Branchiomma Kolliker 1858

Genus Branchiomma Kölliker, 1858 Branchiomma coheni Tovar-Hernández and Knight-Jones, 2006: 24 –27, Fig. 6 A–M, 8 A, 9 E–G, 10 D, 11 C. Examined material. Tampa Bay, Florida, coordinates 27 ° 53 ’ 07.4" N, 82 ° 32 ’ 02.7" W (4 specimens). One specimen is from the survey of 2012 and 3 are f...

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Main Authors: Keppel, Erica, Tovar, Maria Ana, Ruiz, Gregory
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2015
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5064719
https://zenodo.org/record/5064719
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5064719
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
Sabellida
Sabellidae
Branchiomma
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Sabellida
Sabellidae
Branchiomma
Keppel, Erica
Tovar, Maria Ana
Ruiz, Gregory
Branchiomma Kolliker 1858
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Sabellida
Sabellidae
Branchiomma
description Genus Branchiomma Kölliker, 1858 Branchiomma coheni Tovar-Hernández and Knight-Jones, 2006: 24 –27, Fig. 6 A–M, 8 A, 9 E–G, 10 D, 11 C. Examined material. Tampa Bay, Florida, coordinates 27 ° 53 ’ 07.4" N, 82 ° 32 ’ 02.7" W (4 specimens). One specimen is from the survey of 2012 and 3 are from 2014 from the same site of 2012, nevertheless the site numbers are different numbers due to the different years, and are from 2 different plates. Site 2118 (2012): plate 15009: vial # 168941 (1 specimen). Site 2240 (2014): Plate 16838: Vial #: 158629 (1 specimen), 199914 (1 specimen); Plate 16829: 158394 (1 specimen). Some tissue was collected from 2 specimens and preserved in 95 Ethanol for possible molecular analysis (158629 and 158394) in order to have the same organism for both the analysis. The four specimens are listed in Table 1 with some size measures and observations on reproductive biology. Comparative additional material. Panama, Punta Culebra, Naos, 08° 54.7 ’ N, 79 ° 31.8 ’ W, intertidal (Paratype ECOSUR 0051). Gulf of California: Mazatlán, Sinaloa (2009), 23 ° 12 ’ 13 ’’ N, 106 ° 24 ’ 31.4 ’’ W, 50 cm depth, buoy fouling (20 specimens EMU-ICML 8703, 8715, 8719, 8724, 8726, 8729); 23 ° 12 ’ 13 ’’ N, 106 ° 24 ’ 30.1 ’’ W, 50 cm depth, buoy fouling (23 specimens EMU-ICML 8704, 8707, 8710, 8716, 8720, 8722); 23 ° 11 ’ 48.7 ’’ N, 106 ° 24 ’ 31 ’’ W, 50 cm depth, buoy fouling (129 specimens EMU-ICML 8705, 8708, 8711, 8713, 8717, 8721, 8723, 8725, 8727, 8730, 8731, 8733; 23 ° 11 ’ 8.9 ’’ N, 106 ° 24 ’ 55.8 ’’ W, 50 cm depth, buoy fouling (8 specimens EMU-ICML 8706, 8709, 8712, 8714, 8718, 8728, 8732, 8734). Topolobampo, Sinaloa (2011), 25 ° 35 ’ 59 ’’ N, 109 ° 03’ 29 ’’ W, 50 cm depth, dock fouling (13 specimens GEOMARE-POLY-004); El Mavirí (2011), 25 ° 35 ’ 15 ’’ N, 109 ° 06’ 05’’ W, 30 cm depth, on Crassostrea gigas cultures (4 specimens GEOMARE-POLY-005). San Carlos, Sonora (2011), 27 ° 56 ’ 44.52 ” N 111 ° 5 ’ 32.82 ” W, 30 cm depth, rope (8 specimens GEOMARE-POLY-006). La Paz, Baja California Sur (2011), 24 ° 9 ' 17.76 " N 110 ° 19 ' 33.96 " W, 50 cm depth, dock fouling (18 specimens GEOMARE-POLY-007); 24 ° 16 ' 28.62 " N 110 ° 19 ' 51.12 " W, hull fouling (11 specimens GEOMARE-POLY-008). Diagnosis. Body length of four adult specimens varied from 37 to 50 mm. Body dark brown mottled with small brown spots (Fig. 3 b). Interramal dark spots, larger on thoracic segments than in abdominal region. Radiolar crown (1 / 3 of the body length) is usually around 10 mm length. About 21–23 pairs of radioles, each banded with green olive, dark brown bands and one orange band between each pair of eyes. Basal stylodes unpaired, medium length, tongue-like, same size as rachis width. At least three foliose macrostylodes, broadening distally, sometimes with very uneven distal margins (Fig. 3 a–c). Dorsal lips one third length of radioles, triangular with a distinct orange longitudinal ridge (mid-rib), lateral margin olive-green. Body with eight thoracic segments; collar dorsal margin well separated, ventral lappets subtriangular, fleshy and overlapping in reflexed position (Fig. 3 b). Thoracic tori extending to sides of brown trapezoidal ventral shields. Avicular uncini with the crest surmounted by two rows of teeth, occupying one quarter of the crest and manubrium short (Fig. 3 d). Distribution (Fig. 4). Eastern Pacific (Possibly native): Punta Culebra and Balboa (Panama); Mazatlán, Topolobampo, San Carlos and La Paz (Gulf of California). Western Atlantic (Introduced): Tampa Bay (Florida). Habitat. Panama: intertidal, on large boulders and rocks buried in sand and associated tide pools, with smaller rocks covered by sponges and additional fouling species (Tovar-Hernández & Knight-Jones 2006). Gulf of California: inhabiting shallow waters (0.3–0.5 m depth) on buoys, docks, ropes, on vessel hulls and on oyster farms; salinity 32.1–34.8 ‰; temperature 21.5–31.5 ºC; dissolved oxygen 3.15–6.66 mg /L; forming part of an assemblages of 12 introduced species: the polychaetes B. bairdi (McIntosh, 1885), Hydroides diramphus Mörch, 1863, H. elegans (Haswell, 1883), H. sanctaecrucis Krøyer in Mörch, 1863; the ascidians Botryllus schlosseri (Pallas, 1766), Botrylloides nigrum Herdman, 1886, B. violaceus Oka, 1827, Didemnun perlucidum F. Monniot, 1983 and Polyclinum constellatum Savigny, 1816; the bryozoans Bugula neritina (Linnaeus, 1758) and Amathia verticillata (delle Chiaje, 1822); and the copepod Haplostomides hawaiiensis Ooishi, 1994. Florida: on settling panels (present study). Branchiomma coheni was found not in the presence of B. bairdi but was always found with the sabellid Parasabella microphthalma (Verrill, 1873). Remarks. According to Camp et al. (1998) and Statewide Biological Database (2013), four species of Branchiomma are reported along the coast of Florida: Branchiomma arenosa (Treadwell, 1924), B. bairdi , B. conspersum (Ehlers, 1887) and B. nigromaculatum (Baird, 1865). However, B. arenosa is not valid, it is a junior synonym of B. conspersum (Tovar-Hernández & Knight-Jones, 2006). As far as we know, Florida is a natural distribution area for all these three species; the record of B. coheni constitutes the first record of an introduced species of Branchiomma along the east coast of the US and the entire Atlantic Ocean. Branchiomma coheni was described from the Pacific coast of Panama in 2006 and the records provided here from Tampa Bay and Gulf of California constitute the first published record since its description. As B. coheni was found at the same site in two different years and in 2014 on two different settlement panels of the five investigated in that site, we assume that it represents a case of an early detection of a NIS that appears to be established (sensu CIESM 2012). Among the species distributed in Florida, it is easy to differentiate B. nigromaculatum from the other species because it is unique in having microstylodes and rachis with a segmented appearance. Branchiomma bairdi , B. conspersum and B. coheni present macrostylodes, but in the first these are strap-like, in B. conspersum tongue-like and in B. coheni foliose (see Fig. 9 in Tovar-Hernández & Knight-Jones 2006 for the shape of stylodes). : Published as part of Keppel, Erica, Tovar, Maria Ana & Ruiz, Gregory, 2015, First record and establishment of Branchiomma coheni (Polychaeta: Sabellidae) in the Atlantic Ocean and review of non – indigenous species of the genus, pp. 499-518 in Zootaxa 4058 (4) on pages 503-505, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4058.4.3, http://zenodo.org/record/244288 : {"references": ["Tovar-Hernandez, M. A. & Knight-Jones, P. (2006) Species of Branchiomma (Polychaeta: Sabellidae) from the Caribbean Sea and Pacific coast of Panama. Zootaxa, 1189, 1 - 37.", "McIntosh, W. C. (1885) Report on the Annelida Polychaeta collected by H. M. S. Challenger during the years 1873 - 76, Report of the scientific results of the voyage of H. M. S. Challenger London, Zoology, 12, 1 - 554.", "Camp, D. K., Lyons, W. G. & Perkins, T. H. (1998) Checklists of Selected Shallow - Water Marine Invertebrates of Florida. Florida Marine Research Institute Technical Report TR - 3, 238 pp."]}
format Text
author Keppel, Erica
Tovar, Maria Ana
Ruiz, Gregory
author_facet Keppel, Erica
Tovar, Maria Ana
Ruiz, Gregory
author_sort Keppel, Erica
title Branchiomma Kolliker 1858
title_short Branchiomma Kolliker 1858
title_full Branchiomma Kolliker 1858
title_fullStr Branchiomma Kolliker 1858
title_full_unstemmed Branchiomma Kolliker 1858
title_sort branchiomma kolliker 1858
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2015
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5064719
https://zenodo.org/record/5064719
long_lat ENVELOPE(168.683,168.683,-77.517,-77.517)
ENVELOPE(-62.167,-62.167,-74.500,-74.500)
ENVELOPE(-144.850,-144.850,-77.017,-77.017)
ENVELOPE(-60.526,-60.526,-72.655,-72.655)
geographic Baja
Pacific
McIntosh
Hernandez
Treadwell
Herdman
geographic_facet Baja
Pacific
McIntosh
Hernandez
Treadwell
Herdman
genre Crassostrea gigas
genre_facet Crassostrea gigas
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5064719 2023-05-15T15:59:14+02:00 Branchiomma Kolliker 1858 Keppel, Erica Tovar, Maria Ana Ruiz, Gregory 2015 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5064719 https://zenodo.org/record/5064719 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/244288 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFDDB16BF12AFFB79C37FFDE3627931F http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03818780A40FFFC6FEECFB9BFD48FA45 http://zoobank.org/CADABB59-580D-42ED-BD42-2904CD914239 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4058.4.3 http://zenodo.org/record/244288 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFDDB16BF12AFFB79C37FFDE3627931F https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.244291 http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03818780A40FFFC6FEECFB9BFD48FA45 http://zoobank.org/CADABB59-580D-42ED-BD42-2904CD914239 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5064720 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Annelida Polychaeta Sabellida Sabellidae Branchiomma Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2015 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5064719 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4058.4.3 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.244291 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5064720 2022-02-08T12:07:57Z Genus Branchiomma Kölliker, 1858 Branchiomma coheni Tovar-Hernández and Knight-Jones, 2006: 24 –27, Fig. 6 A–M, 8 A, 9 E–G, 10 D, 11 C. Examined material. Tampa Bay, Florida, coordinates 27 ° 53 ’ 07.4" N, 82 ° 32 ’ 02.7" W (4 specimens). One specimen is from the survey of 2012 and 3 are from 2014 from the same site of 2012, nevertheless the site numbers are different numbers due to the different years, and are from 2 different plates. Site 2118 (2012): plate 15009: vial # 168941 (1 specimen). Site 2240 (2014): Plate 16838: Vial #: 158629 (1 specimen), 199914 (1 specimen); Plate 16829: 158394 (1 specimen). Some tissue was collected from 2 specimens and preserved in 95 Ethanol for possible molecular analysis (158629 and 158394) in order to have the same organism for both the analysis. The four specimens are listed in Table 1 with some size measures and observations on reproductive biology. Comparative additional material. Panama, Punta Culebra, Naos, 08° 54.7 ’ N, 79 ° 31.8 ’ W, intertidal (Paratype ECOSUR 0051). Gulf of California: Mazatlán, Sinaloa (2009), 23 ° 12 ’ 13 ’’ N, 106 ° 24 ’ 31.4 ’’ W, 50 cm depth, buoy fouling (20 specimens EMU-ICML 8703, 8715, 8719, 8724, 8726, 8729); 23 ° 12 ’ 13 ’’ N, 106 ° 24 ’ 30.1 ’’ W, 50 cm depth, buoy fouling (23 specimens EMU-ICML 8704, 8707, 8710, 8716, 8720, 8722); 23 ° 11 ’ 48.7 ’’ N, 106 ° 24 ’ 31 ’’ W, 50 cm depth, buoy fouling (129 specimens EMU-ICML 8705, 8708, 8711, 8713, 8717, 8721, 8723, 8725, 8727, 8730, 8731, 8733; 23 ° 11 ’ 8.9 ’’ N, 106 ° 24 ’ 55.8 ’’ W, 50 cm depth, buoy fouling (8 specimens EMU-ICML 8706, 8709, 8712, 8714, 8718, 8728, 8732, 8734). Topolobampo, Sinaloa (2011), 25 ° 35 ’ 59 ’’ N, 109 ° 03’ 29 ’’ W, 50 cm depth, dock fouling (13 specimens GEOMARE-POLY-004); El Mavirí (2011), 25 ° 35 ’ 15 ’’ N, 109 ° 06’ 05’’ W, 30 cm depth, on Crassostrea gigas cultures (4 specimens GEOMARE-POLY-005). San Carlos, Sonora (2011), 27 ° 56 ’ 44.52 ” N 111 ° 5 ’ 32.82 ” W, 30 cm depth, rope (8 specimens GEOMARE-POLY-006). La Paz, Baja California Sur (2011), 24 ° 9 ' 17.76 " N 110 ° 19 ' 33.96 " W, 50 cm depth, dock fouling (18 specimens GEOMARE-POLY-007); 24 ° 16 ' 28.62 " N 110 ° 19 ' 51.12 " W, hull fouling (11 specimens GEOMARE-POLY-008). Diagnosis. Body length of four adult specimens varied from 37 to 50 mm. Body dark brown mottled with small brown spots (Fig. 3 b). Interramal dark spots, larger on thoracic segments than in abdominal region. Radiolar crown (1 / 3 of the body length) is usually around 10 mm length. About 21–23 pairs of radioles, each banded with green olive, dark brown bands and one orange band between each pair of eyes. Basal stylodes unpaired, medium length, tongue-like, same size as rachis width. At least three foliose macrostylodes, broadening distally, sometimes with very uneven distal margins (Fig. 3 a–c). Dorsal lips one third length of radioles, triangular with a distinct orange longitudinal ridge (mid-rib), lateral margin olive-green. Body with eight thoracic segments; collar dorsal margin well separated, ventral lappets subtriangular, fleshy and overlapping in reflexed position (Fig. 3 b). Thoracic tori extending to sides of brown trapezoidal ventral shields. Avicular uncini with the crest surmounted by two rows of teeth, occupying one quarter of the crest and manubrium short (Fig. 3 d). Distribution (Fig. 4). Eastern Pacific (Possibly native): Punta Culebra and Balboa (Panama); Mazatlán, Topolobampo, San Carlos and La Paz (Gulf of California). Western Atlantic (Introduced): Tampa Bay (Florida). Habitat. Panama: intertidal, on large boulders and rocks buried in sand and associated tide pools, with smaller rocks covered by sponges and additional fouling species (Tovar-Hernández & Knight-Jones 2006). Gulf of California: inhabiting shallow waters (0.3–0.5 m depth) on buoys, docks, ropes, on vessel hulls and on oyster farms; salinity 32.1–34.8 ‰; temperature 21.5–31.5 ºC; dissolved oxygen 3.15–6.66 mg /L; forming part of an assemblages of 12 introduced species: the polychaetes B. bairdi (McIntosh, 1885), Hydroides diramphus Mörch, 1863, H. elegans (Haswell, 1883), H. sanctaecrucis Krøyer in Mörch, 1863; the ascidians Botryllus schlosseri (Pallas, 1766), Botrylloides nigrum Herdman, 1886, B. violaceus Oka, 1827, Didemnun perlucidum F. Monniot, 1983 and Polyclinum constellatum Savigny, 1816; the bryozoans Bugula neritina (Linnaeus, 1758) and Amathia verticillata (delle Chiaje, 1822); and the copepod Haplostomides hawaiiensis Ooishi, 1994. Florida: on settling panels (present study). Branchiomma coheni was found not in the presence of B. bairdi but was always found with the sabellid Parasabella microphthalma (Verrill, 1873). Remarks. According to Camp et al. (1998) and Statewide Biological Database (2013), four species of Branchiomma are reported along the coast of Florida: Branchiomma arenosa (Treadwell, 1924), B. bairdi , B. conspersum (Ehlers, 1887) and B. nigromaculatum (Baird, 1865). However, B. arenosa is not valid, it is a junior synonym of B. conspersum (Tovar-Hernández & Knight-Jones, 2006). As far as we know, Florida is a natural distribution area for all these three species; the record of B. coheni constitutes the first record of an introduced species of Branchiomma along the east coast of the US and the entire Atlantic Ocean. Branchiomma coheni was described from the Pacific coast of Panama in 2006 and the records provided here from Tampa Bay and Gulf of California constitute the first published record since its description. As B. coheni was found at the same site in two different years and in 2014 on two different settlement panels of the five investigated in that site, we assume that it represents a case of an early detection of a NIS that appears to be established (sensu CIESM 2012). Among the species distributed in Florida, it is easy to differentiate B. nigromaculatum from the other species because it is unique in having microstylodes and rachis with a segmented appearance. Branchiomma bairdi , B. conspersum and B. coheni present macrostylodes, but in the first these are strap-like, in B. conspersum tongue-like and in B. coheni foliose (see Fig. 9 in Tovar-Hernández & Knight-Jones 2006 for the shape of stylodes). : Published as part of Keppel, Erica, Tovar, Maria Ana & Ruiz, Gregory, 2015, First record and establishment of Branchiomma coheni (Polychaeta: Sabellidae) in the Atlantic Ocean and review of non – indigenous species of the genus, pp. 499-518 in Zootaxa 4058 (4) on pages 503-505, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4058.4.3, http://zenodo.org/record/244288 : {"references": ["Tovar-Hernandez, M. A. & Knight-Jones, P. (2006) Species of Branchiomma (Polychaeta: Sabellidae) from the Caribbean Sea and Pacific coast of Panama. Zootaxa, 1189, 1 - 37.", "McIntosh, W. C. (1885) Report on the Annelida Polychaeta collected by H. M. S. Challenger during the years 1873 - 76, Report of the scientific results of the voyage of H. M. S. Challenger London, Zoology, 12, 1 - 554.", "Camp, D. K., Lyons, W. G. & Perkins, T. H. (1998) Checklists of Selected Shallow - Water Marine Invertebrates of Florida. Florida Marine Research Institute Technical Report TR - 3, 238 pp."]} Text Crassostrea gigas DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Baja Pacific McIntosh ENVELOPE(168.683,168.683,-77.517,-77.517) Hernandez ENVELOPE(-62.167,-62.167,-74.500,-74.500) Treadwell ENVELOPE(-144.850,-144.850,-77.017,-77.017) Herdman ENVELOPE(-60.526,-60.526,-72.655,-72.655)