Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nunez, Riera & Maggio 2014

Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nuñez, Riera & Maggio, 2014 Figs 4–5 Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nuñez, Riera & Maggio, 2014: 116, figs 1–3 (type locality: Gijón (Asturias), Bay of Biscay, Cantabrian Sea, NE Atlantic, 72–74 m depth). Material examined Holotype SPAIN • Bay of Biscay, Cantabrian Sea; 43°3...

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Main Authors: Ravara, Ascensão, Wiklund, Helena, Cunha, Marina R.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2021
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570306
https://zenodo.org/record/4570306
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4570306
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
Eunicida
Dorvilleidae
Ophryotrocha
Ophryotrocha cantabrica
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Eunicida
Dorvilleidae
Ophryotrocha
Ophryotrocha cantabrica
Ravara, Ascensão
Wiklund, Helena
Cunha, Marina R.
Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nunez, Riera & Maggio 2014
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Eunicida
Dorvilleidae
Ophryotrocha
Ophryotrocha cantabrica
description Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nuñez, Riera & Maggio, 2014 Figs 4–5 Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nuñez, Riera & Maggio, 2014: 116, figs 1–3 (type locality: Gijón (Asturias), Bay of Biscay, Cantabrian Sea, NE Atlantic, 72–74 m depth). Material examined Holotype SPAIN • Bay of Biscay, Cantabrian Sea; 43°37.71′ – 43°38.36′ N, 05°37.59′ – 05°39.78′ W; 72–74 m depth; 15 Jun. 1991; cruise Fauna II; Stn 114A; MNCN 16.0/14704. Paratypes SPAIN • 38 specs; same collection data as for holotype; MNCN 16.01/13633. Other material MOROCCO • 27 specs (ethanol), 44 specs (formalin), 1 spec. (slide preparation); GoC, Mercator MV; 35°17.916′ N, 06°38.709′ W; 354 m depth; 2 Mar. 2008; Stn 64PE284_12750W; wood substrata; DBUA0002281.01 • 7 specs (ethanol), 2 specs (formalin); same collection data as for preceding; 19 May 2009; Stn B09-14b_01W; wood substrata; DBUA0002282.01 • 1 spec. (ethanol), 3 specs (formalin); GoC, Meknès MV; 34°59.091′ N, 07°04.424′ W; 698 m depth; 20 May 2009; Stn B09-14b_03W; wood substrata; DBUA0002282.02. PORTUGAL • 135 specs (ethanol); WIM, Estremadura Spur; 39°17.295′ N, 10°01.045′ W; 327 m depth; 1 Jun. 2017; Stn PES-ROVL17D01_pick#3W; sunken wood; DBUA0002283.01 (2 hologenophores and 133 paragenophores). Description Relatively large specimens in comparison to the majority of the species of Ophryotrocha (Fig. 3). Largest complete specimen 5.4 mm long and 0.8 mm wide for 35 chaetigers. Body compressed dorsoventrally, wider sub-anteriorly and tapering posteriorly (Fig. 4A). A transversal band of cilia present in the middle of each segment. Prostomium broadly rounded, without eyes. Antennae and palps digitiform, sometimes retracted and with a more globulous appearance, subequal in length. Peristomium achaetous, with two rings subequal in length to the following segments. Mouth opens ventrally on the first peristomial ring (Fig. 4B). Mandibles rod-like; cutting plates straight and toothed; apophyses triangular, extending laterally right beneath the tip of the mandibula (Fig. 4B, D). Maxillae of P-type with a pair of forceps and seven pairs of free denticles (D1–7) (Fig. 4E); forceps and D1 comb-like with 13 large teeth alternating with two small teeth; D2–3 shovel-like, with long distal fang and serrated edge; D4–6 with coarsely serrated edge (~11 teeth); D7 shovel-like, broader than the others and with smaller and more numerous teeth (~40). Parapodia uniramous, with broadly conical acicular lobes, long digitiform pre-chaetal lamellae (in median parapodia), conical sub-acicular lobes slightly shorter than pre-chaetal lamellae, conical ventral cirri shorter than sub-acicular lobes, and ovoid to piriform dorsal cirri as long as pre-chaetal lamellae in anterior parapodia and greatly increasing in size posteriorly (Fig. 4A). Protruding acicula of sub-acicular lobes very thin and short. Supra-acicular chaetae simple, serrated, tapering distally to a thin pointed hook (Fig. 4F). Sub-acicular chaetae compound with serrated bidentate blades; secondary tooth tiny and difficult to see (Fig. 4G). Pygidium with terminal anus, two cirriform anal cirri inserted laterally and one short median cirrus (Fig. 4C). Remarks Ophryotrocha cantabrica was originally described from the Cantabrian Sea at 72–74 m depth (Nuñez et al . 2014. The holotype and paratypes were examined during this study and found to be similar in size (Fig. 3) and morphology to the material from GoC and WIM. Only the sub-acicular chaetae of the GoC and WIM specimens seem to have somewhat thicker and shorter blades (Fig. 5D) but this was not considered significant enough to establish a different species. Nuñez et al . (2014) described and illustrated the mandibulae of this species as being distally slightly bifid without serration on the anterior edge. However, a thorough examination of all the specimens (including type material) revealed that the mandibles are often broken at the tip (Fig. 5A), giving the appearance illustrated in the original description (Nuñez et al . 2014: fig. 3a). In fact, when not broken, the mandibles present a ridge of small teeth on its distal edge (Fig. 4D). Also in the forceps and denticle 1 of the maxillary apparatus, the large teeth were found to alternate with two small teeth (Figs 4E, 5B). The phylogenetic analysis segregates this species from the others within the tree (Fig. 2), but there are no DNA sequences from the type material to compare with. The two sequenced specimens were from WIM, the K2P value from the H3 alignment between the two specimens is 0.00 and the K2P value to the nearest species in the tree, O. batillus Wiklund et al. , 2012, is 0.10. This study extends the geographic and bathymetric distribution of O. cantabrica to WIM and GoC, where it was the most abundant species, and to a depth of 698 m. It is noteworthy that all our specimens were associated with wood samples only and not with alfalfa grass. Ecology and distribution NE Atlantic: from the Cantabrian Sea (Bay of Biscay) to the Gulf of Cadiz (Moroccan Margin). Found in muddy sand, 72–74 m depth, in the Cantabrian Sea (Nuñez et al. 2014), and in wood substrata, 327–698 m depth, at the West Iberian Margin and Gulf of Cadiz (present study). : Published as part of Ravara, Ascensão, Wiklund, Helena & Cunha, Marina R., 2021, Four new species and further records of Dorvilleidae (Annelida, Polychaeta) from deep-sea organic substrata, NE Atlantic, pp. 44-81 in European Journal of Taxonomy 736 on pages 52-54, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2021.736.1251, http://zenodo.org/record/4570204 : {"references": ["Nunez J., Riera R. & Maggio Y. 2014. A new Ophryotrocha species (Polychaeta: Dorvilleidae) from circalittoral seabeds of the Cantabrian Sea (north-east Atlantic Ocean). Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 94 (1): 115 - 119. https: // doi. org / 10.1017 / s 0025315413001082", "Wiklund H., Altamira I. V., Glover A. G., Smith C. R., Baco A. R. & Dahlgren T. G. 2012. Systematics and biodiversity of Ophryotrocha (Annelida, Dorvilleidae) with descriptions of six new species from deep-sea whale-fall and wood-fall habitats in the north-east Pacific. Systematics and Biodiversity 10 (2): 243 - 259. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 14772000.2012.693970"]}
format Text
author Ravara, Ascensão
Wiklund, Helena
Cunha, Marina R.
author_facet Ravara, Ascensão
Wiklund, Helena
Cunha, Marina R.
author_sort Ravara, Ascensão
title Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nunez, Riera & Maggio 2014
title_short Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nunez, Riera & Maggio 2014
title_full Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nunez, Riera & Maggio 2014
title_fullStr Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nunez, Riera & Maggio 2014
title_full_unstemmed Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nunez, Riera & Maggio 2014
title_sort ophryotrocha cantabrica nunez, riera & maggio 2014
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570306
https://zenodo.org/record/4570306
long_lat ENVELOPE(167.217,167.217,-77.483,-77.483)
geographic Fang
Pacific
geographic_facet Fang
Pacific
genre North East Atlantic
genre_facet North East Atlantic
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4570306 2023-05-15T17:38:56+02:00 Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nunez, Riera & Maggio 2014 Ravara, Ascensão Wiklund, Helena Cunha, Marina R. 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570306 https://zenodo.org/record/4570306 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/4570204 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFFCCF77E959FFB8FF8D8B0C6E6EFFD7 http://zoobank.org/68249639-5FAD-4860-A2EA-0D34690C10FC https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2021.736.1251 http://zenodo.org/record/4570204 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFFCCF77E959FFB8FF8D8B0C6E6EFFD7 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570212 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570214 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570208 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570210 http://zoobank.org/68249639-5FAD-4860-A2EA-0D34690C10FC https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570307 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 Eunicida Dorvilleidae Ophryotrocha Ophryotrocha cantabrica Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570306 https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2021.736.1251 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570212 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570214 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570208 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4570210 https: 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nuñez, Riera & Maggio, 2014 Figs 4–5 Ophryotrocha cantabrica Nuñez, Riera & Maggio, 2014: 116, figs 1–3 (type locality: Gijón (Asturias), Bay of Biscay, Cantabrian Sea, NE Atlantic, 72–74 m depth). Material examined Holotype SPAIN • Bay of Biscay, Cantabrian Sea; 43°37.71′ – 43°38.36′ N, 05°37.59′ – 05°39.78′ W; 72–74 m depth; 15 Jun. 1991; cruise Fauna II; Stn 114A; MNCN 16.0/14704. Paratypes SPAIN • 38 specs; same collection data as for holotype; MNCN 16.01/13633. Other material MOROCCO • 27 specs (ethanol), 44 specs (formalin), 1 spec. (slide preparation); GoC, Mercator MV; 35°17.916′ N, 06°38.709′ W; 354 m depth; 2 Mar. 2008; Stn 64PE284_12750W; wood substrata; DBUA0002281.01 • 7 specs (ethanol), 2 specs (formalin); same collection data as for preceding; 19 May 2009; Stn B09-14b_01W; wood substrata; DBUA0002282.01 • 1 spec. (ethanol), 3 specs (formalin); GoC, Meknès MV; 34°59.091′ N, 07°04.424′ W; 698 m depth; 20 May 2009; Stn B09-14b_03W; wood substrata; DBUA0002282.02. PORTUGAL • 135 specs (ethanol); WIM, Estremadura Spur; 39°17.295′ N, 10°01.045′ W; 327 m depth; 1 Jun. 2017; Stn PES-ROVL17D01_pick#3W; sunken wood; DBUA0002283.01 (2 hologenophores and 133 paragenophores). Description Relatively large specimens in comparison to the majority of the species of Ophryotrocha (Fig. 3). Largest complete specimen 5.4 mm long and 0.8 mm wide for 35 chaetigers. Body compressed dorsoventrally, wider sub-anteriorly and tapering posteriorly (Fig. 4A). A transversal band of cilia present in the middle of each segment. Prostomium broadly rounded, without eyes. Antennae and palps digitiform, sometimes retracted and with a more globulous appearance, subequal in length. Peristomium achaetous, with two rings subequal in length to the following segments. Mouth opens ventrally on the first peristomial ring (Fig. 4B). Mandibles rod-like; cutting plates straight and toothed; apophyses triangular, extending laterally right beneath the tip of the mandibula (Fig. 4B, D). Maxillae of P-type with a pair of forceps and seven pairs of free denticles (D1–7) (Fig. 4E); forceps and D1 comb-like with 13 large teeth alternating with two small teeth; D2–3 shovel-like, with long distal fang and serrated edge; D4–6 with coarsely serrated edge (~11 teeth); D7 shovel-like, broader than the others and with smaller and more numerous teeth (~40). Parapodia uniramous, with broadly conical acicular lobes, long digitiform pre-chaetal lamellae (in median parapodia), conical sub-acicular lobes slightly shorter than pre-chaetal lamellae, conical ventral cirri shorter than sub-acicular lobes, and ovoid to piriform dorsal cirri as long as pre-chaetal lamellae in anterior parapodia and greatly increasing in size posteriorly (Fig. 4A). Protruding acicula of sub-acicular lobes very thin and short. Supra-acicular chaetae simple, serrated, tapering distally to a thin pointed hook (Fig. 4F). Sub-acicular chaetae compound with serrated bidentate blades; secondary tooth tiny and difficult to see (Fig. 4G). Pygidium with terminal anus, two cirriform anal cirri inserted laterally and one short median cirrus (Fig. 4C). Remarks Ophryotrocha cantabrica was originally described from the Cantabrian Sea at 72–74 m depth (Nuñez et al . 2014. The holotype and paratypes were examined during this study and found to be similar in size (Fig. 3) and morphology to the material from GoC and WIM. Only the sub-acicular chaetae of the GoC and WIM specimens seem to have somewhat thicker and shorter blades (Fig. 5D) but this was not considered significant enough to establish a different species. Nuñez et al . (2014) described and illustrated the mandibulae of this species as being distally slightly bifid without serration on the anterior edge. However, a thorough examination of all the specimens (including type material) revealed that the mandibles are often broken at the tip (Fig. 5A), giving the appearance illustrated in the original description (Nuñez et al . 2014: fig. 3a). In fact, when not broken, the mandibles present a ridge of small teeth on its distal edge (Fig. 4D). Also in the forceps and denticle 1 of the maxillary apparatus, the large teeth were found to alternate with two small teeth (Figs 4E, 5B). The phylogenetic analysis segregates this species from the others within the tree (Fig. 2), but there are no DNA sequences from the type material to compare with. The two sequenced specimens were from WIM, the K2P value from the H3 alignment between the two specimens is 0.00 and the K2P value to the nearest species in the tree, O. batillus Wiklund et al. , 2012, is 0.10. This study extends the geographic and bathymetric distribution of O. cantabrica to WIM and GoC, where it was the most abundant species, and to a depth of 698 m. It is noteworthy that all our specimens were associated with wood samples only and not with alfalfa grass. Ecology and distribution NE Atlantic: from the Cantabrian Sea (Bay of Biscay) to the Gulf of Cadiz (Moroccan Margin). Found in muddy sand, 72–74 m depth, in the Cantabrian Sea (Nuñez et al. 2014), and in wood substrata, 327–698 m depth, at the West Iberian Margin and Gulf of Cadiz (present study). : Published as part of Ravara, Ascensão, Wiklund, Helena & Cunha, Marina R., 2021, Four new species and further records of Dorvilleidae (Annelida, Polychaeta) from deep-sea organic substrata, NE Atlantic, pp. 44-81 in European Journal of Taxonomy 736 on pages 52-54, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2021.736.1251, http://zenodo.org/record/4570204 : {"references": ["Nunez J., Riera R. & Maggio Y. 2014. A new Ophryotrocha species (Polychaeta: Dorvilleidae) from circalittoral seabeds of the Cantabrian Sea (north-east Atlantic Ocean). Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 94 (1): 115 - 119. https: // doi. org / 10.1017 / s 0025315413001082", "Wiklund H., Altamira I. V., Glover A. G., Smith C. R., Baco A. R. & Dahlgren T. G. 2012. Systematics and biodiversity of Ophryotrocha (Annelida, Dorvilleidae) with descriptions of six new species from deep-sea whale-fall and wood-fall habitats in the north-east Pacific. Systematics and Biodiversity 10 (2): 243 - 259. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 14772000.2012.693970"]} Text North East Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Fang ENVELOPE(167.217,167.217,-77.483,-77.483) Pacific