Aonides orensanzi Radashevsky, 2015, n. sp.

Aonides orensanzi n. sp. (Figs 3, 4) Type material. Queensland: Holotype: AM W. 45226, MI QLD 2415. Paratypes: AM W. 45220, MI QLD 2330 (3), MIMB 28111, MI QLD 2330 (2); AM W. 45221, MI QLD 2360 (1); AM W. 45222, MI QLD 2363 (1); AM W. 45223, MI QLD 2373 (4); MIMB 28112, MI QLD 2373 (3); AM W. 45225...

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Main Author: Radashevsky, Vasily I.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2015
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4658125
https://zenodo.org/record/4658125
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4658125
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
Spionida
Spionidae
Aonides
Aonides orensanzi
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Spionida
Spionidae
Aonides
Aonides orensanzi
Radashevsky, Vasily I.
Aonides orensanzi Radashevsky, 2015, n. sp.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Spionida
Spionidae
Aonides
Aonides orensanzi
description Aonides orensanzi n. sp. (Figs 3, 4) Type material. Queensland: Holotype: AM W. 45226, MI QLD 2415. Paratypes: AM W. 45220, MI QLD 2330 (3), MIMB 28111, MI QLD 2330 (2); AM W. 45221, MI QLD 2360 (1); AM W. 45222, MI QLD 2363 (1); AM W. 45223, MI QLD 2373 (4); MIMB 28112, MI QLD 2373 (3); AM W. 45225, MI QLD 2410 (2); MIMB 28113, MI QLD 2415 (1); AM W. 45505, MI QLD 2435 (2). Adult morphology. Up to 12 mm long, 0.4 mm wide for 80 chaetigers; holotype a complete individual about 11 mm long for 77 chaetigers; smallest examined individual about 6 mm long for 50 chaetigers. No pigmentation on body and palps. Prostomium long, anteriorly sharply conical, posteriorly narrowed and pressed into chaetiger 1 but not extending over it as a caruncle. Small rounded knobs with short non-motile sensory cilia irregularly scattered on prostomium. Short finger-like antenna present on posterior most part of prostomium (Fig. 3 A). Ciliary bands or patches of nuchal organs absent on posterior sides of prostomium. Two pairs of red eyes arranged almost in a straight transverse line; lateral eyes slightly larger than median eyes (Fig. 3 A). Peristomium reduced to small ring around mouth. Palps as long as 5–15 chaetigers, with frontal longitudinal groove lined with fine cilia, and up to 25 short transverse ciliary bands regularly arranged on inner lateral surface; lateral bands fewer in small individuals; long cilia of bands beating towards distal end of palp. Chaetiger 1 with capillaries and small postchaetal lamellae in both rami. Postchaetal lamellae on succeeding chaetigers elongated, leaf-like in both rami (Fig. 3 A). Dorsal crests, lateral pouches and ventral flaps absent. Hooks in notopodia from chaetigers 20–25 (Fig. 4 B), up to six in a series among capillaries. Hooks in neuropodia from chaetigers 16–22 (Fig. 4 B), up to six in a series, accompanied by 1–5 alternating capillaries and 1–3 inferior chaetae throughout. Alternating capillaries in anterior neuropodia with narrow limbation (Fig. 3 E), in posterior neuropodia alimbate, hair-like (Fig. 3 G). Inferior chaetae in anterior neuropodia capillaries, in posterior neuropodia of big mature individuals they gradually become larger and can be referred to as sabre chaetae (Fig. 3 J). Hooks in both rami in anterior parapodia bidentate, with upper tooth situated at almost right angle to main fang (Fig. 3 C, D). Hooks in posterior parapodia tridentate, with two small upper teeth situated side by side above main fang (Fig. 3 F, H), and occasionally quadridentate, with an additional median superior tooth (Fig. 3 I). Only outer hood present; no inner subdistal hood. Branchiae up to 14 pairs, from chaetiger 2 to chaetiger 15, fewer in small individuals (Figs 3 A, 4 A). Branchiae longest on chaetigers 5–7, up to three times as long as notopodial lamellae, gradually diminishing in length on succeeding chaetigers, free from lamellae, robust, flattened, with surfaces oriented perpendicular to body axis, with longitudinal bands of cilia along inner and outer edges. Afferent and efferent blood vessels of branchiae forming a loop and interconnected by radial capillaries giving branchiae annulate appearance. Dorso-lateral dense bands of short cilia from chaetiger 1 to chaetiger 14, fewer in small individuals. Each band of cilia extending between successive notopodia; bands short and straight to slightly curved on anterior chaetigers, becoming longer and horse-shoe shaped on posterior chaetigers, with lateral sides of horse-shoe directed to midline of body. Short nototrochs present on branchiate chaetigers, each composed by single row of short cilia. Pygidium usually with five cirri, comprising one pair of ventral cirri, a midventral cirrus and one pair of slightly longer and thicker dorsal cirri; one individual (of seven examined complete individuals with pygidia) with four cirri, and one individual with six pygidial cirri. Oesophagus extending through 13–15 anterior chaetigers. Ventral buccal bulb below oesophagus extending to middle of chaetiger 2 (Fig. 3 B). Gizzard-like structure in digestive tract absent. Main dorsal blood vessel transformed into gut sinus in anterior part of midgut. Heart body up to 10 µm in diameter inside main dorsal vessel extending from chaetigers 4–6 to chaetigers 13–15. Blood red, without elements. Nephridia from chaetiger 4 in small individuals and from chaetiger 5 to chaetiger 15 in individuals with more than 60 chaetigers (Fig. 4 C). Reproduction. Aonides orensanzi n. sp. is gonochoristic. Both in females and males gametes develop from chaetigers 16–17 throughout most part of body. Oogenesis is intraovarian. Vitellogenesis occurs when oocytes grow attached to segmental blood vessels. Vitellogenic intraovarian oocytes are up to 130 µm in diameter, with a germinal vesicle about 40 µm and a single nucleolus 13 µm in diameter. Oocyte envelope is 3–4 µm thick, with honey-combed external surface and a circle of about 30 vesicles associated with inner surface; each vesicle is about 10 µm in diameter. Sperm morphology and spermatogenesis are unknown. Remarks. Adult Aonides orensanzi n. sp. appear similar to A. californiensis , A. mayaguezensis , A. oxycephala and A. trifida by the presence of an occipital antenna on the prostomium. The antenna was not described but was illustrated on the posterior edge of the prostomium in A. californiensis by Rioja (1947: fig. 11). Aonides orensanzi n. sp. differs from these species in having bi-, tri- and quadridentate hooks in same individual. Such variability of hook dentition is herein reported for the first time for Aonides . Aonides orensanzi n. sp. collected off Lizard Island in August had intraovarian vitellogenic oocytes up to 130 µm in diameter, each with a circle of about 30 vesicles associated with inner surface. Two circles of vesicles were described by Hannerz (1956), Sveshnikov (1967), and Lebsky (1970) in the oocytes and early larvae of A. oxycephala and A. paucibranchiata . One circle of vesicles instead of two in the oocytes of A. orensanzi n. sp. may be due to incomplete development of the oocytes. Etymology. The species is named in honour of Jose Maria (Lobo) Orensanz, biologist, colleague and a great man. Habitat. Adults of A. orensanzi n. sp. were found in coral sand on coral reefs at 5–16 m depth. Worms were likely crawling free in the coral sand. Distribution. Great Barrier Reef, Australia. : Published as part of Radashevsky, Vasily I., 2015, Spionidae (Annelida) from Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia: the genera Aonides, Dipolydora, Polydorella, Prionospio, Pseudopolydora, Rhynchospio, and Tripolydora, pp. 635-694 in Zootaxa 4019 (1) on pages 641-643, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4019.1.22, http://zenodo.org/record/235906 : {"references": ["Rioja, E. (1947) Estudios anelidologicos. XVII. Contribucion al conocimiento de los anelidos poliquetos de Baja California y Mar de Cortes. Anales del Instituto de Biologia, 18, 197 - 224. [Mexico]", "Hannerz, L. (1956) Larval development of the polychaete families Spionidae Sars, Disomidae Mesnil, and Poecilochaetidae n. fam. in the Gullmar Fjord (Sweden). Zoologiska Bidrag, Uppsala, 31, 1 - 204.", "Sveshnikov, V. A. (1967) Larvae of Archiannelids and Polychaets of the Possjet Bay (the Sea of Japan). Explorations of the Fauna of Seas, 5, 125 - 159.", "Lebsky, V. K. (1970) Development of Glycera capitata Orsted and Aonides paucibranchiata Southern (Annelides, Polychaeta). Biology of the White Sea, 3, 91 - 97."]}
format Text
author Radashevsky, Vasily I.
author_facet Radashevsky, Vasily I.
author_sort Radashevsky, Vasily I.
title Aonides orensanzi Radashevsky, 2015, n. sp.
title_short Aonides orensanzi Radashevsky, 2015, n. sp.
title_full Aonides orensanzi Radashevsky, 2015, n. sp.
title_fullStr Aonides orensanzi Radashevsky, 2015, n. sp.
title_full_unstemmed Aonides orensanzi Radashevsky, 2015, n. sp.
title_sort aonides orensanzi radashevsky, 2015, n. sp.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2015
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4658125
https://zenodo.org/record/4658125
long_lat ENVELOPE(-64.456,-64.456,-65.688,-65.688)
ENVELOPE(167.217,167.217,-77.483,-77.483)
geographic Baja
White Sea
Queensland
Lizard Island
Fang
geographic_facet Baja
White Sea
Queensland
Lizard Island
Fang
genre White Sea
genre_facet White Sea
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4658125 2023-05-15T18:43:58+02:00 Aonides orensanzi Radashevsky, 2015, n. sp. Radashevsky, Vasily I. 2015 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4658125 https://zenodo.org/record/4658125 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/235906 http://publication.plazi.org/id/A268AF4FFFDDFFA2FFDDA13E1870FFB6 http://zoobank.org/88F2DB05-58C4-4726-89D5-99302FABB908 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4019.1.22 http://zenodo.org/record/235906 http://publication.plazi.org/id/A268AF4FFFDDFFA2FFDDA13E1870FFB6 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.235909 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.235910 http://zoobank.org/88F2DB05-58C4-4726-89D5-99302FABB908 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4658126 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 Spionida Spionidae Aonides Aonides orensanzi article-journal ScholarlyArticle Text Taxonomic treatment 2015 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4658125 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4019.1.22 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.235909 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.235910 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4658126 2022-03-10T12:31:49Z Aonides orensanzi n. sp. (Figs 3, 4) Type material. Queensland: Holotype: AM W. 45226, MI QLD 2415. Paratypes: AM W. 45220, MI QLD 2330 (3), MIMB 28111, MI QLD 2330 (2); AM W. 45221, MI QLD 2360 (1); AM W. 45222, MI QLD 2363 (1); AM W. 45223, MI QLD 2373 (4); MIMB 28112, MI QLD 2373 (3); AM W. 45225, MI QLD 2410 (2); MIMB 28113, MI QLD 2415 (1); AM W. 45505, MI QLD 2435 (2). Adult morphology. Up to 12 mm long, 0.4 mm wide for 80 chaetigers; holotype a complete individual about 11 mm long for 77 chaetigers; smallest examined individual about 6 mm long for 50 chaetigers. No pigmentation on body and palps. Prostomium long, anteriorly sharply conical, posteriorly narrowed and pressed into chaetiger 1 but not extending over it as a caruncle. Small rounded knobs with short non-motile sensory cilia irregularly scattered on prostomium. Short finger-like antenna present on posterior most part of prostomium (Fig. 3 A). Ciliary bands or patches of nuchal organs absent on posterior sides of prostomium. Two pairs of red eyes arranged almost in a straight transverse line; lateral eyes slightly larger than median eyes (Fig. 3 A). Peristomium reduced to small ring around mouth. Palps as long as 5–15 chaetigers, with frontal longitudinal groove lined with fine cilia, and up to 25 short transverse ciliary bands regularly arranged on inner lateral surface; lateral bands fewer in small individuals; long cilia of bands beating towards distal end of palp. Chaetiger 1 with capillaries and small postchaetal lamellae in both rami. Postchaetal lamellae on succeeding chaetigers elongated, leaf-like in both rami (Fig. 3 A). Dorsal crests, lateral pouches and ventral flaps absent. Hooks in notopodia from chaetigers 20–25 (Fig. 4 B), up to six in a series among capillaries. Hooks in neuropodia from chaetigers 16–22 (Fig. 4 B), up to six in a series, accompanied by 1–5 alternating capillaries and 1–3 inferior chaetae throughout. Alternating capillaries in anterior neuropodia with narrow limbation (Fig. 3 E), in posterior neuropodia alimbate, hair-like (Fig. 3 G). Inferior chaetae in anterior neuropodia capillaries, in posterior neuropodia of big mature individuals they gradually become larger and can be referred to as sabre chaetae (Fig. 3 J). Hooks in both rami in anterior parapodia bidentate, with upper tooth situated at almost right angle to main fang (Fig. 3 C, D). Hooks in posterior parapodia tridentate, with two small upper teeth situated side by side above main fang (Fig. 3 F, H), and occasionally quadridentate, with an additional median superior tooth (Fig. 3 I). Only outer hood present; no inner subdistal hood. Branchiae up to 14 pairs, from chaetiger 2 to chaetiger 15, fewer in small individuals (Figs 3 A, 4 A). Branchiae longest on chaetigers 5–7, up to three times as long as notopodial lamellae, gradually diminishing in length on succeeding chaetigers, free from lamellae, robust, flattened, with surfaces oriented perpendicular to body axis, with longitudinal bands of cilia along inner and outer edges. Afferent and efferent blood vessels of branchiae forming a loop and interconnected by radial capillaries giving branchiae annulate appearance. Dorso-lateral dense bands of short cilia from chaetiger 1 to chaetiger 14, fewer in small individuals. Each band of cilia extending between successive notopodia; bands short and straight to slightly curved on anterior chaetigers, becoming longer and horse-shoe shaped on posterior chaetigers, with lateral sides of horse-shoe directed to midline of body. Short nototrochs present on branchiate chaetigers, each composed by single row of short cilia. Pygidium usually with five cirri, comprising one pair of ventral cirri, a midventral cirrus and one pair of slightly longer and thicker dorsal cirri; one individual (of seven examined complete individuals with pygidia) with four cirri, and one individual with six pygidial cirri. Oesophagus extending through 13–15 anterior chaetigers. Ventral buccal bulb below oesophagus extending to middle of chaetiger 2 (Fig. 3 B). Gizzard-like structure in digestive tract absent. Main dorsal blood vessel transformed into gut sinus in anterior part of midgut. Heart body up to 10 µm in diameter inside main dorsal vessel extending from chaetigers 4–6 to chaetigers 13–15. Blood red, without elements. Nephridia from chaetiger 4 in small individuals and from chaetiger 5 to chaetiger 15 in individuals with more than 60 chaetigers (Fig. 4 C). Reproduction. Aonides orensanzi n. sp. is gonochoristic. Both in females and males gametes develop from chaetigers 16–17 throughout most part of body. Oogenesis is intraovarian. Vitellogenesis occurs when oocytes grow attached to segmental blood vessels. Vitellogenic intraovarian oocytes are up to 130 µm in diameter, with a germinal vesicle about 40 µm and a single nucleolus 13 µm in diameter. Oocyte envelope is 3–4 µm thick, with honey-combed external surface and a circle of about 30 vesicles associated with inner surface; each vesicle is about 10 µm in diameter. Sperm morphology and spermatogenesis are unknown. Remarks. Adult Aonides orensanzi n. sp. appear similar to A. californiensis , A. mayaguezensis , A. oxycephala and A. trifida by the presence of an occipital antenna on the prostomium. The antenna was not described but was illustrated on the posterior edge of the prostomium in A. californiensis by Rioja (1947: fig. 11). Aonides orensanzi n. sp. differs from these species in having bi-, tri- and quadridentate hooks in same individual. Such variability of hook dentition is herein reported for the first time for Aonides . Aonides orensanzi n. sp. collected off Lizard Island in August had intraovarian vitellogenic oocytes up to 130 µm in diameter, each with a circle of about 30 vesicles associated with inner surface. Two circles of vesicles were described by Hannerz (1956), Sveshnikov (1967), and Lebsky (1970) in the oocytes and early larvae of A. oxycephala and A. paucibranchiata . One circle of vesicles instead of two in the oocytes of A. orensanzi n. sp. may be due to incomplete development of the oocytes. Etymology. The species is named in honour of Jose Maria (Lobo) Orensanz, biologist, colleague and a great man. Habitat. Adults of A. orensanzi n. sp. were found in coral sand on coral reefs at 5–16 m depth. Worms were likely crawling free in the coral sand. Distribution. Great Barrier Reef, Australia. : Published as part of Radashevsky, Vasily I., 2015, Spionidae (Annelida) from Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia: the genera Aonides, Dipolydora, Polydorella, Prionospio, Pseudopolydora, Rhynchospio, and Tripolydora, pp. 635-694 in Zootaxa 4019 (1) on pages 641-643, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4019.1.22, http://zenodo.org/record/235906 : {"references": ["Rioja, E. (1947) Estudios anelidologicos. XVII. Contribucion al conocimiento de los anelidos poliquetos de Baja California y Mar de Cortes. Anales del Instituto de Biologia, 18, 197 - 224. [Mexico]", "Hannerz, L. (1956) Larval development of the polychaete families Spionidae Sars, Disomidae Mesnil, and Poecilochaetidae n. fam. in the Gullmar Fjord (Sweden). Zoologiska Bidrag, Uppsala, 31, 1 - 204.", "Sveshnikov, V. A. (1967) Larvae of Archiannelids and Polychaets of the Possjet Bay (the Sea of Japan). Explorations of the Fauna of Seas, 5, 125 - 159.", "Lebsky, V. K. (1970) Development of Glycera capitata Orsted and Aonides paucibranchiata Southern (Annelides, Polychaeta). Biology of the White Sea, 3, 91 - 97."]} Text White Sea DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Baja White Sea Queensland Lizard Island ENVELOPE(-64.456,-64.456,-65.688,-65.688) Fang ENVELOPE(167.217,167.217,-77.483,-77.483)