Scoloplos de Blainville 1828

Genus Scoloplos de Blainville, 1828 Type species: Lumbricus armiger Müller, 1776, by monotypy. Synonym: Scolaricia Eisig, 1914. Type-species: Scolaricia typicus Eisig, 1914, by monotypy. Fide Day 1973. Diagnosis. Prostomium pointed, usually prolonged; single achaetous peristomial ring. Branchiae fir...

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Main Author: Blake, James A.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2017
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4901767
https://zenodo.org/record/4901767
Description
Summary:Genus Scoloplos de Blainville, 1828 Type species: Lumbricus armiger Müller, 1776, by monotypy. Synonym: Scolaricia Eisig, 1914. Type-species: Scolaricia typicus Eisig, 1914, by monotypy. Fide Day 1973. Diagnosis. Prostomium pointed, usually prolonged; single achaetous peristomial ring. Branchiae first present from middle or posterior thoracic setigers or from abdominal setigers (8–26). Posterior thoracic setigers with 0–2 postsetal lobes and 0–2 subpodial lobes, never more than four lobes of both types combined; not forming ventral fringes. Thoracic neurosetae including blunt, inconspicuous uncini, few in number, not in distinct rows, and accompanied by numerous crenulated capillaries; furcate setae usually present; heavy spear-like spines and bristletopped setae absent. Abdominal neuropodia with embedded, non-projecting acicula. Abdominal noto- and or neuropodial flail setae present or absent. Remarks. The definition of Scoloplos is here emended and restricted to species having only inconspicuous spines in thoracic neuropodia accompanied with numerous capillaries, and branchiae from setiger 8–26. Leodamas , usually treated as a subgenus of Scoloplos, was raised to full generic status by Blake (2000). The latter genus has large, conspicuous spines in thoracic neuropodia, with few or no accompanying capillaries, and branchiae usually from setigers 4–6, however, another group of species has branchiae from posterior thoracic or anterior abdominal setigers. Another, but less reliable distinction between the two genera is that the abdominal neuropodial aciculae tend to be small and imbedded in Scoloplos species and larger and projecting in Leodamas species. Pettibone (1957) distinguished between Scoloplos and Leodamas in a different manner. Scoloplos species were said to have a papilla in the middle of the thoracic neuropodial lobes, while Leodamas species lacked these papillae. While many species of Leodamas do have low, rounded postsetal lobes and lack papillae or cirriform lobes throughout much of the thoracic region, most species develop prolonged postsetal lobes in posterior thoracic setigers. According to Hartman (1948), the thoracic neuropodial postsetal lobes of Leodamas verax Kinberg, the type-species of Leodamas , are triangular and undivided. This structure has been confirmed in the present study. Thus, the presence of a prolonged postsetal lobe on the thoracic neuropodium of the type-species of Leodamas would appear to preclude its use as a definitive character for Scoloplos sensu stricto . The genus Scolaricia was originally distinguished from Scoloplos on the basis of having flail setae in abdominal neuropodia (Eisig, 1914). However, these setae have now been found in several genera and since the character is homoplasic within the Orbiniidae and not unique to Scolaricia , the genus was referred to synonymy with Scoloplos by Day (1973). In the present study, two previously undescribed species of Scoloplos were encountered: S. bathytatus , n. sp ., and S. suroestense , n. sp . Another species, S. armiger, the type species, has been reported from South America (Ehlers, 1901; Rozbaczylo, 1985), but was not found in the present study. : Published as part of Blake, James A., 2017, Polychaeta Orbiniidae from Antarctica, the Southern Ocean, the Abyssal Pacific Ocean, and off South America, pp. 1-145 in Zootaxa 4218 (1) on pages 43-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.245827 : {"references": ["Blainville, H. de. (1828) Dictionnaire des Sciences naturelles, 57, 368 - 501.", "Muller, O. F. (1776) Zoologiae Danicae Prodromus, seu Animalium Daniae et Norvegiae indigenarum characteres, nomina, et synonyma imprimis popularium. Havniae. xxxii + 282 pp.", "Eisig, H. (1914) Zur Systematik, Anatomie und Morphologie der Arciiden nebst Beitragen zur generallen Systematik. Mitteilungen aus der Zoologischen Station Neapel, 21, 153 - 600. [plates 10 - 27, 23 text figures.]", "Day, J. H. (1973) New Polychaeta from Beaufort, with a key to all species recorded from North Carolina. NOAA Technical Report, National Marine Fisheries Circular, 375, 1 - 140.", "Blake, J. A. (2000) A new genus and species of polychaete worm (Family Orbiniidae) from methane seeps in the Gulf of Mexico, with a review of the systematics and phylogenetic interrelationships of the genera of Orbiniidae. Cahiers de Biologie Marine, 41, 435 - 449.", "Pettibone, M. H. (1957) North American genera of the family Orbiniidae. Journal of the Washington Academy of Science, 47, 159 - 167, 4 figures.", "Hartman, O. (1948) The marine annelids erected by Kinberg with notes on some other types in the Swedish State Museum. Arkiv fur Zoologi, 42 A (1), 1 - 137, 18 plates.", "Ehlers, E. (1901) Die Polychaeten des magellanischen und chilenischen Strandes. Ein faunistischer Versuch. Festschrift zur Feier des Hundertfunfzigjahrigen Bestehens der koniglichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Gottingen. pp. 1 - 232, 25 plates.", "Rozbaczylo, N. (1985) Los Anelidos Poliquetos de Chile. Indice Sinonimico y distribucion geografica de especies. Facultad de Ciencias Biologicas Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Monografias Biologicas, No. 3, 1 - 284."]}