Paleanotus Schmarda, 1861
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2017.1395919 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E91002-871C-1374-FE6B-FE18FBFFFCB3 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Paleanotus Schmarda, 1861 |
status |
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Genus Paleanotus Schmarda, 1861 View in CoL
( Figures 13a–f View Figure 13 , 14a, b View Figure 14 ; Tables 1, 2)
Type species: Paleanotus chrysolepis Schmarda, 1861
Material examined
Two specimens Paleanotus bellis ( Johnson, 1897) , FMNH 2495, FMNH 2493, Washington, USA, Eastern Pacific (mCT-00097, mCT-00104).
Distribution
Paleanotus comprises temperate and tropical species found globally between ~ 55°N and 52°S.
Habitat
Paleanotus species are found from predominantly shallower waters to ~ 40 m and inhabit crevices of coral and rocky reefs; dead shell middens on sand or mud and among tubiculous polychaete colonies. Species are commonly part of bryozoan, tunicate and algal encrusting accretions on jetty piers and fouling on wooden platforms and hulls of boats ( Watson 2015). There are also many instances of commensal association with invertebrates, e.g. Paleanotus chrysolepis inside the mantle cavity of Mytilus Linnaeus, 1758 (CW pers. obs.); Paleanotus bellis ‘from inside the mantle cavity of Balanus sp. ’ and from ‘branchial cavity of Loxorhynchus grandis ’ (LACM collection data); P. bellis underneath barnacles on pilings at Friday Harbour (McHugh, pers. comm.).
General morphology
Paleanotus species are slender chrysopetalids with larger species attaining up to ~100 segments for ~ 15 mm length and smaller species attaining maturity at <5 mm length ( Watson 2015). The dorsum is completely covered by bright golden to silvery coloured, asymmetrical-shaped main paleae in fans and flattened median fascicles that intersect at mid-dorsum ( Figure 13a View Figure 13 ). Sensory structures include a prostomium, fused with the anterior segments, two pairs of complex eyes, moderate sized oval palps, a glandular nuchal fold and well-developed lateral organs ( Watson 2015).
Pharynx and jaws
Paleanotus species possess a relatively short proboscis and a moderately long, partly differentiated pharynx with an anterior constriction and posterior caeca ( Figure 13b–f View Figure 13 ). The elongate, slender jaws sit very close to one another but do not interlink along their length. Cross sections illustrate that the posterior halves of the jaws are situated close together, but anteriorly the jaws diverge outwards, revealing broad internal grooves. There is a slight mid-way swelling on the inner margins at the point that the jaws diverge ( Figure 14a, b View Figure 14 ). Paleanotus stylets possess brown-coloured distal tips roughened like sandpaper, only visible under a compound microscope ( Watson 2015, figure 6G).
Muscle fibres enhanced with calcium form a discrete ring surrounding the jaws ( Figure 13b–f View Figure 13 ). Micro-CT scans, virtually dissected and viewed from the posterior end, illustrate that the ring registers a similar density to that of the jaws ( Figure 13f View Figure 13 ). In dorsal top view the calcified section of pharynx is clearly visible as a pair of structures overlying the anterior end of the stylets ( Figure 13b, c, e View Figure 13 ). Interestingly, a similar pharyngeal calcification is seen in related taxa (compare figures of Paleanotus , Treptopale , and Hyalopale ).
FMNH |
Field Museum of Natural History |
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