Leodamas perissobranchiatus Blake, 2017, new species

Leodamas perissobranchiatus new species Figure 35 Scoloplos ( Leodamas ) sp. Hartman 1967: 108 (in part, Sta. 753 only). Material examined. Western Chile, off Valparaiso, Eltanin Sta. 9-753, 26 Sep 1963, 33.27°S, 71.78°W, 192 m, holotype (USNM 1013905) and 3 paratypes (USNM 56460). Description. All...

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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.4901786
https://zenodo.org/record/4901786
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4901786
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
Orbiniidae
Leodamas
Leodamas perissobranchiatus
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Orbiniidae
Leodamas
Leodamas perissobranchiatus
Blake, James A.
Leodamas perissobranchiatus Blake, 2017, new species
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Orbiniidae
Leodamas
Leodamas perissobranchiatus
description Leodamas perissobranchiatus new species Figure 35 Scoloplos ( Leodamas ) sp. Hartman 1967: 108 (in part, Sta. 753 only). Material examined. Western Chile, off Valparaiso, Eltanin Sta. 9-753, 26 Sep 1963, 33.27°S, 71.78°W, 192 m, holotype (USNM 1013905) and 3 paratypes (USNM 56460). Description. All types incomplete, largest paratype 17 mm long, 4 mm wide for 44 setigerous segments. Thoracic region broad, dorsoventrally flattened, with 11–13 setigers, narrowing abruptly to more oval-shaped abdominal region. Color in alcohol: brown. Prostomium reduced, pointed on anterior margin (Fig. 35 A). Peristomium reduced, hidden by setiger 1 dorsally, reduced ventrally to simple ring around oral opening; nuchal slits present on lateral margins of peristomium; proboscis saclike. Thoracic parapodia all similar, well developed, with those of anterior segments narrowest. Segmental dorsal sense organs not present. Notopodial postsetal lamellae with broad, flattened bases tapering to narrow tips (Fig. 35 C); neuropodia consisting of broad tori bearing triangular-shaped postsetal lamellae (Fig. 35 B–C). Abdominal parapodia all similar, shifted only about 20–45° dorsally; with cirriform postsetal lamellae (Fig. 35 D). Branchiae from setiger 4; branchiae single, flattened, acuminate on anterior thoracic setigers (Fig. 35 C), becoming palmately branched from last thoracic or transitional segment of abdominal region; branchiae formed of two branches (Fig. 35 A), then increasing to three and finally four branches (Fig. 35 D); 4-branched arrangement continuing until about setiger 40, thereafter branches reduced to 3, then 2, and 1 in far posterior segments. Notosetae including dense fascicles of long, crenulated capillaries in thoracic setigers and crenulated capillaries, furcate setae and cross-striated, non-crenulated capillaries in abdominal notopodia; furcate setae with unequal tynes between which fine needles connected in a web on both sides (Fig. 35 F). Neurosetae of thoracic setigers in 3–4 dense rows of uncini intermixed with few long, thin silky crenulated capillaries (Fig. 35 B–C); uncini distally curved, notched with lateral sheath and transverse ribs along shaft (Fig. 35 E); abdominal neurosetae short, non-crenulated capillaries, few in number; tip of single acicula emergent. Etymology. Perissobranchiatus : perisso , Greek for beyond the regular number or size; branchos , Greek for gill. Remarks. Leodamas perissobranchiatus n. sp. is most closely related to L. latum (Chamberlin, 1919), originally described from 588 m off the Pacific coast of Panama in having branched or multiple branchiae arising from a single location. The species was later reported by Fauvel (1932) from 457 m off Burma. Leodamas perissobranchiatus n. sp. differs from L. latum in having branchiae first present from setiger 4 instead of 5, in having each branchia with maximally four branches in a palmate arrangement instead of nine, and in having 11–13 thoracic setigers instead of 19–20. In addition, the branchial branches of L. perissobranchiatus arise separately, whereas in L. latum , each branch arises from a common raised core. There are also differences with the thoracic neuropodial uncini; in L. perissobranchiatus there is a lateral sheath along the shaft that is not present in L. latum. Unlike most other orbiniids, L. perissobranchiatus n. sp. has the abdominal parapodia in a more lateral position, shifted dorsally to only about 20–45°, probably due to the space taken up from the bases of the additional branchiae; most dorsally oriented branchiae are present in far posterior segments. Another species of Leodamas with branched branchiae is L. cylindrifer (Ehlers, 1904) from intertidal zones in New Zealand and Australia. However, in this species the branchiae are first present from an anterior abdominal segment and are dendritically branched instead of palmate. Distribution. Western Chile, 192 m. : 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 76-78, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.245827 : {"references": ["Hartman, O. (1967) Polychaetous annelids collected by the USNS Eltanin and Staten Island cruises, chiefly from Antarctic seas. Allan Hancock Monographs in Marine Biology, 2, 1 - 387, 51 plates.", "Chamberlin, R. V. (1919) The Annelida Polychaeta. Memoirs of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard, 48, 1 - 514, plates 1 - 80.", "Fauvel, P. (1932) Annelida Polychaeta of the Indian Museum, Calcutta. Memoirs of the Indian Museum, Calcutta, 12, 1 - 262, 9 plates, 4 text figures.", "Ehlers, E. (1904) Neuseelandische Anneliden. Abhhandlungen der koniglichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Gottingen, Mathematisch-Physikalische Klasse, Neue Folge 3, 1 - 80, plates 1 - 9."]}
format Text
author Blake, James A.
author_facet Blake, James A.
author_sort Blake, James A.
title Leodamas perissobranchiatus Blake, 2017, new species
title_short Leodamas perissobranchiatus Blake, 2017, new species
title_full Leodamas perissobranchiatus Blake, 2017, new species
title_fullStr Leodamas perissobranchiatus Blake, 2017, new species
title_full_unstemmed Leodamas perissobranchiatus Blake, 2017, new species
title_sort leodamas perissobranchiatus blake, 2017, new species
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4901786
https://zenodo.org/record/4901786
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
Pacific
Indian
New Zealand
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
Pacific
Indian
New Zealand
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Southern Ocean
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4901786 2023-05-15T13:55:08+02:00 Leodamas perissobranchiatus Blake, 2017, new species Blake, James A. 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4901786 https://zenodo.org/record/4901786 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/731AFFA50615090DFFA6FFEBFFDCFFC0 http://zoobank.org/9345C596-8656-4B5C-AD8C-2FACF4E9240C https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.245827 http://publication.plazi.org/id/731AFFA50615090DFFA6FFEBFFDCFFC0 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.245861 http://zoobank.org/9345C596-8656-4B5C-AD8C-2FACF4E9240C https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4901787 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 Orbiniidae Leodamas Leodamas perissobranchiatus article-journal ScholarlyArticle Text Taxonomic treatment 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4901786 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.245827 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.245861 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4901787 2022-03-10T11:48:28Z Leodamas perissobranchiatus new species Figure 35 Scoloplos ( Leodamas ) sp. Hartman 1967: 108 (in part, Sta. 753 only). Material examined. Western Chile, off Valparaiso, Eltanin Sta. 9-753, 26 Sep 1963, 33.27°S, 71.78°W, 192 m, holotype (USNM 1013905) and 3 paratypes (USNM 56460). Description. All types incomplete, largest paratype 17 mm long, 4 mm wide for 44 setigerous segments. Thoracic region broad, dorsoventrally flattened, with 11–13 setigers, narrowing abruptly to more oval-shaped abdominal region. Color in alcohol: brown. Prostomium reduced, pointed on anterior margin (Fig. 35 A). Peristomium reduced, hidden by setiger 1 dorsally, reduced ventrally to simple ring around oral opening; nuchal slits present on lateral margins of peristomium; proboscis saclike. Thoracic parapodia all similar, well developed, with those of anterior segments narrowest. Segmental dorsal sense organs not present. Notopodial postsetal lamellae with broad, flattened bases tapering to narrow tips (Fig. 35 C); neuropodia consisting of broad tori bearing triangular-shaped postsetal lamellae (Fig. 35 B–C). Abdominal parapodia all similar, shifted only about 20–45° dorsally; with cirriform postsetal lamellae (Fig. 35 D). Branchiae from setiger 4; branchiae single, flattened, acuminate on anterior thoracic setigers (Fig. 35 C), becoming palmately branched from last thoracic or transitional segment of abdominal region; branchiae formed of two branches (Fig. 35 A), then increasing to three and finally four branches (Fig. 35 D); 4-branched arrangement continuing until about setiger 40, thereafter branches reduced to 3, then 2, and 1 in far posterior segments. Notosetae including dense fascicles of long, crenulated capillaries in thoracic setigers and crenulated capillaries, furcate setae and cross-striated, non-crenulated capillaries in abdominal notopodia; furcate setae with unequal tynes between which fine needles connected in a web on both sides (Fig. 35 F). Neurosetae of thoracic setigers in 3–4 dense rows of uncini intermixed with few long, thin silky crenulated capillaries (Fig. 35 B–C); uncini distally curved, notched with lateral sheath and transverse ribs along shaft (Fig. 35 E); abdominal neurosetae short, non-crenulated capillaries, few in number; tip of single acicula emergent. Etymology. Perissobranchiatus : perisso , Greek for beyond the regular number or size; branchos , Greek for gill. Remarks. Leodamas perissobranchiatus n. sp. is most closely related to L. latum (Chamberlin, 1919), originally described from 588 m off the Pacific coast of Panama in having branched or multiple branchiae arising from a single location. The species was later reported by Fauvel (1932) from 457 m off Burma. Leodamas perissobranchiatus n. sp. differs from L. latum in having branchiae first present from setiger 4 instead of 5, in having each branchia with maximally four branches in a palmate arrangement instead of nine, and in having 11–13 thoracic setigers instead of 19–20. In addition, the branchial branches of L. perissobranchiatus arise separately, whereas in L. latum , each branch arises from a common raised core. There are also differences with the thoracic neuropodial uncini; in L. perissobranchiatus there is a lateral sheath along the shaft that is not present in L. latum. Unlike most other orbiniids, L. perissobranchiatus n. sp. has the abdominal parapodia in a more lateral position, shifted dorsally to only about 20–45°, probably due to the space taken up from the bases of the additional branchiae; most dorsally oriented branchiae are present in far posterior segments. Another species of Leodamas with branched branchiae is L. cylindrifer (Ehlers, 1904) from intertidal zones in New Zealand and Australia. However, in this species the branchiae are first present from an anterior abdominal segment and are dendritically branched instead of palmate. Distribution. Western Chile, 192 m. : 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 76-78, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.245827 : {"references": ["Hartman, O. (1967) Polychaetous annelids collected by the USNS Eltanin and Staten Island cruises, chiefly from Antarctic seas. Allan Hancock Monographs in Marine Biology, 2, 1 - 387, 51 plates.", "Chamberlin, R. V. (1919) The Annelida Polychaeta. Memoirs of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard, 48, 1 - 514, plates 1 - 80.", "Fauvel, P. (1932) Annelida Polychaeta of the Indian Museum, Calcutta. Memoirs of the Indian Museum, Calcutta, 12, 1 - 262, 9 plates, 4 text figures.", "Ehlers, E. (1904) Neuseelandische Anneliden. Abhhandlungen der koniglichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Gottingen, Mathematisch-Physikalische Klasse, Neue Folge 3, 1 - 80, plates 1 - 9."]} Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Southern Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Southern Ocean Pacific Indian New Zealand