Petta alissoni Nogueira & Ribeiro & Carrerette & Hutchings 2019, n. sp.

Petta alissoni n. sp. (Figs 8–12, Table 2) Material examined. Holotype (ZUEC Pol 7891): coll. state of São Paulo, 24°21'S 44°10'W, 10 Jan 1998, 258 m. Paratype 1 (ZUEC Pol 7880): coll. state of Rio de Janeiro, 23°09'36”S 40°57'00”W, 01 Mar 1998, 257 m. Paratypes 2–5 (ZUEC Pol 788...

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Main Authors: Nogueira, João Miguel De Matos, Ribeiro, William M. G., Carrerette, Orlemir, Hutchings, Pat
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2019
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5922719
https://zenodo.org/record/5922719
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5922719
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
Terebellida
Pectinariidae
Petta
Petta alissoni
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Terebellida
Pectinariidae
Petta
Petta alissoni
Nogueira, João Miguel De Matos
Ribeiro, William M. G.
Carrerette, Orlemir
Hutchings, Pat
Petta alissoni Nogueira & Ribeiro & Carrerette & Hutchings 2019, n. sp.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Annelida
Polychaeta
Terebellida
Pectinariidae
Petta
Petta alissoni
description Petta alissoni n. sp. (Figs 8–12, Table 2) Material examined. Holotype (ZUEC Pol 7891): coll. state of São Paulo, 24°21'S 44°10'W, 10 Jan 1998, 258 m. Paratype 1 (ZUEC Pol 7880): coll. state of Rio de Janeiro, 23°09'36”S 40°57'00”W, 01 Mar 1998, 257 m. Paratypes 2–5 (ZUEC Pol 7882 and 21341–21343): coll. state of Rio de Janeiro, 23°36'30”S 42°10'00”W, 16 Feb 1998, 187 m; paratype 2 (ZUEC Pol 21343) mounted on SEM stub, paratype 5 (ZUEC Pol 21342) dissected, some notochaetae and uncini mounted on microscope slide. Paratype 6 (ZUEC Pol 7892): coll. state of São Paulo, 24°07'36”S 45°52'00”W, 09 Jan 1998, 147 m. Paratype 7 (ZUEC Pol 7890): coll. state of São Paulo, 24°07'18”S 44°42'00”W, 09 Jan 1998, 101 m. Morphological variation within the type series is shown in Table 2. Comparative material examined. Petta pusilla Malmgren, 1 866, NRM 104108: coll. Sweden, Bohuslän, Koster area, Kostergrund, 3 specs in excellent state of preservation. Description. Tubes not studied, as all specimens examined lacked tubes. Conical body, 5–18 mm long and 1– 2 mm wide, pale creamy in color. Operculum with smooth marginal lobe low all around; 10–12 pairs of long golden paleae, distally tapering to blunt tips, slightly curved dorsalwards (Figs 8 A–C, E–G; 9A; 10A, B; 11A; 12A; Table 2). Cephalic veil completely free from operculum, with few short, pointed buccal tentacles; distal margin of cephalic veil smooth, except for medial triangular cirrus, distally entire or bifid (Figs 8 A–C; 9A; 10B); cephalic veil terminating by rounded flaring lobe at each side, each ending by spherical papilla. Tentacular cirri of segments 1 and 2 of similar length, both thin and elongate, distally blunt; tentacular cirri of segment 1 ventrally aligned to those of segment 2 (Figs 8 A–C, E–G; 9A, C; 10A, B). Segments 2–6 distinctly raised ventrally, as ventral crests; first crest, on segment 2, with pair of low ventral lobes interrupted mid-ventrally, each side reaching mid-ventral line, with 5–7 marginal cirri; segment 3 with ventrolateral crests interrupted mid-ventrally by pair of large spherical papillae (Figs 8 A–C, E, G; 9A–C; 10B, C; Table 2). Two pairs of small pectinate stalked branchiae, on segments 3 and 4, each pair consisting of loose, flat and smooth rounded lamellae, almost circular, first pair slightly larger, inserted laterally, second pair inserted dorso-laterally (Figs 8 E–G; 9C; 10A, E). Notopodia beginning on segment 5, extending until segment 21, first 3 pairs shorter; neuropodia beginning on segment 8, extending until segment 21; last segment before scaphe with biramous parapodia (Fig. 12H). Notochaetae of two types, those of anterior row with narrow limbation from base, terminating by serrated alimbate blade, much wider at base, triangular, with smooth edge and coarse striations on sides, edge serrated from immediately after base of blade; chaetae of posterior row narrowly-winged throughout (Figs 10D; 11 B–C; 12B–E, H). Neurochaetae as avicular uncini, with clearly defined main fang, with 2–3 transverse rows of progressively shorter secondary teeth on top, short triangular heel, slightly curved base and rounded basal peg, composed of many densely packed denticles as seen under SEM (Figs 11D; 12F, G). Scaphe consisting on five fused posterior segments, not clearly separated from segment 21; scaphe oval in shape, flattened and arched ventrally, lateral margins with 6 pairs of lamellae, anal flaps distinctly short, shorter than lateral papillae, with long anal cirrus inbetween dorsally (Figs 8D, H–J; 9D, E; 10A, F); 5–8 pairs of brown, dorso-lateral scaphal hooks distally blunt, slightly arched posteriorwards (Figs 10F; 11E; 12 H–J; Table 2). Variation. Intraspecific variation among the specimens of the type series is given in Table 2. Observed variation in the numbers of pairs of paleae, scaphal hooks and cirri on ventral lobes of segment 2 is size-related (Table 2). Remarks. Members of P. pusilla differ from specimens of P. alissoni n. sp. in having distally trifid medial extension of cephalic veil, fewer pairs of cirri on lobes of segment 2, with wider mid-ventral gap, larger midventral lobes on segment 3, and distinctly shorter scaphal medial cirrus, about as long as lateral papillae. Members of P. alissoni n. sp. , in contrast, have distally entire or bifid medial extension of cephalic veil (paratype 7 with bifid extension, entire in all other specimens) and scaphal cirrus about 5 times as long as lateral papillae. Members of P. pellucida (Ehlers, 1887) differ from individuals of P. alissoni n. sp. in having distally entire and blunt medial extension of cephalic veil, lobes of segment 2 with pair of ventralmost cirri distinctly longer than other cirri, longer mid-ventral lobes on segment 3, cylindrical and distally rounded. Among members of P. alissoni n. sp. , the medial extension of the cephalic veil is distally pointed, cirri of lobes of segment 2 are all of even length, and the mid-ventral lobes of segment 3 are spherical. Petta assimilis McIntosh, 1885 was described based on material from the Kerguelen Islands, Indian Ocean, and the type material is lost, according to Alexander Muir (personal communication). According to the original description, the holotype of P. assimilis differed from specimens of P. alissoni n. sp. in having triangular, distally entire cephalic veil; lobes of segment 2 with 4–5 pairs of cirri, the ventralmost pair distinctly shorter; entire lobe on segment 3, extending across ventral surface of segment without mid-ventral gap, distally cirrate throughout; scaphe with distinctly larger anal flaps, fused to each other in a foliaceous process, with minute terminal cirrus; and notochaetae without specialization at base of blade. In contrast, members of P. alissoni n. sp. have an almost circular cephalic veil, with entire or bifid medial extension; 5–7 pairs of cirri on lobes of segment 2, all of similar length; smooth ventrolateral crests on segment 3, with pair of mid-ventral spherical lobes; scaphe with minute anal flaps, rounded, and distinctly longer terminal cirrus; and their notochaetae have a foliaceous process at base of blade. Members of P. tenuis Caullery, 1944, according to the original description, have ventro-lateral lobes of segment 2 with 4 pairs of triangular cirri, U-shaped ventral lobe on segment 3, and uncini with 3 teeth only, main fang and 2 secondary teeth. In contrast, members of P. alissoni n. sp. have 5–7 pairs of cirri on lobes of segment 2, segment 3 without a ventral lobe, with a pair of spherical papillae instead, and uncini with more secondary teeth, main fang and 2–3 transverse rows of progressively shorter secondary teeth. Type locality. The holotype comes from off the state of São Paulo, southeastern Brazil, southwestern Atlantic. The type series includes material from the northern coast of São Paulo and southern coast of Rio de Janeiro. Etymology. This species is dedicated to Alisson Ricardo da Silva for his friendship with JMMN. : Published as part of Nogueira, João Miguel De Matos, Ribeiro, William M. G., Carrerette, Orlemir & Hutchings, Pat, 2019, Pectinariidae (Annelida, Terebelliformia) from off southeastern Brazil, southwestern Atlantic, pp. 489-509 in Zootaxa 4571 (4) on pages 502-506, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4571.4.3, http://zenodo.org/record/2614189 : {"references": ["Ehlers, E. (1887) Reports on the results of dredging, under the direction of L. F. Pourtales, during the years 1868 - 1870, and of Alexander Agassiz, in the Gulf of Mexico (1877 - 78), and in the Caribbean Sea (1878 - 79), in the U. S. Coast Survey steamer \" Blake \", Lieut-Com. C. D. Sigsbee, U. S. N. and Commander J. R. Bartlett, U. S. N., commanding. XXXI. Report on the Annelids. Memoirs of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard, 15, i-vi + 1 - 335.", "McIntosh, W. C. (1885) Report on the Annelida Polychaeta collected by H. M. S. Challenger during the years 1873 - 1876, Series Zoology, 12, 1 - 554; 55 pls., 1 A- 39 A.", "Caullery, M. (1944) Polychetes Sedentaires de l'Expedition du Siboga: Ariciidae, Spionidae, Chaetopteridae, Chlorhaemidae, Opheliidae, Oweniidae, Sabellariidae, Sternaspidae, Amphictenidae, Ampharetidae, Terebellidae. Siboga-Expeditie Uitkomsten op Zoologisch, Bonatisch, Oceanographisch en Geologisch gebied verzameld in Nederlandsch Oost-Indi 1899 - 1900, XXIV, 2 bis, 1 - 204."]}
format Text
author Nogueira, João Miguel De Matos
Ribeiro, William M. G.
Carrerette, Orlemir
Hutchings, Pat
author_facet Nogueira, João Miguel De Matos
Ribeiro, William M. G.
Carrerette, Orlemir
Hutchings, Pat
author_sort Nogueira, João Miguel De Matos
title Petta alissoni Nogueira & Ribeiro & Carrerette & Hutchings 2019, n. sp.
title_short Petta alissoni Nogueira & Ribeiro & Carrerette & Hutchings 2019, n. sp.
title_full Petta alissoni Nogueira & Ribeiro & Carrerette & Hutchings 2019, n. sp.
title_fullStr Petta alissoni Nogueira & Ribeiro & Carrerette & Hutchings 2019, n. sp.
title_full_unstemmed Petta alissoni Nogueira & Ribeiro & Carrerette & Hutchings 2019, n. sp.
title_sort petta alissoni nogueira & ribeiro & carrerette & hutchings 2019, n. sp.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2019
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5922719
https://zenodo.org/record/5922719
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.033,-63.033,-64.867,-64.867)
ENVELOPE(168.683,168.683,-77.517,-77.517)
ENVELOPE(167.217,167.217,-77.483,-77.483)
ENVELOPE(-66.117,-66.117,-65.750,-65.750)
geographic Kerguelen
Kerguelen Islands
Indian
Ricardo
McIntosh
Fang
Malmgren
geographic_facet Kerguelen
Kerguelen Islands
Indian
Ricardo
McIntosh
Fang
Malmgren
genre Kerguelen Islands
genre_facet Kerguelen Islands
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5922719 2023-05-15T17:02:10+02:00 Petta alissoni Nogueira & Ribeiro & Carrerette & Hutchings 2019, n. sp. Nogueira, João Miguel De Matos Ribeiro, William M. G. Carrerette, Orlemir Hutchings, Pat 2019 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5922719 https://zenodo.org/record/5922719 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/2614189 http://publication.plazi.org/id/6D28BA0AA0653D14DA25FFC84D72FFA2 http://zoobank.org/62AE5784-A6E5-479B-835A-32B5F9828FC3 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4571.4.3 http://zenodo.org/record/2614189 http://publication.plazi.org/id/6D28BA0AA0653D14DA25FFC84D72FFA2 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2614205 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2614207 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2614209 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2614211 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2614213 http://zoobank.org/62AE5784-A6E5-479B-835A-32B5F9828FC3 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5922720 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 Terebellida Pectinariidae Petta Petta alissoni article-journal ScholarlyArticle Text Taxonomic treatment 2019 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5922719 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4571.4.3 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2614205 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2614207 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2614209 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2614211 https: 2022-03-10T16:20:07Z Petta alissoni n. sp. (Figs 8–12, Table 2) Material examined. Holotype (ZUEC Pol 7891): coll. state of São Paulo, 24°21'S 44°10'W, 10 Jan 1998, 258 m. Paratype 1 (ZUEC Pol 7880): coll. state of Rio de Janeiro, 23°09'36”S 40°57'00”W, 01 Mar 1998, 257 m. Paratypes 2–5 (ZUEC Pol 7882 and 21341–21343): coll. state of Rio de Janeiro, 23°36'30”S 42°10'00”W, 16 Feb 1998, 187 m; paratype 2 (ZUEC Pol 21343) mounted on SEM stub, paratype 5 (ZUEC Pol 21342) dissected, some notochaetae and uncini mounted on microscope slide. Paratype 6 (ZUEC Pol 7892): coll. state of São Paulo, 24°07'36”S 45°52'00”W, 09 Jan 1998, 147 m. Paratype 7 (ZUEC Pol 7890): coll. state of São Paulo, 24°07'18”S 44°42'00”W, 09 Jan 1998, 101 m. Morphological variation within the type series is shown in Table 2. Comparative material examined. Petta pusilla Malmgren, 1 866, NRM 104108: coll. Sweden, Bohuslän, Koster area, Kostergrund, 3 specs in excellent state of preservation. Description. Tubes not studied, as all specimens examined lacked tubes. Conical body, 5–18 mm long and 1– 2 mm wide, pale creamy in color. Operculum with smooth marginal lobe low all around; 10–12 pairs of long golden paleae, distally tapering to blunt tips, slightly curved dorsalwards (Figs 8 A–C, E–G; 9A; 10A, B; 11A; 12A; Table 2). Cephalic veil completely free from operculum, with few short, pointed buccal tentacles; distal margin of cephalic veil smooth, except for medial triangular cirrus, distally entire or bifid (Figs 8 A–C; 9A; 10B); cephalic veil terminating by rounded flaring lobe at each side, each ending by spherical papilla. Tentacular cirri of segments 1 and 2 of similar length, both thin and elongate, distally blunt; tentacular cirri of segment 1 ventrally aligned to those of segment 2 (Figs 8 A–C, E–G; 9A, C; 10A, B). Segments 2–6 distinctly raised ventrally, as ventral crests; first crest, on segment 2, with pair of low ventral lobes interrupted mid-ventrally, each side reaching mid-ventral line, with 5–7 marginal cirri; segment 3 with ventrolateral crests interrupted mid-ventrally by pair of large spherical papillae (Figs 8 A–C, E, G; 9A–C; 10B, C; Table 2). Two pairs of small pectinate stalked branchiae, on segments 3 and 4, each pair consisting of loose, flat and smooth rounded lamellae, almost circular, first pair slightly larger, inserted laterally, second pair inserted dorso-laterally (Figs 8 E–G; 9C; 10A, E). Notopodia beginning on segment 5, extending until segment 21, first 3 pairs shorter; neuropodia beginning on segment 8, extending until segment 21; last segment before scaphe with biramous parapodia (Fig. 12H). Notochaetae of two types, those of anterior row with narrow limbation from base, terminating by serrated alimbate blade, much wider at base, triangular, with smooth edge and coarse striations on sides, edge serrated from immediately after base of blade; chaetae of posterior row narrowly-winged throughout (Figs 10D; 11 B–C; 12B–E, H). Neurochaetae as avicular uncini, with clearly defined main fang, with 2–3 transverse rows of progressively shorter secondary teeth on top, short triangular heel, slightly curved base and rounded basal peg, composed of many densely packed denticles as seen under SEM (Figs 11D; 12F, G). Scaphe consisting on five fused posterior segments, not clearly separated from segment 21; scaphe oval in shape, flattened and arched ventrally, lateral margins with 6 pairs of lamellae, anal flaps distinctly short, shorter than lateral papillae, with long anal cirrus inbetween dorsally (Figs 8D, H–J; 9D, E; 10A, F); 5–8 pairs of brown, dorso-lateral scaphal hooks distally blunt, slightly arched posteriorwards (Figs 10F; 11E; 12 H–J; Table 2). Variation. Intraspecific variation among the specimens of the type series is given in Table 2. Observed variation in the numbers of pairs of paleae, scaphal hooks and cirri on ventral lobes of segment 2 is size-related (Table 2). Remarks. Members of P. pusilla differ from specimens of P. alissoni n. sp. in having distally trifid medial extension of cephalic veil, fewer pairs of cirri on lobes of segment 2, with wider mid-ventral gap, larger midventral lobes on segment 3, and distinctly shorter scaphal medial cirrus, about as long as lateral papillae. Members of P. alissoni n. sp. , in contrast, have distally entire or bifid medial extension of cephalic veil (paratype 7 with bifid extension, entire in all other specimens) and scaphal cirrus about 5 times as long as lateral papillae. Members of P. pellucida (Ehlers, 1887) differ from individuals of P. alissoni n. sp. in having distally entire and blunt medial extension of cephalic veil, lobes of segment 2 with pair of ventralmost cirri distinctly longer than other cirri, longer mid-ventral lobes on segment 3, cylindrical and distally rounded. Among members of P. alissoni n. sp. , the medial extension of the cephalic veil is distally pointed, cirri of lobes of segment 2 are all of even length, and the mid-ventral lobes of segment 3 are spherical. Petta assimilis McIntosh, 1885 was described based on material from the Kerguelen Islands, Indian Ocean, and the type material is lost, according to Alexander Muir (personal communication). According to the original description, the holotype of P. assimilis differed from specimens of P. alissoni n. sp. in having triangular, distally entire cephalic veil; lobes of segment 2 with 4–5 pairs of cirri, the ventralmost pair distinctly shorter; entire lobe on segment 3, extending across ventral surface of segment without mid-ventral gap, distally cirrate throughout; scaphe with distinctly larger anal flaps, fused to each other in a foliaceous process, with minute terminal cirrus; and notochaetae without specialization at base of blade. In contrast, members of P. alissoni n. sp. have an almost circular cephalic veil, with entire or bifid medial extension; 5–7 pairs of cirri on lobes of segment 2, all of similar length; smooth ventrolateral crests on segment 3, with pair of mid-ventral spherical lobes; scaphe with minute anal flaps, rounded, and distinctly longer terminal cirrus; and their notochaetae have a foliaceous process at base of blade. Members of P. tenuis Caullery, 1944, according to the original description, have ventro-lateral lobes of segment 2 with 4 pairs of triangular cirri, U-shaped ventral lobe on segment 3, and uncini with 3 teeth only, main fang and 2 secondary teeth. In contrast, members of P. alissoni n. sp. have 5–7 pairs of cirri on lobes of segment 2, segment 3 without a ventral lobe, with a pair of spherical papillae instead, and uncini with more secondary teeth, main fang and 2–3 transverse rows of progressively shorter secondary teeth. Type locality. The holotype comes from off the state of São Paulo, southeastern Brazil, southwestern Atlantic. The type series includes material from the northern coast of São Paulo and southern coast of Rio de Janeiro. Etymology. This species is dedicated to Alisson Ricardo da Silva for his friendship with JMMN. : Published as part of Nogueira, João Miguel De Matos, Ribeiro, William M. G., Carrerette, Orlemir & Hutchings, Pat, 2019, Pectinariidae (Annelida, Terebelliformia) from off southeastern Brazil, southwestern Atlantic, pp. 489-509 in Zootaxa 4571 (4) on pages 502-506, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4571.4.3, http://zenodo.org/record/2614189 : {"references": ["Ehlers, E. (1887) Reports on the results of dredging, under the direction of L. F. Pourtales, during the years 1868 - 1870, and of Alexander Agassiz, in the Gulf of Mexico (1877 - 78), and in the Caribbean Sea (1878 - 79), in the U. S. Coast Survey steamer \" Blake \", Lieut-Com. C. D. Sigsbee, U. S. N. and Commander J. R. Bartlett, U. S. N., commanding. XXXI. Report on the Annelids. Memoirs of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard, 15, i-vi + 1 - 335.", "McIntosh, W. C. (1885) Report on the Annelida Polychaeta collected by H. M. S. Challenger during the years 1873 - 1876, Series Zoology, 12, 1 - 554; 55 pls., 1 A- 39 A.", "Caullery, M. (1944) Polychetes Sedentaires de l'Expedition du Siboga: Ariciidae, Spionidae, Chaetopteridae, Chlorhaemidae, Opheliidae, Oweniidae, Sabellariidae, Sternaspidae, Amphictenidae, Ampharetidae, Terebellidae. Siboga-Expeditie Uitkomsten op Zoologisch, Bonatisch, Oceanographisch en Geologisch gebied verzameld in Nederlandsch Oost-Indi 1899 - 1900, XXIV, 2 bis, 1 - 204."]} Text Kerguelen Islands DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Kerguelen Kerguelen Islands Indian Ricardo ENVELOPE(-63.033,-63.033,-64.867,-64.867) McIntosh ENVELOPE(168.683,168.683,-77.517,-77.517) Fang ENVELOPE(167.217,167.217,-77.483,-77.483) Malmgren ENVELOPE(-66.117,-66.117,-65.750,-65.750)