Ficopomatus miamiensis ( Treadwell, 1934 )

Bastida-Zavala, J. Rolando, McCANN, Linda D., Keppel, Erica & Ruiz, Gregory M., 2017, The fouling serpulids (Polychaeta: Serpulidae) from United States coastal waters: an overview, European Journal of Taxonomy 344, pp. 1-76 : 19-21

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2017.344

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:27AA4538-407D-470A-8141-365124193D85

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3851353

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/794587B2-FFD3-FFA8-FDD8-F98FFBE1FD6A

treatment provided by

Carolina (2020-05-19 17:24:32, last updated 2024-11-26 04:57:14)

scientific name

Ficopomatus miamiensis ( Treadwell, 1934 )
status

 

Ficopomatus miamiensis ( Treadwell, 1934) View in CoL

Figs 2 View Fig I–K, 3

Sphaeropomatus miamiensis Treadwell, 1934: 339–341 View in CoL ; figs 1–5 (type locality: Miami River, Florida, United States).

Mercierellopsis prietoi Rioja, 1945: 413–417 View in CoL , pl. I, figs 1–20, pl. II, figs 21–23 (type locality: Larios Estuary, Tecolutla and Carmen Lagoon, Veracruz, eastern Mexico; also from Barra de Nautla, Veracruz; in brackish water, on mangrove roots, Ostrea View in CoL and other bivalves).

Ficopomatus miamiensis View in CoL – ten Hove & Weerdenburg 1978: 106 –109, figs 1f–i, 3c, 4h–i, q, v–w, eeii, xx, 5a–b (revision of the genus and specimens from Florida, Louisiana, Jamaica, Barbados, Cura ҫao, Belize, and Canal Zone of Pacific Panama; in brackish water, 2.5–31‰, intertidal to 1 m, on the carapace of Macrobrachium jamaicensis Gundlach, 1887 , now M. carcinus (Linnaeus, 1758) View in CoL , shell of Isognomon alatus (Gmelin, 1791) , pebbles, limestone boulders on sandy mud and Caulerpa View in CoL ). — Perkins 1998: 95 (checklist of shallow-water polychaetes from Florida). — Bastida-Zavala & Salazar-Vallejo 2000a: 813, fig. 4i–s (eastern Mexico: Tecolutla, Veracruz and Chetumal Bay, Mexican Caribbean; on oysters and docks). — Bastida-Zavala & ten Hove 2003: 92 (probably from Costa Rica; on mangrove oysters, Ostrea iridiscens , now Striostrea prismatica (Gray, 1825) View in CoL and Crassostrea columbiensis (Hanley, 1846) View in CoL , with Hydroides humilis ( Bush, 1905) View in CoL and Spirobranchus minutus ( Rioja, 1941b)) View in CoL . — Bastida-Zavala 2008: 19 –21, fig. 5B–D (Sinaloa, Mexican Pacific and Canal Zone of Pacific Panama). — Tovar-Hernández et al. 2009: 327 – 328, figs 3g–i, 6a, 7a–c (as an invasive species in Mazatlán, Sinaloa, Mexican Pacific). — Tovar-Hernández et al. 2012: 12, figs a–e (Gulf of California: La Paz, Baja California Sur).

Material examined

224 specimens: JX (4) Aug. 2001, IR (92) Aug. 2005, BB (65) Aug. 2004, TB (10) Jul. 2002, PB (24) Aug. 2002, GB (27) Sep. 2002, CC (2) Sep. 2002.

Additional material

More than 160 specimens: ECOSUR s.n., 129+ specimens (Chetumal Bay, pier, 1990–1996, coll. S.I. Salazar-Vallejo et al.); UMAR-Poly 51, 10+ specimens (23°09' N, 106°19' W, Urias estuary, Mazatlán, Mexico, 1999, coll. N. Méndez); USNM 58659, 20+ specimens (approx. 8°59'40" N, 79°35'20" W, Miraflores Spillway, Canal Zone, Panama City, Panama, sta. 130–5, “on bottom, standing water”, 2 Apr. 1973, coll. M.L. Jones et al.).

Diagnosis

This species is gregarious and can form colonies. Tube white, with small peristomes; without transverse ridges, longitudinal ridges or alveoli ( Fig. 2I View Fig ). Opercular peduncle smooth, white. Operculum spherical or with a flat end-plate, never with spines ( Fig. 2 View Fig J–K). Thoracic membranes not fused dorsally. Special collar chaetae coarsely serrated.

Measurements: Total length = 6.2 mm (n = 10, r: 2.6–11.9, SD = 2.9); thorax length = 1.6 mm (n = 13, r: 0.7–3.2, SD = 0.6), thorax width = 0.6 mm (n = 13, r: 0.4–0.9, SD = 0.2); peduncle and operculum length = 1.3 mm (n = 13, r: 0.6–2.8, SD = 0.6); operculum length = 0.6 mm (n = 13, r: 0.3–0.9, SD = 0.2); operculum diameter = 0.4 mm (n = 13, r: 0.2–0.7, SD = 0.2).

Taxonomic remarks

Ficopomatus miamiensis has a spherical ( Fig. 2J View Fig ), slightly convex ( Fig. 2K View Fig ) or flat operculum that lacks spines, while, the other two species of Ficopomatus recorded as NIS in the United States have spines on the operculum ( Fig. 2G View Fig , M–N).

The native distribution of F. miamiensis is assumed to be the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea. The NIS records from Urías Estuary, Sinaloa, Mexican Pacific ( Salgado-Barragán et al. 2004; Tovar-Hernández et al. 2009), were likely due to the accidental introduction of larvae included in the water with shrimp transported from the Gulf of Mexico for aquaculture, or as adults encrusting bivalves moved from the Gulf of Mexico to Sinaloa, Mexican Pacific, with oysters for oyster culture, while the specimens recorded from Pacific Panama ( Bastida-Zavala 2008) and Costa Rica ( Bastida-Zavala & ten Hove 2003: 92) presumably invaded following transport by ballast water or by oyster translocation. Recently, F. miamiensis was found in La Paz, Baja California Sur, Gulf of California ( Tovar-Hernández et al. 2012).

Ecology

Intertidal to sublittoral (3 m). On mangrove roots, oysters, shrimp carapace, algae, and rocky and artificial substrates ( ten Hove & Weerdenburg 1978).

Distribution

Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea, in tropical brackish water lagoons and the mouth of rivers. Also recorded from the Pacific side of the Canal Zone of Panama ( Bastida-Zavala 2008) and Urías Estuary, Sinaloa, Mexican Pacific, as an invasive species ( Tovar-Hernández et al. 2009). In this work, Ficopomatus miamiensis was found abundantly on fouling plates from the Indian River, Biscayne Bay and Pensacola Bay, Florida, and Galveston Bay, Texas; and occasionally from Jacksonville and Tampa Bay, Florida, and Corpus Christi, Texas ( Fig. 3 View Fig ). This species extends its westward range from Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana ( ten Hove & Weerdenburg 1978) to Galveston Bay, Texas (500 km).

Bastida-Zavala J. R. & Salazar-Vallejo S. I. 2000 a. Serpulidos (Polychaeta: Serpulidae) del Caribe noroccidental con claves para la region del Gran Caribe: Salmacina, Ficopomatus, Pomatoceros, Pomatostegus, Protula, Pseudovermilia, Spirobranchus y Vermiliopsis. Revista de Biologia Tropical 48: 807 - 840.

Bastida-Zavala J. R. & ten Hove H. A. 2003. Revision of Hydroides Gunnerus, 1768 (Polychaeta: Serpulidae) from the Eastern Pacific Region and Hawaii. Beaufortia 53: 67 - 110.

Bastida-Zavala J. R. 2008. Serpulids (Annelida: Polychaeta) from the eastern Pacific, including a brief mention of Hawaiian serpulids. Zootaxa 1722: 1 - 61.

Bush K. J. 1905. Tubicolous annelids of the tribes Sabellides and Serpulides from the Pacific Ocean. In: Merriam C. H. (ed.) Harriman Alaska Expedition with Cooperation of Washington Academy of Sciences 12: 169 - 346. Doubleday, Page and Company, New York.

Hove H. A. ten & Weerdenburg J. C. A. 1978. A generic revision of the brackish-water serpulid Ficopomatus Southern 1921 (Polychaeta: Serpulinae), including Mercierella Fauvel 1923, Sphaeropomatus Treadwell 1934, Mercierellopsis Rioja 1945 and Neopomatus Pillai 1960. The Biological Bulletin 154: 96 - 120. https: // doi. org / 10.2307 / 1540777

Perkins T. H. 1998. Checklist of shallow-water marine polychaetous Annelida of Florida. In: Camp D. K., Lyons W. G. & Perkins T. H. (eds) Checklist of Selected Shallow-water Marine Invertebrates of Florida: 79 - 122. Florida Marine Research Institute, Technical Report 3.

Rioja E. 1941 b. Estudios Anelidologicos III. Datos para el conocimiento de la fauna de poliquetos de las costas mexicanas del Pacifico. Anales del Instituto de Biologia 12: 669 - 746.

Rioja E. 1945. Estudios Anelidologicos XIII: Un nuevo genero de serpulido de agua salobre de Mexico. Anales del Instituto de Biologia 16: 411 - 417.

Salgado-Barragan J., Mendez N. & Toledano-Granados A. 2004. Ficopomatus miamiensis (Polychaeta: Serpulidae) and Styela canopus (Ascidiacea: Styelidae), non-native species in Urias estuary, SE Gulf of California, Mexico. Cahiers de Biologie Marine 45: 167 - 173.

Tovar-Hernandez M. A., Mendez N. & Villalobos-Guerrero T. F. 2009. Fouling polychaete worms from the southern Gulf of California: Sabellidae and Serpulidae. Systematics and Biodiversity 7 (3): 319 - 336. https: // doi. org / 10.1017 / S 1477200009990041

Tovar-Hernandez M. A., Villalobos-Guerrero T. F., Yanez-Rivera B., Aguilar-Camacho J. M. & Ramirez- Santana I. D. 2012. Guia de Invertebrados acuaticos exoticos en Sinaloa. Geomare, A. C., USFWS, INE- SEMARNAT, Mazatlan, Sinaloa, Mexico.

Treadwell A. L. 1934. Sphaeropomatus miamiensis, a new genus and species of serpulid polychaete. Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 24 (8): 338 - 341.

Gallery Image

Fig. 2. Serpulids from United States fouling plates. Crucigera websteri. A. Operculum, juvenile from Humboldt Bay, California. B. Operculum, adult from San Pedro, California (LACMNH-N8819). – C. zygophora. C. Operculum, juvenile from Alaska (SERC). D. Operculum, adult from Canoe Bay, Alaska (LACMNH-N2128). – Ficopomatus enigmaticus. E. Tubes from Lake Merritt, California (LACMNH-N5141). F. Body, from Chesapeake Bay, Virginia (SERC-59327). G. Operculum, from Chesapeake Bay, Virginia (SERC-60530R). H. Colonies in Long Beach, California (photo by Bruno Pernet).– F. miamiensis. I. Tubes, from Chetumal Bay, Mexican Caribbean (ECOSUR). J–K. Operculum, from Galveston Bay, Texas (SERC-88344RF). – F. uschakovi. L. Tube, from Corpus Christi, Texas (SERC-88883). M. Thorax and operculum, from Galveston Bay, Texas (SERC-86995). N. Operculum, from La Encrucijada, Chiapas (UMAR-Poly 113). O. Thorax and operculum, from Corpus Christi, Texas (SERC-88883).

Gallery Image

Fig. 3. Distribution of serpulids (Crucigera and Ficopomatus spp.) from United States fouling plates (closed symbols) and literature records (open symbols).

ECOSUR

El Colegio de la Frontera Sur (Mexico)

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Sabellida

Family

Serpulidae

Genus

Ficopomatus