandular fold. Pygidium with one pair of digitiform, ventrolateral anal cirri. Left anal cirrus broken off. Thoracic uncini with 7 teeth in 2 staggered row over basal prow and rostral tooth (Fig. 1 D–E). Abdominal uncini with numerous teeth in several rows over basal prow and rostral tooth. Tube parchment like with needle like spicules embedded. Remarks In four of the paratypes the buccal tentacles are better visible and clearly smooth. The tuberculate dorsal cirri of the abdominal pinnules are much better developed in the larger paratype specimens (Fig. 1F). The anal cirri are longer and cirriform in the larger paratypes (Fig. 1G). However, they also seem to break off easily as three of the six complete paratypes lack both anal cirri. The two other Amage species with twelve thoracic uncinigers are A. benhami Reuscher, Fiege & Wehe, 2009 from the northeast Pacific and the Ross Sea and A. longitorus Reuscher, Fiege & Imajima, 2015 from Japan. The latter species differs from A. imajimai sp. nov. by the possession of only three pairs of branchiae, the very long tori in the first two thoracic uncinigers and the larger number of abdominal uncinigers (13). A. benhami differs from the new species by the presence of club shaped notopodial cirri and the higher number of abdominal uncinigers (15–16). Among the other Japanese Amage species A. auricula , A. delus , A. ehlersi and A. scutata have 11 thoracic uncinigers, A. cf. adspersa has 14 thoracic uncinigers. A. cf. adspersa , A. auricula and A. delus differ from A. imajimai sp. nov. by the presence of notopodial cirri. A. scutata is unusual for the presence of rudimentary notopodia in the anterior segments. A. imajimai sp. nov. has a higher count of abdominal uncinigers (11) than A. auricula (8) and A. ehlersi (10) and a lower count than A. delus (12) and A. longitorus (13). Distribution Sagami Bay on the Southeastern Pacific coast of Honshu, in 990–1060 m. : Published as part of Reuscher, Michael G., 2015, Amage imajimai sp. nov., a new species of Ampharetidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from Japanese waters, pp. 1-7 in European Journal of Taxonomy 154 on pages 3-5, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2015.154, http://zenodo.org/record/3788000
format Text
author Reuscher, Michael G.
author_facet Reuscher, Michael G.
author_sort Reuscher, Michael G.
title Amage imajimai Reuscher 2015, sp. nov.
title_short Amage imajimai Reuscher 2015, sp. nov.
title_full Amage imajimai Reuscher 2015, sp. nov.
title_fullStr Amage imajimai Reuscher 2015, sp. nov.
title_full_unstemmed Amage imajimai Reuscher 2015, sp. nov.
title_sort amage imajimai reuscher 2015, sp. nov.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2015
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3793624
https://zenodo.org/record/3793624
geographic Pacific
Ross Sea
geographic_facet Pacific
Ross Sea
genre Ross Sea
genre_facet Ross Sea
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3793624 2023-05-15T18:07:35+02:00 Amage imajimai Reuscher 2015, sp. nov. Reuscher, Michael G. 2015 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3793624 https://zenodo.org/record/3793624 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/3788000 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF90FF90996C4755FFD5A303FE34FFCD http://zoobank.org/F9A2F05E-0F3A-4459-BB5F-FC8563DD683C https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2015.154 http://zenodo.org/record/3788000 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF90FF90996C4755FFD5A303FE34FFCD https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3788002 http://zoobank.org/F9A2F05E-0F3A-4459-BB5F-FC8563DD683C https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3793623 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Annelida Polychaeta Terebellida Ampharetidae Amage Amage imajimai article-journal ScholarlyArticle Text Taxonomic treatment 2015 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3793624 https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2015.154 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3788002 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3793623 2022-03-10T12:37:15Z Amage imajimai sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: CCA76C94-C953-418D-AFC9-DDBBD7D99C6D Fig. 1 A–G Diagnosis Four pairs of branchiae. Twelve thoracic uncinigers. Notopodia without ventral cirri. Eleven abdominal uncinigers. Etymology The species is dedicated to the distinguished Japanese polychaete taxonomist Minoru Imajima. Specimens examined Holotype JAPAN: SMF 24087, Sagami Bay, 35°00.9’ N, 139°35.7’ E – 35°00.7’ N, 139°36.0’ E, 990–1060 m, KT-66-12, St. 7, Jul. 1966 (1 cs). Paratypes JAPAN: SMF 24086, same locality as holotype (3 cs); NSMT-Pol. P-600, same locality as holotype (3 cs, 1 af). Description Length of holotype 3.2 mm, width 0.4 mm. Prostomium with middle lobe bearing anterolateral frontal horns, delimited by incision from inflated surrounding lobe (Fig. 1A); prostomium without glandular ridges or eyes. Single tip of smooth buccal tentacle visible in buccal cavity. Four pairs of branchiae in L-shaped arrangement in segments II–IV (Fig. 1B), separated by wide median gap; all branchiae detached from specimen, cirriform, without conspicuous ciliation or annulations; innermost branchiae of anterior transverse row (1) originating from segment II, outermost branchiae of anterior transverse row (2) originating from segment III, median branchiae of longitudinal row (3) originating from segment IV, posterior branchiae of longitudinal row (4) originating from segment V (Fig. 1B). Segment II without chaetae. Notopodia with capillary chaetae from segment III, present in 15 chaetigers; first three notopodia in close succession due to shortness of segments and slightly elevated above following notopodia (Fig. 1C); first notopodia small, increasing in size from first to third pair; notopodial cirri absent. Neuropodial tori with uncini from segment VI, present in 12 thoracic uncinigers; tori without cirri. Continuous ventral shields conspicuous from anterior thorax to thoracic unciniger 9. Modified notopodia or segments absent. Intermediate uncinigers absent. Eleven abdominal uncinigers with small tuberculate rudimentary notopodia. Pinnules with minute tuberculate dorsal cirrus. Rudimentary notopodia and pinnules connected by glandular fold. Pygidium with one pair of digitiform, ventrolateral anal cirri. Left anal cirrus broken off. Thoracic uncini with 7 teeth in 2 staggered row over basal prow and rostral tooth (Fig. 1 D–E). Abdominal uncini with numerous teeth in several rows over basal prow and rostral tooth. Tube parchment like with needle like spicules embedded. Remarks In four of the paratypes the buccal tentacles are better visible and clearly smooth. The tuberculate dorsal cirri of the abdominal pinnules are much better developed in the larger paratype specimens (Fig. 1F). The anal cirri are longer and cirriform in the larger paratypes (Fig. 1G). However, they also seem to break off easily as three of the six complete paratypes lack both anal cirri. The two other Amage species with twelve thoracic uncinigers are A. benhami Reuscher, Fiege & Wehe, 2009 from the northeast Pacific and the Ross Sea and A. longitorus Reuscher, Fiege & Imajima, 2015 from Japan. The latter species differs from A. imajimai sp. nov. by the possession of only three pairs of branchiae, the very long tori in the first two thoracic uncinigers and the larger number of abdominal uncinigers (13). A. benhami differs from the new species by the presence of club shaped notopodial cirri and the higher number of abdominal uncinigers (15–16). Among the other Japanese Amage species A. auricula , A. delus , A. ehlersi and A. scutata have 11 thoracic uncinigers, A. cf. adspersa has 14 thoracic uncinigers. A. cf. adspersa , A. auricula and A. delus differ from A. imajimai sp. nov. by the presence of notopodial cirri. A. scutata is unusual for the presence of rudimentary notopodia in the anterior segments. A. imajimai sp. nov. has a higher count of abdominal uncinigers (11) than A. auricula (8) and A. ehlersi (10) and a lower count than A. delus (12) and A. longitorus (13). Distribution Sagami Bay on the Southeastern Pacific coast of Honshu, in 990–1060 m. : Published as part of Reuscher, Michael G., 2015, Amage imajimai sp. nov., a new species of Ampharetidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from Japanese waters, pp. 1-7 in European Journal of Taxonomy 154 on pages 3-5, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2015.154, http://zenodo.org/record/3788000 Text Ross Sea DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Pacific Ross Sea