Namalycastis rhodochorde Glasby, Miura, Nishi and Junardi, 2007
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2024.2404472 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14248809 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E8B90C-2A79-FFA9-FF0B-FCF1FEE4E3CF |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Namalycastis rhodochorde Glasby, Miura, Nishi and Junardi, 2007 |
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Namalycastis rhodochorde Glasby, Miura, Nishi and Junardi, 2007 View in CoL
( Figures 10–12 View Figure 10 View Figure 11 View Figure 12 )
Namalycastis rhodochorde Glasby, Miura, Nishi and Junardi, 2007: 21–27 View in CoL , figs 1–8 (type locality: West Kalimantan in Borneo , Indonesia); Idris et al. 2012: 240–241, fig. 2(a–g).
Material examined
In front of Pulau Awang Jin (Sta. 6) (5.643 ° N, 102.757 ° E) in Setiu Wetlands in Terengganu, Malaysia, 27 November 2015, coll GoogleMaps . N GoogleMaps .F. Ibrahim et al., single specimen (UMT-Ann 2270).
Description
Complete specimen 3.3 mm BW, 445 mm BL, with approximately 650 chaetigers. Approximately uniform in width of anterior to about mid-body, then tapering gradually towards the posterior part. Dorsum convex, ventrally flattened. Colour in alcohol whitish (without pigmentation).
Prostomium trapezoidal (2.0x wider than long), with shallow cleft in anterior margin, with narrow longitudinal groove extending from tip to mid-posterior prostomium ( Figure 10 View Figure 10 (a)). Pair of antennae short, sub-conical, aligned at inner edge of palps, extending to one-third of palpophores. Two pairs of eyes (deeply embedded within epidermis, almost invisible), black, arranged obliquely. Jaws black, with several teeth. Proboscis (eversible pharynx) without paragnaths and papillae.
Four pairs of tentacular cirri with cirrophores distinct (1/3 as long as total length of cirri) ( Figure 10 View Figure 10 (a)). Anterodorsal and posterodorsal tentacular cirri of almost the same length. Posterodorsal tentacular cirri extending posteriorly to chaetiger 3.
Parapodia consist of triangular dorsal cirrus, acicular ligule and ventral cirrus. Acicular ligule weakly bilobed distally (superior lobe papilliform, inferior lobe globular) throughout except for posterior-most chaetigers ( Figure 10 View Figure 10 (d–l)). Dorsal cirri triangular throughout, widest (1.2x wider than long) at mid-body (around chaetiger 300, Figure 10 View Figure 10 (i)), longest around chaetiger 10 ( Figure 10 View Figure 10 (e)), decreasing in length posteriorly; dorsal cirri of chaetiger 10 twice longer than those of chaetiger 601 ( Figure 10 View Figure 10 (l)). Ventral cirri small, slender throughout. Aciculae black.
Notochaetae absent throughout ( Figure 11 View Figure 11 ). Neurochaetae type C according to Glasby (1999). Upper neurochaetae have sesquigomph spinigers with finely serrated blade posteriorly ( Figure 12 View Figure 12 (a)) and heterogomph falcigers anteriorly ( Figure 12 View Figure 12 (b)). Lower neurochaetae have heterogomph falcigers ( Figure 12 View Figure 12 (c)) arranged in deep arc around inferior lobe ( Figure 11 View Figure 11 ). All heterogomph falcigers with single nose-like projection at base of inner edge of blade lacking serration ( Figure 12 View Figure 12 (b,c)).
Pygidium with multi-incised rim, and anus dorsoterminal ( Figure 10 View Figure 10 (c)). Pair of anal cirri arising ventrolaterally, half as long as pygidium width.
Habitats
A single specimen was found inside the decaying fronds of Nypa fruticans in the estuary Setiu Wetlands, Terengganu, co-existing with Namalycastis sp. in the present study. The species inhabited the mud banks and mudflats associated with the Nypa palm in estuarine mangrove areas, such as those found in Indonesia, Vietnam ( Glasby et al. 2007; Junardi 2021) and Malaysia ( Idris et al. 2012).
Distribution
Mekong Delta ( Vietnam), West Kalimantan and Sabah in Borneo ( Indonesia and Malaysia) ( Glasby et al. 2007; Junardi et al. 2014a; Junardi 2021); Johor, Kedah and Penang in the western coast of Peninsular Malaysia ( Idris et al. 2012); Terengganu on the eastern coast of Peninsular Malaysia (present study).
Remarks
This is the first record of the species from the eastern coast of Peninsular Malaysia. General morphology of the specimen agrees well with the original description of N. rhodochorde by Glasby et al. (2007), clearly differing from Namalycastis sp. by having toothless blades of heterogomph falcigers and in the absence of notochaetae as well as neuropodial sub-acicular heterogomph spinigers. The specimens reported from the western coast of Peninsular Malaysia by Idris et al. (2012) differ from our specimen in the following characteristics: (1) the presence of heterogomph falcigers having a blade with 10 small serrations in the anterior chaetigers, and (2) the presence of few (1–4) notopodial sesquigomph spinigers in some chaetigers.
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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Namalycastis rhodochorde Glasby, Miura, Nishi and Junardi, 2007
Ibrahim, Nur Fazne, Ibrahim, Yusof Shuaib, Kan, Kotaro & Sato, Masanori 2024 |
Namalycastis rhodochorde
Idris I & Glasby CJ & Arshad A 2012: 240 |
Glasby CJ & Miura T & Nishi E & Junardi 2007: 27 |