Nereis alacranensis Ramírez-Hernández, Hernández-Alcántara & Solís-Weiss, 2015, new species

Nereis alacranensis new species Figures 1 A–G, 2 A–I, 3 A–B Type material. Holotype: Atokous individual collected from Arrecife Alacranes, Yucatán, southern Gulf of Mexico, (CNAP – ICML: POH- 39 -002), Station 14 B (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m, coll....

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Main Authors: Ramírez-Hernández, Adriana, Hernández-Alcántara, Pablo, Solís-Weiss, Vivianne
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2015
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5671239
https://zenodo.org/record/5671239
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5671239
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
Phyllodocida
Nereididae
Nereis
Nereis alacranensis
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Phyllodocida
Nereididae
Nereis
Nereis alacranensis
Ramírez-Hernández, Adriana
Hernández-Alcántara, Pablo
Solís-Weiss, Vivianne
Nereis alacranensis Ramírez-Hernández, Hernández-Alcántara & Solís-Weiss, 2015, new species
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Phyllodocida
Nereididae
Nereis
Nereis alacranensis
description Nereis alacranensis new species Figures 1 A–G, 2 A–I, 3 A–B Type material. Holotype: Atokous individual collected from Arrecife Alacranes, Yucatán, southern Gulf of Mexico, (CNAP – ICML: POH- 39 -002), Station 14 B (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m, coll. V. Solís-Weiss. Paratypes: (CNAP – ICML: POP- 39 -004): 7 atokous individuals, two of them coated with gold for SEM studies, Station 14 B (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 3 specimens, Station 14 (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 1 specimen, Station 14 B (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 1 specimen, Station 14 C (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m. Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales de Madrid (MNCN): 5 atokous individuals, 2 specimens (MNCP 16.01/ 16646), Station 15 (22 ° 23 ' 44 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 5 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 3 specimens (MNCP 16.01/ 16645), Station 14 B (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1m. All paratypes collected by V. Solís-Weiss. Non-type material examined. 25 specimens (CNAP – ICML: PO- 39 -032), 1 specimen, Station 14 (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 18 specimens, Station 14 B (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 2 specimens, Station 14 C (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 4 specimens, Station 15 (22 ° 23 ' 44 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 5 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m. All specimens collected by V. Solís-Weiss. Additional material examined. Nereis baolingi de León-González & Solís-Weiss, 2000: Paratype, UANL 3982, western shores of the Baja California Peninsula, Mexican Pacific. Description. Holotype complete with 63 chaetigers, 28 mm long, 2 mm wide. Paratypes with 56–63 chaetigers, 17–28 mm long, 1–2 mm wide. Body thin anteriorly, gradually tapering posteriorly towards pygidium. Colour cream in preserved specimens. Prostomium pentagonal, as long as wide, anterior margin entire; two pairs of eyes round and large, arranged trapezoidally; pair of smooth tapered antennae situated at anterior end; one pair of palps with large palpophores and short cylindrical palpostyles (Fig. 1 A, 2 A). Peristomium longer than length of first chaetiger, as large as anterior and middle chaetigers; four pairs of tentacular cirri of unequal length, with distinct cirrophores; posterior dorsal tentacular cirri longest, reaching chaetiger 3. A peristomial ventral plate present, located in the external side of the peristomium; it is a brown coarse arc shaped plate, with numerous and irregular rigid wrinkles (Fig. 1 B, 2 B, 3 A, B). Proboscis with a pair of light brown dentate jaws, each with 7–9 teeth. Black paragnaths usually with a pointed tip on both maxillary and oral rings. Maxillary ring of pharynx with paragnaths arranged in discrete areas (Fig. 2 A, B): area I absent; area II with 4 conical paragnaths (3–5 in paratypes) in irregular arrangement; area III absent; area IV with 5 conical paragnaths (5–8 in paratypes) in a curved row. Oral ring with paragnaths: area V absent; area VI with 5 conical paragnaths (3–7 in paratypes) in irregular arrangement; areas VII to VIII with 7 conical paragnaths arranged in a single transverse row. First two parapodia uniramous; with notopodial dorsal ligules shorter than long dorsal cirri; with small, triangular prechaetal lobe and shorter, rounded postchaetal lobe; neuropodial ventral ligule long, conical; ventral cirri long (Fig. 1 D, 2 D). All following parapodia biramous (Fig. 1 E–G). From parapodium 3, long dorsal cirri and conical notopodial dorsal ligules with rounded tips; with long, conical notopodial ventral ligule (Fig. 1 E–G, 2 G). Neuropodia with ventral ligules and long ventral cirri, which are longer in posterior parapodia; with short, rounded pre- and postchaetal lobes. Notochaetae: only homogomph spinigers in anterior parapodia (Fig. 2 C); heterogomph and sesquigomph spinigers absent; from chaetiger 15, homogomph falcigers with short blades, entire distally, multidentate, with up to 7 small lateral teeth, first and subsequent lateral teeth much smaller than terminal tooth (Fig. 2 E, F). Sesquigomph falcigers absent. Number of notochaetae vary along body: 3–4 at parapodium 3, 5–6 at parapodium 10, about 3 around parapodium 25, and 2 around parapodium 50. Neurochaetae grouped in two clearly separate fascicles. Dorsal fascicle with heterogomph falcigers and all spinigers homogomph, 7–10 chaetae per fascicle; heterogomph falcigers with serrated blades, about 14–17 short, slender lateral teeth, with a curved terminal tooth (Fig. 2 H). Ventral fascicle with homogomph and heterogomph spinigers, and heterogomph falcigers; around 10–15 chaetae per fascicle, their number decreases towards the posterior region of body; heterogomph falcigers with about 15 lateral teeth, well separated between them, and a distal curved tooth, which is clearly thicker than lateral teeth (Fig. 2 I). Pygidium with a pair of long and slender anal cirri (1 mm) (Fig. 1 C). Remarks. Nereis alacranensis n. sp. is characterized by a peculiar brown coarse arc shaped plate in the external ventral region of the peristomium, which together with the lack of paragnaths in areas I, III and V, the presence of 3–7 cones in area VI, 7 cones in a transversal row in areas VII–VIII, and the short notopodial homogomph falcigers with up to 7 lateral teeth, clearly separate it from the other species of the genus (Table 1). Etymology. The new species is named after the marine region where it was found: Alacranes Reef National Park, southern Gulf of Mexico. Habitat. Intertidal (1 m), on dead coral rocks, associated to seagrasses and sponges. Distribution. Alacranes Reef, Yucatán, southern Gulf of México. Discussion. All of the species of Nereis are characterized by the presence of paragnaths in at least one of the areas of both pharyngeal rings and by having notopodial homogomph falcigers in posterior parapodia. However, due to the high number of species that share those characteristics (241 species), they have been assembled in several groups. Nereis alacranensis sp. n. belongs to the group lacking paragnaths in areas I and V of the pharynx, with cones in a single row or absent in areas VII and VIII, and short blades in notopodial homogomph falcigers. Only five other species share those morphological characteristics (Table 1): Nereis anoculopsis Fauchald, 1972, recorded in deep waters, and N . baolingi de León-González & Solís-Weiss, 2000, collected on the continental shelf, both from the Mexican Pacific (Fauchald 1972; de León-González & Solís-Weiss 2000), N. cirriseta Hutchings & Turvey, 1982, from Australia, N . eugeniae (Kinberg, 1866), widely distributed in the southeastern Pacific Ocean (Kinberg 1866; Ríos et al . 2003; Rozbaczylo et al . 2005), Falkland Islands (Monro 1936, Darbyshire 2014), and South Africa (Day 1960, 1967), and N . grayi Pettibone, 1956, from the northeastern Atlantic Ocean (Pettibone 1956; Day 1973; Gardiner 1976), and the Gulf of Mexico (Taylor 1984; Fauchald et al . 2009). The pharyngeal structure of N. eugeniae can be differentiated from all other species in this group by the presence of 9–11 paragnaths in area II, 2–6 small cones in area III, and no paragnaths in area IV. In other species, including, N. alacranensis n. sp. , the maximum number of cones is 7 in area II, no paragnaths in area III, and at least 2 cones in area IV (Table 1). The morphological characteristics of N. eugeniae vary depending on the different authors’ descriptions, mainly when referring to the paragnaths’ distribution. However, thanks to the revision of that species by Darbyshire (2014), which integrates the information of Ehlers (1897), Monro (1930) and Hartman (1964, 1967), we know that, occasionally, up to 18 cones have been found in area III in this species. Notwithstanding, the morphological differences, between N. eugeniae and the new species are significant (Table 1). Nereis grayi is distributed in the Gulf of Mexico (Pettibone 1956; Taylor 1984), just as N. alacranensis n. sp. , but differs from the new species by the absence of paragnaths in areas VII and VIII, and the presence of long tentacular cirri, which extend to chaetiger 8. Those characteristics separate N. grayi from the other species in the group, in which two or more cones are present in areas VII and VIII, and the tentacular cirri are short, extending to chaetiger 4 at most. In addition, in both N. grayi and N. eugeniae , the notopodial homogomph falcigers are smooth, in contrast with the other species listed in Table 1, which have dentate homogomph falcigers. The shape of the notopodial homogomph falcigers and the length of the tentacular cirri are very similar in the four remaining species. However, N. anoculopsis can be differentiated, since it has only two cones in areas VII and VIII, while N. baolingi , N. cirriseta and N. alacranensis n. sp. have up to 7 cones arranged in a row. On the other hand, N. cirriseta and N. alacranensis n. sp. can be differentiated from N. baolingi by the presence of 3 to 6 (7) cones in area VI of the pharynx, while no paragnaths are present in area VI in the last species. Still, N. baolingi and N. alacranensis n. sp. are close, since no paragnaths are found in either species in areas I, III and V, 7 cones in a transverse row are present in areas VII and VIII and short tentacular cirri are present, as well as short, dentate notopodial homogomph falcigers. Nevertheless, the revision of type material of N. baolingi enabled us to confirm that this species can be separated from the new species, since it has very few paragnaths in the pharynx, 2 cones in areas II and IV, cones are absent in area VI (Fig. 3 D, E), the maxillary teeth are thick and distally quadrate (Fig. 3 F), and the notopodial homogomph falcigers have only 3–4 thick lateral teeth (Fig. 3 C). Finally, it is clear that the number, arrangement and distribution of the paragnaths in N. cirriseta and N. alacranensis n. sp. are very similar (Table 1); however, besides the fact that N. cirriseta lives on rocks in the Australian coasts, the new species can be clearly separated because in N. cirriseta the posterior notopodial falcigers have noticeably elongated blades, which instigated its specific name, the lateral teeth of the blades are very fine, bristle-like, and the ventral cirri extend at most from three quarters to tip of the ventral neuropodial lobes, while in N. alacranensis , the blades of the notopodial falcigers are similar along the body, their teeth are thicker (Fig. 2 E, F), and the ventral cirri are as long as the ventral neuropodial lobes (Figs. 1 D–G). All these characteristics, besides the important new morphological structure observed in N. alacranensis n. sp. , the peristomial brown, coarse arc shaped plate, allow us to conclude that it is certainly a new species of Nereis . : Published as part of Ramírez-Hernández, Adriana, Hernández-Alcántara, Pablo & Solís-Weiss, Vivianne, 2015, Nereis alacranensis, a new species of polychaete (Annelida, Nereididae) from Alacranes Reef, southern Gulf of Mexico, with a key to Nereis from the Grand Caribbean, pp. 156-166 in Zootaxa 4012 (1) on pages 157-163, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4012.1.8, http://zenodo.org/record/236496 : {"references": ["de Leon-Gonzalez, J. A. & Solis-Weiss, V. (2000) A review of the polychaete family Nereididae from Western Mexico. Bulletin of Marine Science, 67 (1), 549 - 569.", "Fauchald, K. (1972) Benthic polychaetous annelids from deep water off western Mexico and adjacent areas in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. Allan Hancock Monographs in Marine Biology, 7, 1 - 575.", "Hutchings, P. A. & Turvey, S. P. (1982) The Nereididae of South Australia. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 106 (3), 93 - 144.", "Kinberg, J. G. H. (1866) Annulata Nova. Ofversigt af Koniglich Vetenskaps-akademiens forhandlingar, 23 (4), 97 - 103.", "Rios, C., Mutschke, E. & Morrison, E. (2003) Biodiversidad bentonica sublitoral en el estrecho de Magallanes, Chile. Revista de Biologia Marina y Oceanografia, 38 (1), 1 - 12.", "Rozbaczylo, N., Moreno, R. A. & Diaz-Diaz, O. (2005) Poliquetos bentonicos submareales de fondos blandos de la region de Aysen, Chile: Clado Phyllodocida (Annelida, Polychaeta). Investigaciones Marinas, 33 (1), 69 - 89. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.4067 / S 0717 - 71782005000100005", "Monro, C. C. A. (1936) Polychaete worms II. Discovery Reports, 12, 59 - 193.", "Darbyshire, T. (2014) Intertidal and nearshore Nereididae (Annelida) of the Falkland Islands, southwestern Atlantic, including a new species of Gymnonereis. ZooKeys, 427, 75 - 108. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.3897 / zookeys. 427.7296", "Day, J. H. (1960) The Polychaete fauna of South Africa. Part 5. Errant species dredged off Cape coasts. Annals of the South Africa Museum, 45 (3), 261 - 373.", "Day, J. H. (1967) A monograph on the Polychaeta of Southern Africa. Part 1: Errantia. Trustrees of the British Museum (Natural History), London, 887 pp.", "Pettibone, M. H. (1956) Some polychaete worms of the families Hesionidae, Syllidae and Nereidae from the east coast of North America, West Indies, and Gulf of Mexico. Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences, 46 (9), 281 - 294.", "Day, J. H. (1973) New Polychaeta from Beaufort, with a Key to All Species Recorded from North Carolina. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration-Technical Report- National Marine Fisheries Service CIRC- 375, Seattle, 140 pp. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 62852", "Gardiner, S. L. (1976) Errant polychaete annelids from North Carolina. Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society, 91 (3), 77 - 220.", "Taylor, J. L. (1984) Family Nereidae Johnston, 1845. In: Uebelacker, J. M. & Johnson, P. G. (Eds.), Taxonomic guide to the polychaete of the Northern Gulf of Mexico. Vol. V. Barry A. Vittor & Associates, Inc. Mobile, Alabama, pp. 1 - 42.", "Fauchald, K., Granados-Barba, A. & Solis-Weiss, V. (2009) Polychaeta (Annelida) of the Gulf of Mexico. In: Felder, D. L. & Camp, D. K. (Eds.), Gulf of Mexico. Origin, waters and biota. Vol. 1. Biodiversity. Texas A & M University Press, Corpus Christi, pp. 751 - 788.", "Ehlers, E. (1897) Polychaeten. Magalhaensische Sammelreise, Hamburger, 148 pp.", "Monro, C. C. A. (1930) Polychaete worms. Discovery Reports, 2, 1 - 222.", "Hartman, O. (1964) Polychaeta Errantia of Antarctica. Antarctic Research Series, 3, 1 - 131. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1029 / AR 003", "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."]}
format Text
author Ramírez-Hernández, Adriana
Hernández-Alcántara, Pablo
Solís-Weiss, Vivianne
author_facet Ramírez-Hernández, Adriana
Hernández-Alcántara, Pablo
Solís-Weiss, Vivianne
author_sort Ramírez-Hernández, Adriana
title Nereis alacranensis Ramírez-Hernández, Hernández-Alcántara & Solís-Weiss, 2015, new species
title_short Nereis alacranensis Ramírez-Hernández, Hernández-Alcántara & Solís-Weiss, 2015, new species
title_full Nereis alacranensis Ramírez-Hernández, Hernández-Alcántara & Solís-Weiss, 2015, new species
title_fullStr Nereis alacranensis Ramírez-Hernández, Hernández-Alcántara & Solís-Weiss, 2015, new species
title_full_unstemmed Nereis alacranensis Ramírez-Hernández, Hernández-Alcántara & Solís-Weiss, 2015, new species
title_sort nereis alacranensis ramírez-hernández, hernández-alcántara & solís-weiss, 2015, new species
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2015
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5671239
https://zenodo.org/record/5671239
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.300,-62.300,-64.083,-64.083)
ENVELOPE(-62.933,-62.933,-64.883,-64.883)
ENVELOPE(-63.533,-63.533,-66.167,-66.167)
ENVELOPE(-58.250,-58.250,-63.917,-63.917)
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geographic Antarctic
Baja
Pacific
Alabama
Moreno
Magallanes
Morrison
Gonzalez
Estrecho
Pablo
Diaz
Adriana
Darbyshire
Solís
Gardiner
geographic_facet Antarctic
Baja
Pacific
Alabama
Moreno
Magallanes
Morrison
Gonzalez
Estrecho
Pablo
Diaz
Adriana
Darbyshire
Solís
Gardiner
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_relation http://zenodo.org/record/236496
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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5671239
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4012.1.8
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5671239 2023-05-15T13:57:33+02:00 Nereis alacranensis Ramírez-Hernández, Hernández-Alcántara & Solís-Weiss, 2015, new species Ramírez-Hernández, Adriana Hernández-Alcántara, Pablo Solís-Weiss, Vivianne 2015 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5671239 https://zenodo.org/record/5671239 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/236496 http://publication.plazi.org/id/B477FF86FFA42E048708535D9F04FFEA http://table.plazi.org/id/94986660FFA72E07877F51C79A16FD5A http://zoobank.org/361EA0FD-D34A-4657-A1BE-9F49150599AA https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4012.1.8 http://zenodo.org/record/236496 http://publication.plazi.org/id/B477FF86FFA42E048708535D9F04FFEA https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.236497 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.236498 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.236499 http://table.plazi.org/id/94986660FFA72E07877F51C79A16FD5A http://zoobank.org/361EA0FD-D34A-4657-A1BE-9F49150599AA https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5671238 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Annelida Polychaeta Phyllodocida Nereididae Nereis Nereis alacranensis Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2015 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5671239 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4012.1.8 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.236497 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.236498 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.236499 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5671238 2022-02-08T13:42:09Z Nereis alacranensis new species Figures 1 A–G, 2 A–I, 3 A–B Type material. Holotype: Atokous individual collected from Arrecife Alacranes, Yucatán, southern Gulf of Mexico, (CNAP – ICML: POH- 39 -002), Station 14 B (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m, coll. V. Solís-Weiss. Paratypes: (CNAP – ICML: POP- 39 -004): 7 atokous individuals, two of them coated with gold for SEM studies, Station 14 B (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 3 specimens, Station 14 (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 1 specimen, Station 14 B (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 1 specimen, Station 14 C (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m. Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales de Madrid (MNCN): 5 atokous individuals, 2 specimens (MNCP 16.01/ 16646), Station 15 (22 ° 23 ' 44 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 5 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 3 specimens (MNCP 16.01/ 16645), Station 14 B (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1m. All paratypes collected by V. Solís-Weiss. Non-type material examined. 25 specimens (CNAP – ICML: PO- 39 -032), 1 specimen, Station 14 (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 18 specimens, Station 14 B (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 2 specimens, Station 14 C (22 ° 24 ' 46 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 53 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m; 4 specimens, Station 15 (22 ° 23 ' 44 "N, 89 ° 39 ' 5 "W), 12 December 2009, 1 m. All specimens collected by V. Solís-Weiss. Additional material examined. Nereis baolingi de León-González & Solís-Weiss, 2000: Paratype, UANL 3982, western shores of the Baja California Peninsula, Mexican Pacific. Description. Holotype complete with 63 chaetigers, 28 mm long, 2 mm wide. Paratypes with 56–63 chaetigers, 17–28 mm long, 1–2 mm wide. Body thin anteriorly, gradually tapering posteriorly towards pygidium. Colour cream in preserved specimens. Prostomium pentagonal, as long as wide, anterior margin entire; two pairs of eyes round and large, arranged trapezoidally; pair of smooth tapered antennae situated at anterior end; one pair of palps with large palpophores and short cylindrical palpostyles (Fig. 1 A, 2 A). Peristomium longer than length of first chaetiger, as large as anterior and middle chaetigers; four pairs of tentacular cirri of unequal length, with distinct cirrophores; posterior dorsal tentacular cirri longest, reaching chaetiger 3. A peristomial ventral plate present, located in the external side of the peristomium; it is a brown coarse arc shaped plate, with numerous and irregular rigid wrinkles (Fig. 1 B, 2 B, 3 A, B). Proboscis with a pair of light brown dentate jaws, each with 7–9 teeth. Black paragnaths usually with a pointed tip on both maxillary and oral rings. Maxillary ring of pharynx with paragnaths arranged in discrete areas (Fig. 2 A, B): area I absent; area II with 4 conical paragnaths (3–5 in paratypes) in irregular arrangement; area III absent; area IV with 5 conical paragnaths (5–8 in paratypes) in a curved row. Oral ring with paragnaths: area V absent; area VI with 5 conical paragnaths (3–7 in paratypes) in irregular arrangement; areas VII to VIII with 7 conical paragnaths arranged in a single transverse row. First two parapodia uniramous; with notopodial dorsal ligules shorter than long dorsal cirri; with small, triangular prechaetal lobe and shorter, rounded postchaetal lobe; neuropodial ventral ligule long, conical; ventral cirri long (Fig. 1 D, 2 D). All following parapodia biramous (Fig. 1 E–G). From parapodium 3, long dorsal cirri and conical notopodial dorsal ligules with rounded tips; with long, conical notopodial ventral ligule (Fig. 1 E–G, 2 G). Neuropodia with ventral ligules and long ventral cirri, which are longer in posterior parapodia; with short, rounded pre- and postchaetal lobes. Notochaetae: only homogomph spinigers in anterior parapodia (Fig. 2 C); heterogomph and sesquigomph spinigers absent; from chaetiger 15, homogomph falcigers with short blades, entire distally, multidentate, with up to 7 small lateral teeth, first and subsequent lateral teeth much smaller than terminal tooth (Fig. 2 E, F). Sesquigomph falcigers absent. Number of notochaetae vary along body: 3–4 at parapodium 3, 5–6 at parapodium 10, about 3 around parapodium 25, and 2 around parapodium 50. Neurochaetae grouped in two clearly separate fascicles. Dorsal fascicle with heterogomph falcigers and all spinigers homogomph, 7–10 chaetae per fascicle; heterogomph falcigers with serrated blades, about 14–17 short, slender lateral teeth, with a curved terminal tooth (Fig. 2 H). Ventral fascicle with homogomph and heterogomph spinigers, and heterogomph falcigers; around 10–15 chaetae per fascicle, their number decreases towards the posterior region of body; heterogomph falcigers with about 15 lateral teeth, well separated between them, and a distal curved tooth, which is clearly thicker than lateral teeth (Fig. 2 I). Pygidium with a pair of long and slender anal cirri (1 mm) (Fig. 1 C). Remarks. Nereis alacranensis n. sp. is characterized by a peculiar brown coarse arc shaped plate in the external ventral region of the peristomium, which together with the lack of paragnaths in areas I, III and V, the presence of 3–7 cones in area VI, 7 cones in a transversal row in areas VII–VIII, and the short notopodial homogomph falcigers with up to 7 lateral teeth, clearly separate it from the other species of the genus (Table 1). Etymology. The new species is named after the marine region where it was found: Alacranes Reef National Park, southern Gulf of Mexico. Habitat. Intertidal (1 m), on dead coral rocks, associated to seagrasses and sponges. Distribution. Alacranes Reef, Yucatán, southern Gulf of México. Discussion. All of the species of Nereis are characterized by the presence of paragnaths in at least one of the areas of both pharyngeal rings and by having notopodial homogomph falcigers in posterior parapodia. However, due to the high number of species that share those characteristics (241 species), they have been assembled in several groups. Nereis alacranensis sp. n. belongs to the group lacking paragnaths in areas I and V of the pharynx, with cones in a single row or absent in areas VII and VIII, and short blades in notopodial homogomph falcigers. Only five other species share those morphological characteristics (Table 1): Nereis anoculopsis Fauchald, 1972, recorded in deep waters, and N . baolingi de León-González & Solís-Weiss, 2000, collected on the continental shelf, both from the Mexican Pacific (Fauchald 1972; de León-González & Solís-Weiss 2000), N. cirriseta Hutchings & Turvey, 1982, from Australia, N . eugeniae (Kinberg, 1866), widely distributed in the southeastern Pacific Ocean (Kinberg 1866; Ríos et al . 2003; Rozbaczylo et al . 2005), Falkland Islands (Monro 1936, Darbyshire 2014), and South Africa (Day 1960, 1967), and N . grayi Pettibone, 1956, from the northeastern Atlantic Ocean (Pettibone 1956; Day 1973; Gardiner 1976), and the Gulf of Mexico (Taylor 1984; Fauchald et al . 2009). The pharyngeal structure of N. eugeniae can be differentiated from all other species in this group by the presence of 9–11 paragnaths in area II, 2–6 small cones in area III, and no paragnaths in area IV. In other species, including, N. alacranensis n. sp. , the maximum number of cones is 7 in area II, no paragnaths in area III, and at least 2 cones in area IV (Table 1). The morphological characteristics of N. eugeniae vary depending on the different authors’ descriptions, mainly when referring to the paragnaths’ distribution. However, thanks to the revision of that species by Darbyshire (2014), which integrates the information of Ehlers (1897), Monro (1930) and Hartman (1964, 1967), we know that, occasionally, up to 18 cones have been found in area III in this species. Notwithstanding, the morphological differences, between N. eugeniae and the new species are significant (Table 1). Nereis grayi is distributed in the Gulf of Mexico (Pettibone 1956; Taylor 1984), just as N. alacranensis n. sp. , but differs from the new species by the absence of paragnaths in areas VII and VIII, and the presence of long tentacular cirri, which extend to chaetiger 8. Those characteristics separate N. grayi from the other species in the group, in which two or more cones are present in areas VII and VIII, and the tentacular cirri are short, extending to chaetiger 4 at most. In addition, in both N. grayi and N. eugeniae , the notopodial homogomph falcigers are smooth, in contrast with the other species listed in Table 1, which have dentate homogomph falcigers. The shape of the notopodial homogomph falcigers and the length of the tentacular cirri are very similar in the four remaining species. However, N. anoculopsis can be differentiated, since it has only two cones in areas VII and VIII, while N. baolingi , N. cirriseta and N. alacranensis n. sp. have up to 7 cones arranged in a row. On the other hand, N. cirriseta and N. alacranensis n. sp. can be differentiated from N. baolingi by the presence of 3 to 6 (7) cones in area VI of the pharynx, while no paragnaths are present in area VI in the last species. Still, N. baolingi and N. alacranensis n. sp. are close, since no paragnaths are found in either species in areas I, III and V, 7 cones in a transverse row are present in areas VII and VIII and short tentacular cirri are present, as well as short, dentate notopodial homogomph falcigers. Nevertheless, the revision of type material of N. baolingi enabled us to confirm that this species can be separated from the new species, since it has very few paragnaths in the pharynx, 2 cones in areas II and IV, cones are absent in area VI (Fig. 3 D, E), the maxillary teeth are thick and distally quadrate (Fig. 3 F), and the notopodial homogomph falcigers have only 3–4 thick lateral teeth (Fig. 3 C). Finally, it is clear that the number, arrangement and distribution of the paragnaths in N. cirriseta and N. alacranensis n. sp. are very similar (Table 1); however, besides the fact that N. cirriseta lives on rocks in the Australian coasts, the new species can be clearly separated because in N. cirriseta the posterior notopodial falcigers have noticeably elongated blades, which instigated its specific name, the lateral teeth of the blades are very fine, bristle-like, and the ventral cirri extend at most from three quarters to tip of the ventral neuropodial lobes, while in N. alacranensis , the blades of the notopodial falcigers are similar along the body, their teeth are thicker (Fig. 2 E, F), and the ventral cirri are as long as the ventral neuropodial lobes (Figs. 1 D–G). All these characteristics, besides the important new morphological structure observed in N. alacranensis n. sp. , the peristomial brown, coarse arc shaped plate, allow us to conclude that it is certainly a new species of Nereis . : Published as part of Ramírez-Hernández, Adriana, Hernández-Alcántara, Pablo & Solís-Weiss, Vivianne, 2015, Nereis alacranensis, a new species of polychaete (Annelida, Nereididae) from Alacranes Reef, southern Gulf of Mexico, with a key to Nereis from the Grand Caribbean, pp. 156-166 in Zootaxa 4012 (1) on pages 157-163, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4012.1.8, http://zenodo.org/record/236496 : {"references": ["de Leon-Gonzalez, J. A. & Solis-Weiss, V. (2000) A review of the polychaete family Nereididae from Western Mexico. Bulletin of Marine Science, 67 (1), 549 - 569.", "Fauchald, K. (1972) Benthic polychaetous annelids from deep water off western Mexico and adjacent areas in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. 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Allan Hancock Monographs in Marine Biology, 2, 1 - 387."]} Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Baja Pacific Alabama Moreno ENVELOPE(-62.300,-62.300,-64.083,-64.083) Magallanes ENVELOPE(-62.933,-62.933,-64.883,-64.883) Morrison ENVELOPE(-63.533,-63.533,-66.167,-66.167) Gonzalez ENVELOPE(-58.250,-58.250,-63.917,-63.917) Estrecho ENVELOPE(-60.783,-60.783,-62.467,-62.467) Pablo ENVELOPE(-63.717,-63.717,-64.283,-64.283) Diaz ENVELOPE(-60.667,-60.667,-63.783,-63.783) Adriana ENVELOPE(-62.783,-62.783,-64.667,-64.667) Darbyshire ENVELOPE(158.083,158.083,-78.467,-78.467) Solís ENVELOPE(-59.783,-59.783,-62.533,-62.533) Gardiner ENVELOPE(-150.950,-150.950,-86.317,-86.317)