Apionsoma (Edmondsius) pectinatum ( Keferstein, 1867 )

Silva-Morales, Itzahí & Gómez-Vásquez, Julio D., 2021, First records and two new species of sipunculans (Sipuncula) from the Southern Mexican Pacific, European Journal of Taxonomy 740 (1), pp. 77-117 : 95-97

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2021.740.1283

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:07F1B593-9F4F-4B32-88D9-ADC5CA0BEB84

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4644455

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CA87A4-D362-8036-79DB-42DAFB9F64DD

treatment provided by

Plazi (2021-03-29 06:54:26, last updated by Guilherme 2024-12-09 17:50:24)

scientific name

Apionsoma (Edmondsius) pectinatum ( Keferstein, 1867 )
status

 

Apionsoma (Edmondsius) pectinatum ( Keferstein, 1867) View in CoL

Fig. 10 View Fig

Phascolosoma pectinatum Keferstein, 1867: 47–48 View in CoL (type locality: Pacific of Panama).

Siphonides rickettsi Fisher, 1952: 386–388 , pl. 22 (type locality: near La Paz, Baja California, Mexico, under boulders).

Phascolosoma (Satonus) pectinatum View in CoL – E. Cutler 1977: 150 (from Gulf of Panama, Panama).

Material examined

MEXICO • 21; Oaxaca, Zipolite ; 15°39′37″ N, 96°30′38″ W; 16 Nov. 2016; FRE leg.; depth 2 m, in dead coral; UMAR-SIPU 011 GoogleMaps 8; Huatulco, San Agustín Bay ; 15°41′21″ N, 96°14′11″ W; 17 Nov. 2016; JGV leg.; depth 2 m, in dead coral; UMAR-SIPU 012 GoogleMaps .

Description

Trunk 20 mm in length ( Fig. 10A View Fig ). Trunk light yellowish to dark brown in color, with dome-shaped papillae around trunk and base of introvert, scattered on body. Body wall wrinkled, giving a rough appearance ( Fig. 10B View Fig ). Introvert 2–4 times as long as trunk. Tentacles digitiform, encircling nuchal organ. Thirty rings of hooks in anterior region of introvert, with seven basal spinelets ( Fig. 10C View Fig ). Two pairs of retractor muscles. A pair of bilobed nephridia. Longitudinal bands of body wall show slight anastomosis. Nephridia with 40% of trunk length. Spindle muscle not attached to posterior end of trunk ( Fig. 10A View Fig ).

Remarks

With only a few records at the time, Cutler (1994) concluded that the distribution of Apionsoma (Edmondsius) pectinatum in the Eastern Pacific went from Baja California to Panama, so its distribution in the rest of TEP could only be inferred. This new record from the Southern Mexican Pacific breaks the disjunctive distribution in the Tropical Eastern Pacific for this species.

Habitat

Subtidal (2 m); in dead coral.

Distribution

Tropical Eastern Pacific, from Baja California Sur, Mexico to Gulf of Panama.

Cutler E. B. 1977. The bathyal and abyssal Sipuncula. Galathea Report 14: 135 - 156.

Cutler E. B. 1994. The Sipuncula: their Systematics, Biology and Evolution. Cornell University, New York. https: // doi. org / 10.2307 / 2413618

Fisher W. K. 1952. The sipunculid worms of California and Baja California. Proceedings of the United States National Museum 102 (3306): 371 - 450. https: // doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 00963801.102 - 3306.371

Keferstein W. 1867. Untersuchungen uber einige amerikanische Sipunculiden. Zeitschrift fur Wissenschaftliche Zoologie 17: 44 - 55.

Gallery Image

Fig. 10. Apionsoma (Edmondsius) pectinatum (Keferstein, 1867) from the Southern Mexican Pacific. A. Internal morphology. B. External morphology. C. Hook. Abbreviations: I = intestine; LMB = longitudinal muscle bands; N = nephridium; RM = retractor muscles.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Sipuncula

Class

Phascolosomatidea

Order

Phascolosomatiformes

Family

Phascolosomatidae

Genus

Apionsoma

SubGenus

Apionsoma