Haplosyllis spongicola ( Grube, 1855 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.190035 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6218845 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038F043C-FFC6-914F-AD9B-FCFD772DFCC0 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Haplosyllis spongicola ( Grube, 1855 ) |
status |
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Haplosyllis spongicola ( Grube, 1855) View in CoL
( Figs 17 View FIGURE 17 A–C, 18A–D)
Syllis spongicola Grube, 1855: 104 View in CoL –105.— Marion & Bobretzky, 1875: 24 –25, fig.7
Syllis setubalensis McIntosh, 1885: 195 View in CoL –196, pl. 30,fig. 5; pl. 33, fig. 6; pl. 15a fig. 16–17.
Syllis spongicola tentaculata View in CoL .— Marion, 1879: 19 –20, fig. 4 a–c.— Cognetti, 1955: 1 –3, fig. 1b.— Cognetti, 1957: 10 –14, fig. 2b.— Cognetti, 1961: 294.
? Syllis spongicola tentaculata View in CoL .— Imajima, 1966: 221 –222, fig. 38 i –n.
? Haplosyllis spongicola View in CoL .— Sun, 1996: 20 –21, fig. 3.
Haplosyllis spongicola View in CoL .— Amoureux, 1977: 398.— Campoy, 1982: 363 –365, in part.— Hartmann-Schröder, 1981: 27, fig. 3–4.— San Martín, 2003: 323 –325, fig. 179 a, c, d y 180, in part.— Lattig et al. 2007: 554 –556, figs 1–2.
Geminosyllis View in CoL sp. 1 Lattig et al. 2007: 564 –566, figs 7–8.
Non: Haplosyllis spongicola .— Fauvel, 1923: 257–258, fig. 95.— Imajima, 1966: 220–221 fig. 38, a–h.
Non: Syllis spongicola spongicola .— Cognetti, 1955: 1–3, Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 a.— Cognetti, 1957: 10–14, fig. 2a.— Cognetti, 1961: 294.
Examined material. Lesina, Adriatic Sea , Mediterranean. Syntype MPW 399. Coast of Portugal, Holotype of Syllis setubalensis BMNH, 850 m.
Additional material: Portugal, personal collection of Joao Gil ( CEAB – CSIC): SEPLAT 6: sta. 15 (1) 65 m; sta. 21 (1) 70 m; sta. 22 (4) 52 m; sta. 25 (1) 61 m; sta. 54 (3) 58 m; sta. 55 (1) 64 m; sta. 89 (1) 490 m. SEPLAT 7: sta.96 (1) 112 m; sta. 105 (1) 27 5m; sta. 149 (2) 113 m; sta. 175 (5) 202 m; sta. 179 (1) 120 m; sta. 212 (1) 147 m; sta. 220 (2) 28 m; sta. 223 (1) 38 m; sta. 231 (1) 32 m; sta. 289 (1) 338 m. Las Aguilas, Murcia, Spain, 28 m (2).
South of Ireland. 20 specimens MNHN, 40 specimens MNHN. Continental slope, 850–1000 m, Expedition Thalassa 1973.
W Mediterranean: 2 specimens MNCN 16.01/10591, Rhizomes of Posidonia oceanica , 5 m, October 1989; 2 specimens MNCN 16.01/10588, on Eunicella singularis , 9 m, August 1984; 6 specimens MNCN 16.01/10592, on algae Udotea petiolata , 12 m, April 1985; 2 specimens MNCN 16.01/10594, on Paramuricea clavata , 23 m, April 1983; 1 specimen 16.01/10593, 1 specimen 16.01/10587 on Paramuricea clavata , 15 m, August 1984. Cabo de Creus, coll. Carmen Alós.
E Atlantic, Cantabric Sea: 8 specimens MNCN 16.01/10550, 114– 116 m, 43º40’59’’N 7º04’35’’O. 3 specimens MNCN 16.01/ 10553, 146 m, 43º40’27’’N 5º13.36'0. Expedition Fauna Ibérica, June 1991.
Diagnosis. Body robust, variable in size, up to 60 mm long, for 35–110 chaetigers. Dorsal cirri long, whip-shaped. Chaetae all bidentate, anterior ones broad, US of MF with small denticles ( Fig. 18 View FIGURE 18 A, C). Midbody chaetae variable, depending on size of specimens: in small worms (about 0.5 mm long), MJP straight and long; LMF similar than SW ( Fig. 18 View FIGURE 18 D). In longer worms (> 1 cm long), MJP short and curved; LMF longer than SW ( Fig. 18 View FIGURE 18 B).
Host. Found in association with different sponge species ( López et al. 2001), but more likely a specialized predator than a true sponge symbiont ( Martin & Britayev, 1998).
Distribution. Mediterranean and European Atlantic waters. Also reported from the Indo-Pacific ( Imajima 1966; Lee & Rho 1994; Sun 1996), but this material need to be rechecked. Recorded from 5 to 1000 m. Remarks. Observing the pharynx under SEM, we have found a variety of anterior margins ranging from those with smooth, to those with well defined trepans, either with small apparently eroded teeth ( Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 A), or with blunt, to triangular teeth ( Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 B). Sometimes, pharyngeal margins are impossible to distinguish due the presence of a densely ciliated ring ( Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 C). When present, teeth may occupy the whole pharyngeal margin or only a semicircle (usually opposite to the long anterior tooth).
Haplosyllis spongicola show different chaetal morphologies in anterior and midbody chaetae, as well as in small and large worms ( Fig. 18 View FIGURE 18 A–D). Small worms (about 5 mm in length) have small denticles on US of MF, and LMF is similar to SW in all chaetae; long specimens (i.e. more than 10 mm length) have a long LMF. These variations may reflect the existence of an allometric variability. The same occurs with the shape of cirri, which may vary from long, broad to very long whip-shaped. Typically, the largest worms have more whipshaped cirri.
Haplosyllis spongicola has a variable ecological signal. Its bathymetric range is very wide (from shallow to very deep waters), and has been collected in different types of hard substrata, in association with gorgonian fields, algal mats, calcareous algae crusts or Posidonia meadows. Although it has been reported from inside sponges, the worm are found solitary or in low numbers and the sponges seem not to be hosts but a source of food. Contrary to other Haplosyllis species, which are strict endosymbionts found in large quantities inside their sponge hosts ( Martin & Britayev 1998).
The specimens reported as Geminosyllis sp. 1 in Lattig et al. (2007) fits within the morphological variability of H. spongicola and, thus, are here considered as the same species. Similarly, the examination of the holotype of H. setubalensis and additional material from Portugal (30–330 m) and the Thalassa 1973 expedition (Atlantic coast of France, 1000 m) allowed us to confirm the synonymy of this species with H. spongicola , as previously reported by Licher (1999).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Genus |
Haplosyllis spongicola ( Grube, 1855 )
Lattig, Patricia & Martin, Daniel 2009 |
Geminosyllis
Lattig 2007: 564 |
Haplosyllis spongicola
Sun 1996: 20 |
Haplosyllis spongicola
Lattig 2007: 554 |
San 2003: 323 |
Campoy 1982: 363 |
Hartmann-Schroder 1981: 27 |
Amoureux 1977: 398 |
Syllis spongicola tentaculata
Imajima 1966: 221 |
Syllis setubalensis
McIntosh 1885: 195 |
Syllis spongicola tentaculata
Cognetti 1961: 294 |
Cognetti 1957: 10 |
Cognetti 1955: 1 |
Marion 1879: 19 |
Syllis spongicola
Marion 1875: 24 |
Grube 1855: 104 |