Chaetozone anasima Doner & Blake, 2006
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5113.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EB01C862-025E-493F-8CA9-934B4F1626AF |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6958014 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/054C717B-713F-2345-65DD-FC1FFB12FB08 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Chaetozone anasima Doner & Blake, 2006 |
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Chaetozone anasima Doner & Blake, 2006 View in CoL
Figure 17 View FIGURE 17
Chaetozone setosa Blake et al. 1998b View in CoL : C-1 (in part). Not Malmgren, 1867.
Chaetozone anasimus Doner & Blake, 2006: 67–68 View in CoL ., figs. 2, 5C, G).
Chaetozone anasima: Blake & Levesque 2017: 572–575 View in CoL .
Material examined. (208 specimens) Northeastern USA, Gulf of Maine, Georges Bank , MMS Benthic Infauna Monitoring Program , coll. G.W. Hampson, Chief Scientist: Sta. 14A: Cruise M-6, Rep. 2, 20 Nov 1982, 41°57.5′W, 68°31.2′W, 168 m, (1, USNM 1660979 About USNM ) ; Cruise M-7, Rep. 1, 06 Feb 1983, 41°57.5′W, 68°31.0′W, 168 m (1, USNM 1660980 About USNM ) ; Rep. 4 (2, USMM 1660981 ) ; Cruise M-8, Rep. 5, 14 May 1983, 41°57.5′W, 68°31.1′W, 170 m (1, USMM 1660982 ) ; Cruise M-9, Rep. 1, 13 Jul 1983, 41°57.5′W, 68°31.0′W, 179 m (1, USMM 1660983 ) .— Massachusetts Bay, MWRA Harbor and Outfall Monitoring Program : 1995 August Survey , Sta. FF-05: Rep. 2, Aug 1995, 42°08.00′N, 70°25.35′W, 61 m (11, MCZ 161922 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps . Sta. FF-11: Rep. 2, Aug 1995, 42°39.50′N, 70°30.00′W, 87 m (22, MCZ 161923 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Rep. 3 (21 MCZ 161924 About MCZ ) . 1997 August Survey, Sta. FF-04: Aug 1997, Rep. 1, 42°17.30′N, 70°25.50′W, 87 m (31, MCZ 161925 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Rep. 2 (21, MCZ 161926 About MCZ ) ; Rep. 3 (61, MCZ 161927 About MCZ ) . Sta. FF-05: Rep. 2, Aug 1997, 42°08.00′N, 70°25.35′W, 61 m (20, MCZ 161928 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Rep. 3 (10, MCZ 161929 About MCZ ) . Sta. FF-09: Rep. 1, Aug 1997, 42°18.75′N, 70°39.40′W, 49 m (3, MCZ 161930 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps ; Rep. 2 (5, MCZ 161931 About MCZ ) . August 2002 Survey, Sta. FF-11: Rep. 2, Aug 2002, 42°39.50′N, 70°30.00′W, 88 m, 3 on SEM Stubs ( MCZ 161932 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps . 2006 August Survey, Sta. FF-04: Rep. 3, 03 Aug 2006, 42°17.296′N, 70°25.30′W, 88 m (16, MCZ 161933 About MCZ ) GoogleMaps .
Description. A moderately sized species, 9–12 mm long, 0.5– 1 mm wide for 65–90 setigers. Body thick, robust in anterior two-thirds, then tapering posteriorly. Dorsum rounded with narrow groove ( Fig. 17A View FIGURE 17 ); venter flattened with broad channel or groove along most of body ( Fig. 17B–D View FIGURE 17 ). Anterior segments short, crowded about ten times wider than long; posterior segments longer, about 2.5 times as wide as long. Color in alcohol light tan, with no body pigments evident.
Pre-setiger region short, compact, about as wide as long and as long as first six setigers ( Fig. 17A–B View FIGURE 17 ). Prostomium short, conical, pointed ( Fig. 17A View FIGURE 17 ), sometimes with tip directed dorsally ( Fig. 17B View FIGURE 17 ); eyespots absent; nuchal organs present on lateral surface of peristomium just anterior to oral opening, as a ciliated oval groove ( Fig. 17B View FIGURE 17 , inset). Peristomium with two lateral grooves producing three rings surmounted by broad dorsal crest ( Fig. 17A–B View FIGURE 17 ). Dorsal tentacles arising from near posterior margin of peristomium with first pair of branchiae lateral and slightly posterior to tentacles ( Fig. 17A View FIGURE 17 ). First branchiae appearing to arise from groove between peristomium and setiger 1 in some views ( Fig. 17B View FIGURE 17 ); subsequent setigers with branchiae arising dorsal to notosetae ( Fig. 17A View FIGURE 17 ).
Parapodia of anterior and middle setigers lateral enlargements, forming distinct shoulders along body between notopodium and rounded dorsal surface ( Fig. 17A View FIGURE 17 ); setae arising from posterior margin of each noto- or neuropodium. Parapodia of posterior 20–25 setigers becoming narrow, and elevated forming distinct cinctures bearing acicular spines and capillaries ( Fig. 17D, G View FIGURE 17 ). Noto- and neurosetae of anterior and middle body segments all capillaries, numbering about 8–12 per fascicle; long natatory-like capillaries variably present on some specimens, not associated with reproduction. Acicular spines first present from about setiger 50–60 in neuropodia and 55–65 in notopodia. In most specimens posterior setigers with 10–14 notopodial spines and 6–10 neuropodial spines or with 16–24 spines on a side producing full cinctures; spines accompanied by alternating thin, smooth capillaries, most longer than spines ( Fig. 17D–E, G View FIGURE 17 ). Spines with narrow pointed tips that bend back and merge with shaft of spine on concave edge; recurved bent tips only apparent in light microscopy, not visible in SEM where spines appearing with curved tip ( Fig. 17H View FIGURE 17 ). Cinctured segments with low elevated membranes from with setal fascicles emerge ( Fig. 17G View FIGURE 17 ).
Pygidium with rounded lobe or inflated cushion ventral to anal opening ( Fig. 17E–F View FIGURE 17 ).
Methyl green staining. Base of prostomium stains; rest of body stains lightly with no pattern after differentiation.
Remarks. Chaetozone anasima belongs to the C. curvata and occurs in inner and outer shelf habitats, whereas two additional new species described in this study, C. adunca n. sp. and C. brychiata n. sp., both occur in deepwater sediments. Morphological similarities and differences among the nine species in the C. curvata group are presented in Table 3 View TABLE 3 .
Among species in the Chaetozone curvata group, C. anasima and five other species have three peristomial rings ( Table 3 View TABLE 3 ). Of these, only C. anasima and Chaetozone gesae Blake, 2018 from off Chile, have a dorsal crest. However, C. anasima has full posterior cinctures with up 16–24 spines on a side instead of partial cinctures with 13–15 spines as in C. gesae . In addition, C. gesae is recorded as having the first and second pair of branchiae both occurring on setiger 1, whereas in C. anasima , the first branchiae occur on the posterior margin of the peristomium.
Among local species of nearshore and continental shelf species of Chaetozone , C. anasima , apart from the recurved tips on the acicular spines, may be easily recognized by the relatively short pre-setiger region with three peristomial rings and a prostomium that is typically turned upward. In contrast, Chaetozone hystricosa ( Doner & Blake, 2006) , with which C. anasima may occur, has an elongate, smooth pre-setiger region, not interrupted by annular rings, that tapers to a narrow anteriorly directed prostomium.
Distribution. Northeastern USA, Massachusetts Bay, 49–90 m; Gulf of Maine, 168– 179 m.
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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Chaetozone anasima Doner & Blake, 2006
Blake, James A. 2022 |
Chaetozone anasimus
Doner, S. A. & Blake, J. A. 2006: 68 |