Sthenelais Kinberg, 1856
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.740.1287 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A1E7F84F-49D0-4DA8-94E6-77E8CA68098F |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4650569 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FC87CE-1A24-1653-FDD5-F70BFA92FE26 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Sthenelais Kinberg, 1856 |
status |
|
Genus Sthenelais Kinberg, 1856 View in CoL (emended)
Sthenelais Kinberg, 1856: 387 View in CoL
(type species Sthenelais helenae Kinberg, 1856 View in CoL ; revised by Pettibone 1971).
Conconia Schmarda, 1861: 150 View in CoL
(type species Conconia caerulea Schmarda, 1861 = Sthenelais helenae Kinberg, 1856 View in CoL ).
Diagnosis
BODY. Elongate, with numerous segments; mid-dorsum bordered by few pairs of small ctenidia.
ELYTRA. Numerous, on segments 2, 4, 5, 7, continuing on alternate segments to 27, then on every segment to end of body. Dorsal tubercles on segments 3, 6, 8, continuing on alternate segments to 26.
PROSTOMIUM. Rounded, fused to first segment. Median antenna inserted terminally, with stout, cylindrical ceratophore with lateral auricles and tapering style. Lateral antennae fused to inner dorsal sides of tentaculophores, without ceratophore, distinctly shorter than dorsal tentacular cirri. Paired palps encircled by palpal sheath emerging ventrally to tentaculophores.
TENTACULOPHORES. With single aciculum, a pair of tentacular cirri, two bundles of capillary chaetae, L-shaped inner tentacular lobe with ciliated ridge and fused to palpal sheath, and dorsal tentacular crest.
SEGMENT 2. With first pair of elytra, biramous parapodia and buccal cirri longer than following ventral cirri. Small ctenidia on lateral lips and medial to ventral cirri in anterior segments.
SEGMENT 3. With dorsal tubercles fused to posterior sides of elytrophores of segment 2. Dorsal cirri absent.
BRANCHIAE. Cirriform, absent in anteriormost segments.
DORSAL CIRRI. Absent from all segments.
VENTRAL CIRRI. Styles with or without basal knob and without long basal papillae.
PARAPODIA. Biramous, each with up to three cup-shaped ctenidia dorsal to notopodia, noto- and neuropodial acicular lobes with accessory bracts and smooth stylodes on most parapodia (minute papillae may be present on stylodes in juveniles or in anteriormost parapodia of adults). Notopodial acicular lobes nearly completely encircled by a bract covering the basis of the notochaetae. Neuropodial acicular lobes posteriorly with a large bilobed bract and anteriorly with two smaller crescent-shaped bracts.
CHAETAE. Notochaetae slender, spinous, tapering to capillary, uni- or bidentate tip. Neurochaetae usually compound falcigers and, if present, few compound spinigers and/or simple spinous chaetae; stems of compound chaetae usually with few rows of spines distally. Neurochaetae arranged in three groups: upper group of neurochaetae within anterodorsal bract: mainly slender compound falcigers; few simple, spinous chaetae (may be missing); in some species also few compound spinigers. Middle group of neurochaetae within posterior bract: all stout compound falcigers. Lower group of neurochaetae within anteroventral bract: all slender compound falcigers.
Remarks
The generic diagnosis of Sthenelais is emended for the potential presence of minute papillae on the stylodes found in juveniles or in anteriormost parapodia of adult S. boa and for the presence of compound spinigers found in S. limicola (see below).
Wehe (2007) was the first to mention that the capillary notochaetae of S. boa taper to a bidentate or unidentate tip and emended the generic diagnosis of Sthenelais accordingly. We confirm the presence of bidentate and unidentate (i.e., simple) tips for the capillary notochaetae of S. boa , while those of S. limicola are all simple, see below.
Based on our study, Sthenelais currently comprises two valid species in the wider Northeast Atlantic: Sthenelais limicola ( Ehlers, 1864) , which is the most widespread and common nearshore and offshore, and Sthenelais boa ( Johnston, 1833) , which is found usually nearshore.
For an extensive list of synonyms, or species previously referred to Sthenelais , which belong to other genera, or species that require further investigation, see Table 2 View Table 2 and the respective paragraphs below.
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
Sthenelais Kinberg, 1856
Barnich, Ruth & Haaren, Ton Van 2021 |
Conconia
Schmarda L. K. 1861: 150 |
Sthenelais
Kinberg J. G. H. 1856: 387 |