Dipolydora giardi ( Mesnil, 1896 )

Radashevsky, Vasily I. & Petersen, Mary E., 2005, On the morphology and distribution of Dipolydora giardi and status of D. trilobata (Annelida: Spionidae), Zootaxa 1086, pp. 25-36 : 28-31

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.170484

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6265801

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F7EC34-FFA4-5963-FD45-1D02FAB5FC4A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Dipolydora giardi ( Mesnil, 1896 )
status

 

Dipolydora giardi ( Mesnil, 1896) View in CoL

( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 )

Polydora giardi Mesnil, 1896: 195 View in CoL –202, pl. 13, figs. 1–12. Fauvel, 1927: 50 –52, fig. 17 h–m.

Dipolydora giardi: Blake, 1996: 186 View in CoL . [New combination introduced. D. giardi View in CoL record uncertain].

Material. FRANCE: La Manche, coll. & id. F. Mesnil, accessioned ZMUC 22 June 1896, ZMUC POL­ 653 (3 spec.). ITALY: Ischia Is., Gulf of Naples, 40°44.8' N, 13°56.7' E, 2 m, from shells of the whelks Stramonita haemastoma (L.) and Hexaplex trunculus (L.), coll. V. I. Radashevsky, 18 Jul 1994, BMNH 2002.620–629 (17 spec.).

Comparative material. Dipolydora trilobata : RUSSIA: Sea of Japan, Vostok Bay of Peter the Great Bay, 42°53.6' N, 132°44.1' E, from shells of the oyster Crassostrea gigas (Thunberg) , ZISP 1/46576­3/46578 (holotype + 19 paratypes); IMBV 1/12171 (50 paratypes); USNM 183520 (30+ spec.).

Description. Mesnil’s material consists of three complete individuals 3–4 mm long and 0.3–0.4 mm wide for c. 60, 70, and 75 chaetigers. One individual regenerating two anterior segments. Largest complete specimen from Italy c. 4 mm long and 0.3 mm wide for 60 chaetigers. Body pigmentation absent. Prostomium incised to bifid anteriorly. Caruncle extending posteriorly to end of chaetiger 3. Eyes and nuchal antenna absent ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A). Palps extending posteriorly for 10–15 chaetigers.

Chaetiger 1 with postchaetal lamellae in both rami; both noto­ and neurochaetae short capillaries, fewer than in following chaetigers. Posterior notopodia with only capillaries, without spines.

Chaetiger 5 greatly modified, larger than chaetigers 4 or 6, without postchaetal lamellae, with 2 or 3 dorsal superior geniculate capillaries ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 H), 4 or 5 major spines alternating with bilimbate­tipped companion chaetae ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 I), and a tuft of 4 or 5 ventral capillaries ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 G). Major spines falcate, with lateral tooth on one side and fine spur or protuberance on the other side; spines arranged in a slightly curved diagonal row; lateral tooth occasionally broken in older spines positioned in anterior part of the row.

Hooded hooks in neuropodia from chaetiger 7, up to 5 in a series, accompanied by single, winged inferior capillary chaetae in chaetigers 7–9 ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 D) and by 1 or 2 hair­like capillaries situated between hooks in a few posterior chaetigers ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 E). Hooks bidentate throughout, with angle between main fang and shaft wider in posterior chaetigers; hook shaft slightly curved, without constriction ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 C, F).

Branchiae from chaetiger 9–10, usually from 10 but one specimen with short branchial buds present on chaetiger 9 ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A); branchiae full­sized from chaetiger 11, absent from posterior half of body. Branchiae flattened, with surfaces oriented parallel to body axis, free from notopodial postchaetal lamellae.

Pygidium small, cup­shaped, with one ventral lobe and two smaller dorsal lobes, appearing white because of large number of spindle­shaped mucous cells ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 B). Glandular pouches from chaetiger 6, full­sized from chaetiger 7 or 8, diminishing in size after chaetiger 10 or 11.

Gizzard­like structure present at about chaetiger 17. Hind gut white.

Metanephridia opening middorsally via two separate nephridiopores on fertile segments apparent under methyl­green staining in a 40­segment posterior fragment from Italy which had oocytes up to 130 µm in diameter in middle segments. No sperm were recognized in this fragment or in other specimens.

Methyl­green staining patterns. Head and anterior chaetigers do not retain stain. Staining dorsally as paired spots, one on each half of chaetiger, usually from chaetiger 8 or 9, occasionally from chaetiger 7; size of spots and intensity of staining gradually increasing posteriorly.

Remarks. No differences in size, morphology and life style (boring in calcareous substrata) could be detected between the Mesnil’s worms from northern France and those from the Mediterranean and thus we are confident they are D. giardi sensu stricto Mesnil as indicated. Two specimens from the Mesnil’s sample found in Copenhagen have an indistinct pygidium, but one of them clearly has a middorsal cleft and two dorso­lateral clefts that divide the cup into one ventral lobe and two smaller dorsal lobes. The same trilobed pygidium was also invariably present in all specimens collected by us from Italy.

Dipolydora trilobata View in CoL specimens examined for the comparison resemble D. giardi View in CoL in that they also have an incised to bifid prostomium, caruncle extending to the end of chaetiger 3, pygidium with three small lobes, major falcate spines of chaetiger 5 with large lateral tooth on one side and a smaller accessory spur on the other side. Maximal size of worms and boring mode of life are also identical. Both species lack eyes, occipital antenna and modified spines in posterior notopodia. However, branchiae in D. giardi View in CoL begin on chaetiger 10 (19 specimens in 20 examined), rarely on chaetiger 9 (1 specimen), whereas in D. trilobata View in CoL they usually start on chaetiger 9 (46 specimens in 83 examined), occasionally on chaetiger 8 or 10 (23 and 13 specimens in 83 examined, respectively), and rarely on chaetiger 7 (1 specimen). Hooded hooks in D. giardi View in CoL are distinctly bidentate in all neuropodia, whereas in D. trilobata View in CoL they become unidentate in 2–5 posterior chaetigers ( Radashevsky 1993: fig. 17I). A more fundamental difference may be that Mesnil's D. giardi View in CoL were reportedly simultaneous hermaphrodites ( Mesnil 1896: p. 200) while D. trilobata View in CoL is a gonochoristic species (Radashevsky unpublished). The description of gamete arrangement in D. giardi View in CoL provided by Mesnil is, however, ambiguous and hermaphroditism in the species needs to be confirmed by further studies.

Polydora anoculata Moore, 1907 View in CoL from Massachusetts is also a similar species. Blake (1971) examined the holotype and emended the diagnosis. Subsequently Maciolek (1984) did not find differences between Moore’s and Mesnil’s species and placed P. anoculata View in CoL into the synonymy of P. giardi View in CoL . Blake (1971) and Maciolek (1984) reported that specimens from Massachusetts and North Carolina had the caruncle extending posteriorly to chaetiger 3–5, branchiae beginning from chaetiger 9–10, and the pygidium small and disclike, with only a dorsal notch. However, these characteristics indicate that Dipolydora anoculata View in CoL is not only validly described, but also distinct from D. giardi View in CoL and D. trilobata View in CoL .

ZMUC

Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen

ZISP

Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Spionida

Family

Spionidae

Genus

Dipolydora

Loc

Dipolydora giardi ( Mesnil, 1896 )

Radashevsky, Vasily I. & Petersen, Mary E. 2005
2005
Loc

Dipolydora giardi:

Blake 1996: 186
1996
Loc

Polydora giardi

Fauvel 1927: 50
Mesnil 1896: 195
1896
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