Neanthes kerguelensis (McIntosh, 1885)

Darbyshire, Teresa, 2014, Intertidal and nearshore Nereididae (Annelida) of the Falkland Islands, southwestern Atlantic, including a new species of Gymnonereis, ZooKeys 427, pp. 75-108 : 87-89

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.427.7296

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CCF51DC4-3AEA-4E49-AA12-1E26F6DF4CE7

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/983305BB-09CC-81E9-8A4C-F865E3592705

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Neanthes kerguelensis (McIntosh, 1885)
status

 

Taxon classification Animalia Phyllodocida Nereididae

Neanthes kerguelensis (McIntosh, 1885) View in CoL Figures 4, 9 C–D

Nereis kerguelensis McIntosh, 1885: 225-227, Pl. XXXV, figs 10-12, Pl. XVIA, figs 17-18. - Augener 1924: 330-333.

Neanthes kerguelensis . - Hartman 1954: 30. - Hartmann-Schröder 1962: 394-395. - Hartman 1967: 64. - Hutchings and Turvey 1982: 113. - Wilson 1984: 216-218. - Bakken and Wilson 2005: 528.

Material examined.

East Falkland: Stanley foreshore, stn 1a (51°41.454'S, 057°51.870'W), under rocks in coarse sand, midshore, 3 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.0120), 15.11.2011; Stanley foreshore, stn 1b (51°41.459'S, 057°51.840'W), under rocks in coarse sand, midshore, 9 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.121), 15.1.2011; Stanley foreshore, stn 1c (51°41.459'S, 057°51.823'W), under rocks in coarse sand, low shore, 3 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.0122), 15.1.2011; The Canache, east of Stanley, stn 2c (51°41.716'S, 057°47.107'W), under rocks in gravel & coarse sand, mid-low shore, 6 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.0123), 16.1.2011; Hookers Point, stn 4 (51°41.994'S, 057°46.747'W), in & under pink encrusting algae, low shore, 3 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.0124), 15.1.2011; Hookers Point, stn 6b, (51°41.994'S, 057°46.747'W), algal holdfast scraping, low shore, 1 specimen (NMW.Z.2011.039.0125), 21.11.2011; Sea Lion Island: East Loafers Bay, stn 20a (52°26.306'S, 059°06.229'W), in & under pink encrusting algae, mid-low shore, 4 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.0126), 28.11.2011; East Falkland: west Stanley, stn 21 (51°41.402'S, 057°52.580'W), under small stones in coarse sand & gravel, 6 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.0127-0128), 01.12.2011; Egg Harbour, Shag Rookery Point, stn 27 (51°49.345'S, 059°26.719'W), under rocks in soft silty sand, 6 m, 2 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.0129), 03.12.2011; Kelp Harbour, stn 29a (51°47.715'S, 059°18.400'W), coralline coarse sand, mid-low shore, 15 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.0136), 04.12.2011; Stanley marina, stn 32 (51°41.600'S, 057°48.073'W), Macrocystis holdfast, 30 cm, 2 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.0132), 05.12.2011; Sand Bay, Port Harriet, stn 34f (51°44.130'S, 058°00.550'W), under rocks within mussel bed, midshore, 7 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.0130), 08.12.2011; Teal Creek, east of Darwin, stn 35d (51°49.248'S, 058°55.561'W), under rocks in sand, midshore, 4 specimens (NMW.Z.2011.039.0131), 09.12.2011; Cape Bougainville, stn 38b (51°18.727'S, 058°27.607'W), under rocks in gravel in rock pool, mid-low shore, 1 specimen (NMW.Z.2012.082.0019), 13.01.2013; North Arm, stn 48a (52°07.768'S, 059°22.131'W), mussel bed over silty coarse sand, midshore, 13 specimens (NMW.Z.2013.082.0020), 22.01.2013; West Falkland: Moonlight Bay, Port Stephens, stn 51c (52°06.232'S, 060°50.368'W), in crevices, midshore, 10 specimens (NMW.Z.2012.082.0021), 26.01.2013; The Creek, Hill Cove, stn 56d (51°30.061'S, 060°07.618'W), under algae-covered rocks in fine sand, midshore, 4 specimens (NMW.Z.2012.082.0022), 31.01.2013; Shallow Bay, stn 57e (51°30.032'S, 060°07.726'W), in crevices & under stones, low shore, 3 specimens (NMW.Z.2012.082.0023), 01.02.2013.

Description.

Ninety-six entire specimens examined: length 5.9-61.3 mm, width 0.7-3.3 mm (excluding parapodia, measured at 8th chaetiger) for 29-70 chaetigers.

Colour pale cream in alcohol, some with dark brown, uniform shading remaining over anterior chaetigers.

Body depressed dorso-ventrally, of mostly uniform width, tapering in last few chaetigers. Prostomium longer than broad (Fig. 4A), antennae and palps about equal in length, with antennae 1/4 width of palpophores. Palpostyles very short, 1/5 length of palpophores. Four pairs tentacular cirri, postero-dorsal pair extending 2-7 chaetigers, usually 2-3. Two pairs small, equal-sized, black eyes, anterior pair more laterally placed.

Pharynx with conical paragnaths (Fig. 9C, D), variable in size, sometimes faint, not easily lost. Paragnaths arranged as follows: I = 1 (absent or too small to see in specimens of less than 45 chaetigers); II = 1-8; III = 1-9; IV = 6-17; V = 0; VI = 1 (2 on one specimen only); VII–VIII = 3-8. Jaws dark brown to black, 7-10 teeth.

Notopodia with dorsal and median ligule throughout. Of almost equal size, globular anteriorly (Fig. 4B), dorsal ligule becoming conical, median ligule becoming digitiform, in median chaetigers. Notopodial prechaetal lobe present from chaetigers 5-6 (Fig. 4B), increasingly fused to median ligule, absent posteriorly, difficult to determine more precisely due to the very gradual fusion, generally obvious for at least 10 chaetigers.

Dorsal cirrus 1-1.5 times length of dorsal ligule anteriorly (Fig. 4B), increasing to 2-2.5 times length posteriorly (Fig. 4C).

Neuropodia with postchaetal lobe and ventral ligule throughout; postchaetal lobe rounded anteriorly, reduced in size and digitiform posteriorly, ventral ligule globular anteriorly, conical posteriorly (Fig. 4B, C). Ventral cirrus approximately 3/4 length of ventral ligule, becoming equal in length posteriorly (Fig. 4B, C).

Parapodia biramous from chaetiger 3, sub-biramous on chaetigers 1-2. Notochaetae homogomph spinigers only. Neurochaetae with homogomph spinigers and heterogomph falcigers (Fig. 4D, E) in both superior and inferior (from 3) fascicles throughout. No heterogomph spinigers found.

Pygidium terminal; 2 long, tapering anal cirri inserted ventrally.

Remarks.

In a detailed study of Australian and sub-Antarctic specimens of Neanthes kerguelensis , Wilson (1984) described a wide variation in the numbers of paragnaths in Areas II, III and IV. This, combined with the apparent widespread occurrence across both hemispheres and from intertidal to 5000 m depths, would suggest that records of this species may, in fact, represent a species complex. Greater investigation in each area is required to properly resolve this.

The variation in paragnath numbers exhibited by the Falkland Islands specimens is within the boundaries of that described by Wilson (1984), although it falls consistently at the lower end of those ranges. In addition, the majority of specimens had tentacular cirri that extended only to chaetigers 2-4 ( Wilson 1984: 4-8 chaetigers) although some did extend up to chaetiger 7, and the neuropodial postchaetal lobe was present throughout the body as opposed to only the anterior 20-30 chaetigers ( Wilson 1984).

There are currently no published genetic sequences for Neanthes kerguelensis . However, a comparison of some of these different populations using molecular techniques may help resolve these discrepancies.

Habitat.

Wilson (1984) describes the habitat as "associated with fouling communities, intertidal in rocks and sand on sheltered and exposed coasts, soft bottom benthos to 115 m deep". Previous records from the Falkland Islands exist from intertidal to 197 m depth and from this survey from intertidal to 20 m depth in almost every habitat sampled (including algal holdfasts, epifaunal turf, coarse sand, gravel and under rocks), except for mud and fine-medium clean sands.

Distribution.

Recorded widely across the southern hemisphere including Australia, New Zealand, Tasmania, Fiji, Taiwan, Antarctic Peninsula, sub-Antarctic Islands (incl. Kerguelen, Macquarie, South Shetlands, South Orkneys), Chile and the Falkland Islands. Previous records from the Falkland Islands exist from Pratt (1898), Fauvel (1916), Ramsay (1914), Monro (1930) and Hartman (1953) and the species was recorded from almost every location sampled during this survey.

Neanthes kerguelensis is also recorded from the Northern hemisphere from the Mediterranean and Azores ( von Marenzeller 1902) and the UK ( Comely 1973). The latter record, however, is discounted as the author describes his specimen as having 6-7 paragnaths in Area VI which would not identify it as this species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Phyllodocida

Family

Nereididae

SubFamily

Nereidinae

Genus

Neanthes